
Trump and Saudi prince sign agreements as US leader begins Middle East tour
Donald Trump has signed a host of economic and bilateral co-operation agreements in Saudi Arabia as he kicked off a four-day Middle East trip with a focus on dealmaking with a key regional ally.
The US president's visit came against a backdrop of shared concerns about Iran's nuclear programme and the war in Gaza.
Advertisement
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi de facto ruler, warmly greeted Mr Trump as he stepped off Air Force One at King Khalid International Airport in the Saudi capital.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman welcomes Donald Trump to Riyadh (Alex Brandon/AP)
The two leaders then retreated to a grand hall at Riyadh airport, where Mr Trump and his aides were served traditional Arabic coffee by waiting attendants wearing ceremonial gun belts.
'I really believe we like each other a lot,' Mr Trump said later during a brief appearance with the crown prince at the start of a bilateral meeting.
They later signed more than a dozen agreements to increase co-operation between their governments' militaries, justice departments and cultural institutions.
Advertisement
Additional economic agreements were expected to be sealed later at a US-Saudi investment conference convened for the occasion.
Prince Mohammed has already committed to 600 billion dollars (£450 billion) in new Saudi investment in the US, but Mr Trump teased a trillion dollars (£750 million) would be even better.
The pomp began before Mr Trump even landed, as Royal Saudi Air Force F-15s provided an honorary escort for Air Force One as it approached the kingdom's capital — an exceptionally rare sight.
Donald Trump and Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the Royal Palace (Alex Brandon/AP)
Mr Trump and Prince Mohammed also took part in a formal greeting and lunch at the Royal Court at Al Yamamah Palace, gathering with guests and aides in an ornate room with blue and gold accents and massive crystal chandeliers.
Advertisement
As he greeted business leaders with Mr Trump by his side, Prince Mohammed was animated and smiling.
It was a stark contrast to his awkward fist bump with then-president Joe Biden, who looked to avoid being seen on camera shaking hands with the prince during a 2022 visit to the kingdom.
Mr Biden had visited as he tried to alleviate soaring prices at the pump for motorists at home and around the globe. At the time, Prince Mohammed's reputation had been badly damaged by a US intelligence determination that found he had ordered the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
But that dark moment appeared to be a distant memory for the prince as he rubbed elbows with high-profile business executives — including Blackstone Group chief executive Stephen Schwarzman, BlackRock boss Larry Fink and Tesla and SpaceX chief Elon Musk — in front of the cameras and with Mr Trump by his side.
Advertisement
Later, the crown prince will fete Mr Trump with an intimate state dinner at Ad-Diriyah, a Unesco heritage site which is the birthplace of the first Saudi state and the site of a major development project championed by the crown prince.
The two leaders pose for a photo after exchanging documents (Alex Brandon/AP)
Saudi Arabia and fellow Opec+ nations have already helped their cause with Mr Trump early in his second term by stepping up oil production.
He sees cheap energy as a key component to lowering costs and stemming inflation for Americans. The Republican president has also made the case that lower oil prices will hasten an end to the Russia-Ukraine war.
Saudi Arabia and the next two destinations on his Middle East trip – Qatar and the United Arab Emirates — are places where the Trump Organisation, run by Mr Trump's two oldest sons, is developing major property projects. They include a high-rise tower in Jeddah, a luxury hotel in Dubai and a golf course and villa complex in Qatar.
Advertisement
He is trying to demonstrate that his transactional strategy for international politics is paying dividends as he faces criticism from Democrats who say his global tariff war and approach to Russia's war on Ukraine are isolating the US from allies.
He is expected to announce deals with the three wealthy countries that will touch on artificial intelligence, expanding energy co-operation and perhaps new arms sales to Saudi Arabia. The administration this month announced initial approval to sell 3.5 billion dollars (£2.6 billion) of air-to-air missiles for Saudi Arabia's fighter jets.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
33 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
'Trump's ceasefire was a fragile fantasy from the world's loudest liability'
It was as fragile as his ego. Before the parties involved had a chance to speak, Donald Trump was doing a lap of honour around the world, hailing a ceasefire between Israel and Iran as a historic victory for his leadership. He posted slogans, shared self-congratulatory graphics - including one declaring 'TRUMP WAS RIGHT ABOUT EVERYTHING' - and praised himself as the man who had brought peace to a region at war. Within hours, as always, his work and his words had crumbled. The ceasefire disintegrated almost as soon as it was announced, exposed as yet another hollow stunt from a man obsessed with headlines over substance. What the US president trumpeted as a major diplomatic breakthrough has instead unravelled as yet another hollow promise, one forged not through serious negotiation or international consensus but through political theatre, self-promotion, and an alarming disregard for the complexity of the conflict he claimed to resolve. The ceasefire, announced to great fanfare, lasted only a few hours before violence resumed. Missiles were once again fired, tensions reignited, and hopes for calm were extinguished before they had the chance to take hold. Earlier, true to form, Trump had taken to his personal platform, Truth Social, not to urge restraint or focus on regional stability, but to praise himself. It was a moment of staggering hubris, and the statement was disproved almost immediately as the ceasefire disintegrated. This is the danger of a foreign policy built on self-image. Trump's actions have long been governed not by strategic logic or informed advice but by the pursuit of credit and headlines. In this latest episode, he sought to frame himself as a peacemaker (as he has Ukraine), a man capable of ending one of the world's most volatile standoffs. Once again, the reality has proven very different. Even Trump's sycophant supporters in the UK were quick to declare the ceasefire a world-changing achievement. One moronic troll even claimed: 'The Don might have just saved millions of lives around the world.' Such declarations have aged as poorly as many of Trump's ventures, from his failed university to his branded vodka. All quickly became busted flushes. This ceasefire was never built to last. There was no structure, no verifiable enforcement, no multilateral agreement underpinning it. The regional actors most affected by the fighting were not visibly aligned in purpose or commitment. The absence of diplomatic groundwork made the deal little more than a fragile illusion. Meanwhile, Trump's previous actions have made any genuine progress towards peace more difficult. He withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal while destabilising a framework that had placed significant checks on Tehran's nuclear programme. He has routinely backed Israeli military actions without serious scrutiny. And most recently, he ordered the bombing of Iranian nuclear facilities - an act which many experts agree pushed the region to the brink. His sudden pivot to peacemaker sits uncomfortably with the facts. And while his administration attempted to portray the ceasefire as evidence of strength and strategic foresight, the outcome speaks for itself: a few short hours of calm, followed by a renewed cycle of retaliation. There is a pattern here, and it is deeply troubling. Time and again, Trump has positioned himself as a dealmaker. But what follows is not peace, not resolution, but collapse. From North Korea to Afghanistan to the Middle East, his record is one of rushed announcements, minimal follow-through, and maximum personal glorification. The consequences are borne not by him, but by the people whose lives depend on stable diplomacy and coherent policy. It is not simply that this latest ceasefire failed. It is how it failed. In its haste. In its lack of credibility. And in its detachment from the on-the-ground realities that define one of the most entrenched geopolitical struggles in the world. There was no roadmap, no coalition of allies, and no clear terms of agreement. Instead, a message of 'mission accomplished' was presented before the mission had even begun. This is the style of governance that has come to define Trump's presidency: optics over outcomes, slogans over solutions. There is now serious damage to repair. The collapse of this ceasefire risks deepening mistrust among regional partners and complicating any future effort to secure a meaningful, durable peace. It undermines the credibility not just of the Trump administration, but of the United States as a reliable international actor. Leadership in moments of conflict requires more than proclamations and graphics on social media. It demands discipline, clarity, and the patience to build trust over time. Donald Trump has never demonstrated these qualities. The Middle East deserves more than theatrics. It deserves serious, sustained diplomacy. These 24 hours have once again shown that Donald Trump is not capable of delivering it. And the world, yet again, must deal with the fallout.

Leader Live
36 minutes ago
- Leader Live
Middle East ceasefire on the brink as Israel orders retaliation for Iran strike
Both Middle Eastern countries had agreed to lay down arms, following a proposal by US President Donald Trump. But on Tuesday morning, only hours after Israel agreed to the ceasefire, its defence minister Israel Katz claimed Iran had 'completely violated' the agreement by launching missile strikes after it came into effect. The defence minister instructed Israeli forces to resume targeting Iranian paramilitary and government targets. Iran's military however denied that it had fired missiles after the ceasefire, according to reports from Iranian state television. The UK had earlier welcomed the cessation in the fighting, but Cabinet Office minister Pat McFadden cautiously told BBC Breakfast it was 'good news, if the ceasefire holds'. He added: 'It's obviously a fragile situation in the Middle East. 'A number of people have been killed overnight in missile strikes, but I think the whole world will hope that the ceasefire will hold and that Iran will come forward with a credible plan that shows that it will not pursue the development of a nuclear weapon.' Israel had agreed to the ceasefire early on Tuesday morning, with the country's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu reasoning it had achieved all its goals in its 12-day war against Iran, including removing the threat of its nuclear programme. 'Israel will respond forcefully to any violation of the ceasefire,' the Israeli prime minister warned. Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi had earlier posted on social media site X there was 'NO 'agreement' on any ceasefire or cessation of military operations'. But he said Iran had 'no intention' of continuing attacks if Israel stopped its 'illegal aggression against the Iranian people' by 4am Tehran time (2am BST), around a quarter of an hour before his post. As Iran has repeatedly made clear: Israel launched war on Iran, not the other way around. As of now, there is NO "agreement" on any ceasefire or cessation of military operations. However, provided that the Israeli regime stops its illegal aggression against the Iranian people no… — Seyed Abbas Araghchi (@araghchi) June 24, 2025 Mr Trump first claimed an agreement had been reached overnight, but both Israel and Iran were initially silent. Writing on his social media site Truth Social, Mr Trump announced the 'complete and total ceasefire' to be brought in over 24 hours, saying the two countries had approached him 'almost simultaneously'. He said the ceasefire would be phased in, giving the two countries six hours to have 'wound down and completed their in progress, final missions'. It followed an onslaught of missiles targeting Israel early on Tuesday, which killed at least four people. Israel in turn launched a blitz of airstrikes targeting sites across Iran before dawn. Sir Keir Starmer will arrive at the Nato summit in the Netherlands on Tuesday, where the fragile situation in the Middle East is likely to dominate leaders' conversations. The UK started evacuating Britons from Israel on Monday, with the first group of 63 flown back via Cyprus. Downing Street said 'around 1,000' people had requested a seat on an evacuation flight – a quarter of the 4,000 who had registered their presence in Israel or Palestine with the Foreign Office. Shadow foreign secretary Dame Priti Patel told Sky News that the Conservatives felt America's intervention in the conflict was 'absolutely essential and necessary' to degrade Iran's nuclear capabilities. But the frontbench Tory hit out at the Government for a lack of clarity on its support for the US and Israel. She said: 'The Government has not been able to say – I was in Parliament yesterday – whether or not they supported this action or took a view on this action. 'I think the British people need clarity, they need to know whether or not their own government, the government of the day, backed the action.'

Rhyl Journal
37 minutes ago
- Rhyl Journal
Middle East ceasefire on the brink as Israel orders retaliation for Iran strike
Both Middle Eastern countries had agreed to lay down arms, following a proposal by US President Donald Trump. But on Tuesday morning, only hours after Israel agreed to the ceasefire, its defence minister Israel Katz claimed Iran had 'completely violated' the agreement by launching missile strikes after it came into effect. The defence minister instructed Israeli forces to resume targeting Iranian paramilitary and government targets. Iran's military however denied that it had fired missiles after the ceasefire, according to reports from Iranian state television. The UK had earlier welcomed the cessation in the fighting, but Cabinet Office minister Pat McFadden cautiously told BBC Breakfast it was 'good news, if the ceasefire holds'. He added: 'It's obviously a fragile situation in the Middle East. 'A number of people have been killed overnight in missile strikes, but I think the whole world will hope that the ceasefire will hold and that Iran will come forward with a credible plan that shows that it will not pursue the development of a nuclear weapon.' Israel had agreed to the ceasefire early on Tuesday morning, with the country's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu reasoning it had achieved all its goals in its 12-day war against Iran, including removing the threat of its nuclear programme. 'Israel will respond forcefully to any violation of the ceasefire,' the Israeli prime minister warned. Iran's foreign minister Abbas Araghchi had earlier posted on social media site X there was 'NO 'agreement' on any ceasefire or cessation of military operations'. But he said Iran had 'no intention' of continuing attacks if Israel stopped its 'illegal aggression against the Iranian people' by 4am Tehran time (2am BST), around a quarter of an hour before his post. As Iran has repeatedly made clear: Israel launched war on Iran, not the other way around. As of now, there is NO "agreement" on any ceasefire or cessation of military operations. However, provided that the Israeli regime stops its illegal aggression against the Iranian people no… — Seyed Abbas Araghchi (@araghchi) June 24, 2025 Mr Trump first claimed an agreement had been reached overnight, but both Israel and Iran were initially silent. Writing on his social media site Truth Social, Mr Trump announced the 'complete and total ceasefire' to be brought in over 24 hours, saying the two countries had approached him 'almost simultaneously'. He said the ceasefire would be phased in, giving the two countries six hours to have 'wound down and completed their in progress, final missions'. It followed an onslaught of missiles targeting Israel early on Tuesday, which killed at least four people. Israel in turn launched a blitz of airstrikes targeting sites across Iran before dawn. Sir Keir Starmer will arrive at the Nato summit in the Netherlands on Tuesday, where the fragile situation in the Middle East is likely to dominate leaders' conversations. The UK started evacuating Britons from Israel on Monday, with the first group of 63 flown back via Cyprus. Downing Street said 'around 1,000' people had requested a seat on an evacuation flight – a quarter of the 4,000 who had registered their presence in Israel or Palestine with the Foreign Office. Shadow foreign secretary Dame Priti Patel told Sky News that the Conservatives felt America's intervention in the conflict was 'absolutely essential and necessary' to degrade Iran's nuclear capabilities. But the frontbench Tory hit out at the Government for a lack of clarity on its support for the US and Israel. She said: 'The Government has not been able to say – I was in Parliament yesterday – whether or not they supported this action or took a view on this action. 'I think the British people need clarity, they need to know whether or not their own government, the government of the day, backed the action.'