The Manila Times

Trump seeks to win over Muslim leaders with Islam speech

- AFP

RIYADH: US President Donald Trump tells 50 Muslim leaders in Saudi Arabia Sunday of his “hopes for a peaceful vision of Islam” a day after Washington took issue with Shiite Iran.

Trump’s major speech on Is trip as president and in the cradle of the Islamic faith.

It also comes a day after the United States and the Sunni Gulf kingdom signed agreements worth more than $380 billion - almost a third of that military-related.

“That was a tremendous day. Tremendous investment­s in the United States,” Trump said on Saturday at talks with Saudi King Salman. “Hundreds of billions of dollars of investment­s into the United States and jobs, jobs, jobs.”

His Secretary of State Rex Tillerson set the tone on Saturday when he urged Iran’s newly reelected President Hassan Rouhani to dismantle his country’s “network of terrorism.”

Tillerson also said the new arms deals signed between Riyadh and Washington aim to help Saudi Arabia deal “with

Sunday’s speech on Islam would be onerous for any US president, but for the real estate billionair­eturned-politician, it has the potential to be a high-risk exercise.

The speech has been touted as a major event along the lines of a landmark address to the Islamic world given by his predecesso­r Barack Obama in Cairo in 2009.

It will be especially sensitive given tensions sparked by the Trump administra­tion’s attempted travel ban targeting several Muslim-majority nations and accusation­s of anti-Islamic rhetoric while campaignin­g.

Trump’s influentia­l national security adviser, HR McMaster, has said he will deliver “an inspiring, direct speech.”

He will meet and have lunch with leaders of more than 50 Muslim countries, where he will deliver an inspiring, direct speech on the need to confront radical ideology and the president’s hopes for a peaceful vision of Islam,” McMaster said ahead of the visit.

‘He’ll be very blunt’

on condition of anonymity, said the speech would be “uplifting.”

“He’ll talk about what unites us in uplifting terms, but he’ll also be very blunt in talking about the need to confront extremism and the fact that many in the Muslim world have not only not done enough, they’ve actively abetted this extremism, even as some of them have talked a good game on the surface but in quiet, continue to fund extremism,” the

In December 2015, Trump told a campaign rally he was calling for a “total shutdown” of Muslims entering the United States “until our out what the hell is going on.”

His words shocked many Americans, with Trump detractors noting that the US Constituti­on prohibits religious discrimina­tion.

“I think Islam hates us. There is a tremendous hatred there. We have to get to the bottom of it,” Trump said in a March 2016 interview with CNN.

But now he is in the White House, Trump may chose a path not far removed from those of his predecesso­rs, Obama and George W. Bush.

After Al-Qaeda claimed the 9/11 attacks on the United States, Bush visited a Washington mosque.

“Islam is peace,” he said, insisting that “the face of terror is not the true faith of Islam.”

And Obama chose Cairo University to deliver a speech detailing his vision of Islam in June 2009.

He addressed the world’s 1.5 billion Muslims with the traditiona­l Arabic greeting “Salam alaikum,”, and went on to call for “this cycle of suspicion and discord” to end.

Trump, who next travels to Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s before visiting the Vatican, Brussels and Italy for NATO and Group of Seven meetings, is looking to leave his domestic troubles behind.

James Comey, the former FBI to testify publicly about Russian interferen­ce in the US elections.

Reports have also emerged that Trump called Comey “a nut job” and that the FBI have identified a senior White House official as a “significan­t person of interest” in its probe of Russian meddling.

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