logo
Trump drops one final $1 trillion Middle East deal and heads home to see daughter Tiffany's baby

Trump drops one final $1 trillion Middle East deal and heads home to see daughter Tiffany's baby

Daily Mail​16-05-2025
President Donald Trump announced one final $1 trillion deal on the last day of his Middle East trip and then said he was headed home to see his new grandson.
Trump's daughter Tiffany gave birth to a baby boy - Alexander Trump Boulos - on Thursday. It's her first child and the president's 11th grandbaby.
'It's been a tremendous time. Now it's time to go back home. My daughter had a baby. I'm going to go back home and see that little baby,' Trump said at a business roundtable in Abu Dhabi.
'I probably should have left yesterday,' he conceded. 'But I couldn't disappoint you,' he told Crown Prince Khaled Bin Mohamed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan. 'Your father would have been extremely upset with me, and you would have been more upset.'
With the announcement Trump confirmed he would not be headed to Turkey for talks on a Russia-Ukraine peace deal. The president had dangled the possibility of a drop-in but Russian President Vladimir Putin decided not to go to Istanbul to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
'My daughter had a baby. I'm going to go back home and see that little baby, and then we get back to a lot of work. We'll see what happens with Russia and Ukraine,' Trump said.
He noted he'd meet with Putin 'as soon as we can set it up. I was gonna, I would actually leave here and go, I do want to see my beautiful grandson.'
Secretary of State Marco Rubio is in Turkey but won't sit in the talks, noting the United States doesn't 'have high expectations' for a deal.
Trump said on Thursday he doesn't expect a deal to be done until he and Putin can meet.
In the meantime, the president and UAE leaders announced a $1.4 trillion investment pledge, which includes plans from the UAE's Etihad Airways plans to purchase dozens of American-made Boeing aircraft powered by GE engines.
Trump even had kind words for Boeing - a marked change from his recent criticism about its delay in delivering two 747s to serve as the new Air Force Ones.
'It's just my opinion but Boeing makes the best planes. They've had some headaches over the last few years, but they make the best planes,' he said.
But his own issues with the aerospace giant remained on his mind.
'I leave now and get on a 42-year-old Boeing,' he said of the current Air Force One. Trump's acceptance of a $400 million luxury jet from the Qatari Royal Family - which he plans to use as an Air Force One - has been one of the controversial issues of the trip.
But, in his four-days in the Middle East, Trump has wracked up an astonishing number of deals.
Those include a $200 billion order from Qatar Airways for Boeing jets and a $600 billion investment from Saudi Arabia -- including nearly $142 billion in weapons, which the White House described as the largest-ever arms deal.
Trump said it was important that Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates be the stops in the first major foreign trip of his second term.
'Coming to Saudi Arabia, Qatar was very important to me because of personal relationships that I had, maybe more than anything else. So it's been an amazing period of time,' he said. 'We're developing a lot of fans.'
'People have said they've never seen anything like taking place over the last four days, in terms of investment,' he added, 'in terms of the kind of money coming back into the United States. And all that money, the money is a nice word, but it's really jobs. We have jobs that are at a level that we very soon will not be able to nobody can duplicate it.'
In addition to the massive investment totals, Trump met with Syria's president and offered renewed optimism for an Iran nuclear deal.
There was no breakthrough on the Gaza war, but Trump did suggest turning the area into a 'freedom zone'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump is ready to ‘crush' the Russian economy if Putin doesn't meet with Zelensky, says Lindsey Graham
Trump is ready to ‘crush' the Russian economy if Putin doesn't meet with Zelensky, says Lindsey Graham

The Independent

time2 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump is ready to ‘crush' the Russian economy if Putin doesn't meet with Zelensky, says Lindsey Graham

Sen. Lindsey Graham has said that Donald Trump is ready to 'crush' the Russian economy if Vladimir Putin refuses to meet with Volodymyr Zelensky in the coming weeks to discuss an end to the Ukraine war. Graham has reportedly been pressuring Trump for months to support a sweeping sanctions bill designed to punish the Kremlin by placing massive tariffs on any country that continues to buy Russian oil and gas, thereby indirectly helping to bankroll its invasion of its western neighbor state. The legislation would most obviously hurt rival superpowers China and India, who currently account for 70 percent of Russia's energy exports and would face 500 percent U.S. tariffs if it were to be enacted. The Independent 's Owen Matthews has argued that Zelensky's European allies have already missed their opportunity to hold Putin to account by starving Russia of fossil fuel revenues. However, the senator believes there is still time. 'If we don't have this thing moving in the right direction by the time we get back, then I think that plan B needs to kick in,' Graham told the Associated Press in a phone interview this week. His bipartisan bill has been endorsed by 85 of his fellow senators to date, but does not have the expressed support of the White House. Graham argues that its moment may come when the upper chamber of Congress reconvenes in September following its summer recess. Graham said he had spoken to Trump on Tuesday, a day after he hosted several European heads of state and senior officials at the White House, including Zelensky, Keir Starmer, Emmanuel Macron, Friedrich Merz, Giorgia Meloni, Ursula von der Leyen and Mark Rutte. 'Trump believes that if Putin doesn't do his part, that he's going to have to crush his economy. Because you've got to mean what you say,' Graham told reporters in his home state after his call with the president. 'There will come a point where if it's clear that Putin is not going to entertain peace, that President Trump will have to back up what he said he would do. And the best way to do it is to have congressional blessing.' Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, the top Democrat in support of Graham's bill, has warned against excessive optimism regarding the prospects of a peace deal, given that the Russian leader emerged from his Alaska summit with Trump last week without making any definite commitments, suggesting he could be employing 'rope-a-dope' tactics. 'The only way to bring Putin to the table is to show strength,' Blumenthal told the AP. 'What Putin understands is force and pressure.'

Russia says security discussions without Moscow are 'road to nowhere'
Russia says security discussions without Moscow are 'road to nowhere'

Reuters

time3 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Russia says security discussions without Moscow are 'road to nowhere'

MOSCOW, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Russia said on Wednesday that attempts to resolve security issues relating to Ukraine without the participation of Moscow was a "road to nowhere". Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov made the comments two days after U.S. President Donald Trump hosted Ukraine's president and European leaders for discussions about security guarantees for Ukraine that could help to end the war. "We cannot agree with the fact that now it is proposed to resolve questions of security, collective security, without the Russian Federation. This will not work," Lavrov said. "I am sure that in the West and above all in the United States they understand perfectly well that seriously discussing security issues without the Russian Federation is a utopia, it's a road to nowhere."

Erdogan tells Putin Turkey supports Ukraine peace effort
Erdogan tells Putin Turkey supports Ukraine peace effort

Reuters

time3 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Erdogan tells Putin Turkey supports Ukraine peace effort

ANKARA, Aug 20 (Reuters) - Turkey supports efforts to establish a permanent peace in Ukraine with the participation of all parties, President Tayyip Erdogan told his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in a phone call on Wednesday, the Turkish presidency said. Erdogan also told Putin he was closely following developments related to the process, and that Turkey had strived for a just peace since the beginning of the war, it said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store