The Jerusalem Post

Many in Saudi Arabia say Trump’s anti-Islam talk was just a gimmick

- • By ANITA KUMAR

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia – Donald Trump described Muslims as sick people who have hatred on their minds, and he proposed banning them from entering the United States.

Yet many people in Saudi Arabia, a nation considered the birthplace of Islam and where citizens are required to be Muslim, don’t hold his words against him.

In more than a dozen interviews, residents suggested that the billionair­e businessma­n turned Republican president simply was using stinging rhetoric to appeal to supporters and defeat Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.

He was, they say, the ultimate salesman.

“What Donald Trump said before he was president was just marketing,” Adeel Alhathlol, a Riyadh businessma­n who imports sound systems, said through a translator. “Because he’s a businessma­n, he knew how to make followers. His goal is not to be racist but just to wake up people.”

Trump has largely backed off his harsh criticism of Islam since he was inaugurate­d in January. He even softened his tone during his two-day visit to Riyadh last week, praising Islam as “one of the world’s greatest faiths” and calling for tolerance and respect for all faiths.

Though his administra­tion is still seeking to temporaril­y stop the entry into the United States of citizens from six Muslim-majority nations, many Saudis don’t consider it a Muslim ban. Of 50 or so Muslim nations, only six are included, including two of Saudi Arabia’s bitter rivals, Syria and Iran, but not Saudi Arabia, 15 of whose citizens were among the 19 Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers.

Waheed Mohammed A. Alghamdi, who works for the city of Yanbu in the western part of the kingdom, said through a translator that the reason Trump hasn’t repeated what he said about Muslims recently is because as president he needs to maintain a serious relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia, considered the leading Muslim nation and an important partner in the fight against terrorism.

“Donald Trump is so smart to use the audience to support his campaign,” said Alghamdi, who said he was fired from being a teacher because of his outspoken views. “He’s a businessma­n. It doesn’t mean he’s racist. They know it’s just propaganda. He’s a smart guy.”

Trump is extremely popular with the leaders of Persian Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia, who treated him like royalty during his visit. They can relate to his personalit­y, his black-and-white outlook on life and his background running a family business, and they were relieved he didn’t push them to change how they run their countries.

In Saudi Arabia, people aren’t allowed to speak against King Salman and his government, which controls the media, forbids demonstrat­ions and doesn’t allow political parties or trade unions. It is likely that Trump would have faced protests upon his arrival in Riyadh had they been allowed.

Several people had agreed to interviews but canceled at the last minute because they said they were afraid of repercussi­ons from the government. Those who went through with the interviews agreed to speak about American politics but not Saudi politics.

Some may have said they don’t oppose Trump simply because he’s popular with their own government. Others, including those who are outspoken on social media, say they don’t mind Trump, whom they never believed, or his supporters, who don’t have the power to act even if they agreed with Trump.

“I don’t think people dislike him that much,” said Eman al Hafjan, a university professor in Riyadh. “I think they see him as strange, somewhat entertaini­ng, because we have very little political participat­ion. We are very passive, not by choice.”

Mohammed Jawad of Alahsa in the eastern part of the country, who manages internatio­nal training contracts for a company owned by the government, said he has for the most part moved past what Trump said before he became president, though he remains troubled that he has not deleted all his anti-Islamic Twitter posts.

“We are really glad that it seems different than what he said during his campaign,” he said. “But I have some questions about credibilit­y and willingnes­s to solve the issues.”

In recent months, Trump has acted in ways that appealed to the Saudis. He blamed Iran for devastatio­n in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen, agreed to the largest arms deal in US history, and launched a missile strike on Syria after President Bashar Assad used chemical weapons on his own people.

During Trump’s visit, Saudis took to social media to lavish praise on his daughter, Ivanka, some of which rubbed off on Trump. One man even said he named his newborn child after her.

Ahmed Gh, an English teacher from Alasha in the eastern part of the country, said he prefers Trump to his predecesso­r, Barack Obama. “Maybe he will do something,” Gh said. “He’s a businessma­n.”

Toward the end of his administra­tion, Saudis had soured on Obama and his policies on the civil wars in nearby Syria and Yemen and his implementa­tion of a deal that allows Iran to pursue a nuclear energy and research program but prohibits it from producing a nuclear weapon.

“Obama was living in his utopia world or something,” said Abdulnasse­r Gharem, a well-known Saudi artist. “He was trying to postpone things. He wasn’t taking action but this guy is.”

Gharem, who said he’s forbidden from showing his provocativ­e artwork in Saudi Arabia, said Trump’s recent visit was good for the country. Saudis were flattered to be the first stop of Trump’s first foreign trip as president. “I can’t deny it’s a good thing,” Gharem said. “He activated the whole country.”

Mohammed Alhamza, a social researcher and writer in Riyadh, said Saudis always have had better relations with Republican presidents, including George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush, than Democrats because they are more business-minded.

Alhamza said Trump’s campaign remarks “annoyed” him even though he knew the whole time it was just a gimmick and that as president Trump wouldn’t want to make himself the enemy of the world’s more than 1.6 billion Muslims. He also had faith that other branches of the US government would rein Trump in.

He cited, as an example, the Trump administra­tion’s attempt at a travel ban on residents from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. Several federal courts have blocked it, including the 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals, which acted Thursday.

“The American system isn’t run by one,” he said through a translator during an interview at his house. “This is a good thing.” – TNS

 ?? (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Donald Trump bids farewell before he and first lady Melania Trump board ‘Air Force One’ at King Khalid Internatio­nal Airport in Riyadh last week.
(Jonathan Ernst/Reuters) US PRESIDENT Donald Trump bids farewell before he and first lady Melania Trump board ‘Air Force One’ at King Khalid Internatio­nal Airport in Riyadh last week.

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