Houston Chronicle Sunday

Trump gives $110B arms deal to Saudis amid a warm embrace

- By Michael D. Shear and Peter Baker

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — With trumpets blaring, cannons booming and fighter jets streaking overhead trailed by red, white and blue contrails, President Donald Trump arrived in the scorching heat of the Arabian desert Saturday hoping to realign the politics and diplomacy of the Middle East by forcefully reassertin­g U.S. support for Sunni Muslim countries and Israel against Iran’s Shiite-led government.

Trump rewarded his hosts with a $110 billion arms package aimed at bolstering Saudi security and a slew of business agreements.

“That was a tremendous day, tremendous investment­s in the United States,” Trump said during a meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef.

The start of Trump’s first trip abroad since becoming president — coming amid the scandals and chaos engulfing his administra­tion — was intended to be a blunt rejection of President Barack Obama’s vision for the region. Obama sought a reconcilia­tion with Iran and negotiated a deal intended

to keep Tehran from developing nuclear weapons.

The most tangible agreement between the two nations was the $110 billion sale of military equipment to Saudi Arabia that is effective immediatel­y and could expand up to $350 billion over 10 years. The deal includes tanks, combat ships, missile defense systems, radar and communicat­ions, and cybersecur­ity technology. The State Department said the agreement could support “tens of thousands of new jobs in the United States.”

The package includes precision weaponry that Obama had held up over concerns that it would be used to kill civilians in the war in neighborin­g Yemen, as well as an anti-missile system.

The day proved to be almost everything a besieged White House could have wanted. After weeks of stormy politics and outof-control news cycles, the president stayed rigorously on script and restrained himself on Twitter. His staff boasted about the business deals being signed, and the visual images beamed to Americans back home showed ain command of a world stage.

The Saudis treated him like royalty, with red carpets, lavish meals and American flags flying everywhere. They repeatedly used the word “historic” to describe his visit, gave him a medal, projected a multistory image of his face on the side of the palatial Ritz-Carlton hotel where he was staying, and treated him to a colorful dance display in which his staff joined in with scores of white-robed Saudis and even the president swayed back and forth.

‘Extremely productive’

As Trump arrived in Saudi Arabia, Iranians re-elected President Hassanwho sealed the nuclear deal. Officials of both countries used the president’s visit to press Iran to halt support for terrorism and to stop interferin­g in the affairs of its neighbors.

“We are closely coordinati­ng our efforts in terms of how to counter Iran’s extremism and its export of extremism,” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said at a joint news conference in Riyadh with Adel al-Jubeir, the Saudi foreign minister.

Al-Jubeir praised Trump for renewing ties between the countries, and pointed to the “extremely, extremely productive and historic visit.”

For Trump, the warm embrace by the Saudi monarchy was a welcome break from the cascade of bad news in Washington. Even as Air Force One took off from a Maryland air base Friday afternoon, headlines revealed new details about the swiftly expanding investigat­ion into ties between Russia and Trump’s advisers.

Questions about those headlines followed Trump across the globe, a reminder of the political troubles dogging him back home. But the president at least initially resisted the temptation to deviate from his diplomatic script to address reports that he had referred to James Comey, the former FBI director, as “a nut job” during meetings with Russian officials in the Oval Office.

At his news conference, Tillerson said he did not have “any informatio­n or knowledge” about an unnamed White House official reported by the Washington Post to be a person of interest to investigat­ors in the Russia case.

Throughout his first day as the United States’ top overseas ambassador, Trump posed for pictures, shook hands with his hosts and avoided his domestic turmoil.

A forum bringing together U.S. and Saudi corporate executives Saturday also produced a series of multibilli­on-dollar deals. Among them: Lockheed Martin signed a $6 billion letter of intent to assemble 150 Black Hawk helicopter­s in Saudi Arabia, and General Electric announced projects it valued at $15 billion.

Critics said the last thing the region needed was more arms.

“In the powder keg that is the Middle East, this sale may simply light a fuse that sends the region, and us, deeper down the rabbit hole of perpetual military conflict,” Sen. Chris Murphy, D Conn ., wrote on Huff Post.

‘Inflated expectatio­ns’

During two days in Saudi Arabia, the president is set to meet with dozens of leaders from the Persian Gulf and the wider Muslim world as he seeks to shape a new Middle East coalition. His current embrace of the Gulf nations differs sharply with some of his previous remarks. In 2014, before becoming a candidate for the White House, Trump wrote on Twitter: “Tell Saudi Arabia and others that we want (demand!) free oil for the next ten years or we will not protect their private Boeing 747s. Pay up!”

On Sunday, Trump is scheduled to deliver a speech that White House aides described as a call to Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Muslim world to unite against extremism. One senior White House official said the president hoped to “reset” both the global fight against Islamic terrorism and his own reputation for intoleranc­e of Muslims, which was fueled by his campaign call for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States.”

After taking office, Trump signed an executive order to temporaril­y block visitors from some predominan­tly Muslim countries, but courts have blocked it pending a legal review.

Trump’s royal hosts, whose country was not among those covered by the travel ban, have chosen to ignore that history in the interests of working with a U.S. president who seems to share their goals and will not lecture them about repression of women or minority Shiites in Saudi Arabia, or its brutal conduct of the war in Yemen.

“Traditiona­l Arab allies welcome the U.S. back because they believe it is largely on their terms: a U.S. that is clearly anti-Iran and anti-political Islam, a U.S. that de-emphasizes political reform and human rights, a U.S. that is in business mode and a White House that seems more accessible than in the past eight years,” said Emile Hokayem, a senior fellow at the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies.

But Hokayem said Arab leaders might be in for a surprise over the long run.

“There is a lot of projection and wishfulnes­s in the Gulf view of Trump’s America,” he said. “There is plenty of inflated expectatio­ns.”

Tamara Cofman Wittes, a former State Department official who worked on the Middle East under Obama, said Trump’s goal of aligning with the Sunni states fundamenta­lly conflicted with his desire for closer relations with Russia, which has sided with Iran in bolstering the government in Syria’s civil war. Allowing President Bashar Assad to remain in power in Syria under Iran’s thumb is precisely the outcome the Sunni states and Israel oppose, noted Wittes, who is now at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington.

Greeted by the king

The president and his wife, Melania, emerged from Air Force One against a stark desert backdrop Saturday morning and were greeted on a long red carpet by King Salman, who was leaning on a cane, and other members of the Saudi royal family.

Sal man greeted Trump at the airport, a gesture he did not extend to Obama. Later, he bestowed the Collar of Abdulaziz Al Saud Medal, the nation’s highest honor, on the new president, draping the gold medal and chain around Trump’s neck. Previous recipients of the award include Barack Obama, President George W. Bush, and Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia.

A television microphone picked up the king’s remarks to Trump.

“Syria, too, used to be one of the most advanced countries,” the king said. “We used to get our professors from Syria. They served our kingdom. Unfortunat­ely, they too brought destructio­n to their own country.”

“You could destroy a country in mere seconds,” the king told the president, “but it takes a lot of effort.”

 ?? Mandel Ngan / AFP ?? President Donald Trump joins dancers with swords at a welcome ceremony Saturday. More coverage on page A22.
Mandel Ngan / AFP President Donald Trump joins dancers with swords at a welcome ceremony Saturday. More coverage on page A22.

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