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Trump starts Gulf visit seeking big economic deals

Trump starts Gulf visit seeking big economic deals

Reuters13-05-2025

RIYADH, May 13 - U.S. President Donald Trump will arrive in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday morning to kick off a four-day swing through the Gulf region, a trip that will focus more on economic deals than on the security crises besetting the region, from the war in Gaza to the threat of escalation over Iran's nuclear program.
With a who's who of powerful American business leaders in tow, including Tesla CEO and Trump adviser Elon Musk, Trump will first visit Riyadh - where the Saudi-US Investment Forum is taking place - and continue to Qatar on Wednesday and the United Arab Emirates on Thursday.
Trump has also said he may travel on Thursday to Turkey for potential face-to-face talks between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
Trump's second foreign trip since taking office again - his first was to Rome for Pope Francis' funeral - comes during a moment of geopolitical tension. In addition to pressing for a settlement to the war in Ukraine, the Trump administration is pushing for a new aid mechanism for war-torn Gaza and urging Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree a new ceasefire deal there.
Over the weekend, U.S. and Iranian negotiators met in Oman to discuss a potential deal to curb Tehran's nuclear program. Trump has threatened military action against Iran if diplomacy fails.
But - potential Turkey side trip aside - those matters are not the focus of Trump's Middle East swing as it is currently scheduled.
The U.S., Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE are expected to announce potentially trillions in investments. Saudi Arabia already committed in January, opens new tab to $600 billion in investments in the U.S. over the next four years, but Trump has said he will ask for a full trillion.
In addition to Musk, business leaders including BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser will make the trip.
Secretary of State and National Security Advisor Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth will travel with the president.
During the Riyadh stop, Trump is expected to offer Saudi Arabia an arms package worth well over $100 billion, sources told Reuters, which could include a range of advanced weapons including C-130 transport aircraft.
The U.S. and Saudi Arabia are expected to avoid the topic of normalization between Riyadh and Israel altogether, sources told Reuters, even as it is Trump's most enduring geopolitical goal in the region.
Trump's Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff said last week that he imminently expected progress on expanding the Abraham Accords, a set of deals brokered by Trump in his first term under which Arab states including the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco recognized Israel.
But opposition by Netanyahu to a permanent stop to the war in Gaza or to the creation of a Palestinian state makes progress on similar talks with Riyadh unlikely, sources told Reuters.
Trump's second and third stops - in Qatar and the UAE, respectively - are similarly expected to focus on economic issues.
Qatar's royal family is expected to gift Trump a luxury Boeing 747-8 plane to be outfitted for use as Air Force One, an arrangement that has been met with scrutiny by ethics experts. Trump is expected to donate the plane to his presidential library for use after his term ends.

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The world is cruel and full of horrors. Israel understands this - and acts. It is doing a service not just for itself, but for the Iranian people and all those who care about fighting theocratic murderers, writes DAVID PATRIKARAKOS
The world is cruel and full of horrors. Israel understands this - and acts. It is doing a service not just for itself, but for the Iranian people and all those who care about fighting theocratic murderers, writes DAVID PATRIKARAKOS

Daily Mail​

time39 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

The world is cruel and full of horrors. Israel understands this - and acts. It is doing a service not just for itself, but for the Iranian people and all those who care about fighting theocratic murderers, writes DAVID PATRIKARAKOS

Shock and awe. The words seem almost inadequate to capture the magnitude of the destruction, the scale of Israel 's military and strategic audacity. But the images are unequivocal. Smoke surges skywards. Flames burst across the horizon. Explosions strafe Tehran and Natanz. At 3am local time yesterday the skies over Iran erupted as Israeli fighter jets penetrated their enemy's airspace, littering the ground beneath with high-tech destruction and death. Operation Am KeLavi (Rising Lion) had begun. Over 200 aircraft roared across Iran, dropping 300 munitions on approximately 100 targets. On the ground, commandos moved silently into place. By 3.30am, smoke was rising from Tehran. By 4.15am, state TV showed smoke bursting out of Natanz, around 300km away. The Natanz uranium enrichment facility, the jewel in the crown of Iran's nuclear programme, was erupting and, along with it, quite possibly, Iran's nuclear ambitions. Israel has done the unthinkable. It has done what everybody said it could and should not do. It has, finally, struck the Iranian nuclear programme. Make no mistake, this was a truly historic day. Amid the chaos, and the fear and the noise, I can see the contours of a new Middle East. And like so much else in the region, it is born in violence. The degree to which Israel has degraded or even destroyed Iranian nuclear facilities remains unclear. But by striking Natanz, they have sent a message: Iran's nuclear programme will no longer be tolerated. There is no going back. The nuclear programme sits at the heart of the Mullahs' squalid regime. For decades, they have continued with their nuclear progress in the face of sanctions, international condemnation and political isolation – this week the International Atomic Energy Agency, the world's nuclear watchdog, formally declared Iran in breach of its non-proliferation obligations for the first time in 20 years. The situation had long been unacceptable to the Israelis. Now, finally, the major attack has come. Have no doubt, this was an extraordinary operation. A combination of military prowess, superlative intelligence, and what you need most in life: chutzpah. In fact, the Israeli operation wasn't one strike – it was three coordinated, high-risk missions run deep inside enemy territory, carried out by Mossad agents and Israeli military forces over months, years, of planning. It demanded precise intelligence, sophisticated equipment, and the covert deployment of commando teams operating deep inside Tehran and across Iran – all under the constant watch of Iranian security forces. In a stunning logistical feat, Mossad agents also smuggled large quantities of specialised weaponry into Iran under the noses of Iranian intelligence, staging these weapons across the country – ready to strike when the time came. The operation's first mission saw Mossad commando teams infiltrate central Iran and deploy advanced targeting systems near key Iranian surface-to-air missile batteries. As the Israeli air force began its air assault, these systems sprang to life, unleashing a salvo of precision-guided missiles with devastating accuracy. In a second mission, Mossad planted high-tech weapons inside civilian-looking vehicles positioned near critical air defence hubs. As Israeli fighter jets began pounding targets from the air, strike systems hidden inside those vehicles were remotely activated to obliterate Iran's air defences. In parallel, embedded Mossad units launched precision-guided missiles they had previously positioned near Iranian sites. The final blow came from within Iran, too. Long before the operation, Mossad agents had smuggled explosive-laden drones into a hidden launch site near Tehran. As the wider assault unfolded, these drones took off from secret launchpads and slammed into surface-to-surface missile launchers at the Asfaqabad base – one of Iran's most strategically sensitive sites. This wasn't just an air raid. It was a meticulously coordinated, multi-front takedown of Iran's military nerve centres – executed with precision, patience and deep penetration. Then there are the assassinations. Israel killed three of Iran's top military commanders, including the head of its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Hossein Salami, top military commander Mohammad Bagheri, and Gholam Ali Rashid, head of the powerful Khatam al-Anbiya central command. Reports are that General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, head of the IRGC's aerospace division and architect of Iran's missile programme, also met a well-deserved end. To get at these men required still more preparation and still more surgical strikes. Yet worse for the Iranians, hours after all this, a second wave of attacks yesterday evening liquidated Quds Force commander General Esmail Qaani, the man responsible for overseeing Iran's regional proxies, Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis in Yemen. The Israelis also took out two senior nuclear scientists – Fereydoon Abbasi and Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi. In total, Israel attacked at least six military bases around the capital and residential homes in two highly secure complexes for military commanders as well as multiple other residential buildings in Tehran. As an Israeli security source told me yesterday afternoon: 'These massive attacks by the Israeli air force and Mossad together send a clear message to the Mullahs, and to the world. We are operating inside the beating heart of Iran. We can strike any apartment, any field, any area at any time.' You might say this is Boy's Own stuff – except there's nothing boyish about the remorseless and meticulous Israelis. Among other things, this operation is a monument to their ingenuity and military prowess. Beyond the worldwide reaction, Israel's goal here is an immaculately precise one: to degrade Iran's military command and control, strategic missile capabilities and air defence systems, and to target its nuclear facilities, all of which pose a clear and direct threat to Israel. So far it seems to have done exactly that. According to Iranian state TV, Natanz, Iran's largest uranium enrichment site, which the IDF says 'contains the infrastructure required for enrichment to a military-grade level', has been hit 'several times'. Hours after the first wave of strikes, the Israelis struck Iran's second major nuclear enrichment facility at Fordow. The IDF reports that the strikes destroyed Natanz's underground 'multi-level enrichment hall housing centrifuges, electrical rooms, and other supporting infrastructure'. They also said they 'destroyed critical infrastructure enabling the site's continued operation and advancement of the Iranian regime's nuclear weapons project'. If this is true, it is the biggest setback to Iran's nuclear ambitions this century. But that's not all. Beyond the months of preparation, Rising Lion was the result of years of wider planning between Mossad and the IDF who compiled detailed intelligence dossiers not just on Iran's missile infrastructure but also on its senior military and nuclear personnel. Which explains why the operation has been so devastating in its efficacy. This is a disaster for the Iranians: military, strategically and, of course, for their reputation. Iran has no choice but to respond. Indeed, the country's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was in full voice. Israel 'opened its wicked and blood-stained hand to a crime in our beloved country revealing its malicious nature more than ever by striking residential centres', he thundered – online. 'With this crime, the Zionist regime has set itself for a bitter and painful fate and it will definitely receive it.' Strong words. And you'd think a huge response would be inevitable. Iran has already fired over 100 drones that the Israeli air force has been shooting down. Last night, it was launching further drone strikes at Israel and there will almost certainly be more in the coming days, probably at IDF bases across the country. Iran also has about 1,600 ballistic missiles it can launch, and while doubts remain over their effectiveness, the damage they can wreak is considerable. The problem is that both of Iran's direct strikes on Israel last year were damp squibs. Pretty much everything it fired was either intercepted by Israel and its allies (including the US and Britain) or landed harmlessly far from their targets. The strikes weakened, rather than strengthened, the perception of Iran as a military power. And this attack has given no reason to alter that assessment. Not least because, right now, it seems like Iranian air defences failed miserably, either because they weren't up to the job or because Israel dispensed with them. So they may be able to launch a huge volley of missiles, and even do damage to Israel. But then what? Iran is without air defences, without an air force, and without their top military commanders. The Israelis would open them up if they launched an all-out attack. It would be carnage for the sadistic Khamenei and his thuggish acolytes. As an Israeli source confided to me yesterday: 'I think parts of the Israeli military establishment are praying that the Iranians launch a vast missile attack because it will allow us to end them.' So the regime is stuck. If they try again and fail again to carry out Khamenei's blood-curdling threats, which they almost certainly will, they are in trouble. Don't forget, it's not only the Israelis watching – it's the Iranian people, the vast majority of whom want nothing more than to see the end of their sordid theocratic oppressors. When I first began studying this subject 20 years ago, Iranians told me they hated the Mullahs but would fight for their country if it were attacked. Two decades of brutality later, and many Iranians are reacting to yesterday's news with cries of 'thank you uncle Netanyahu'. So who can the regime rely on? The Mullahs are always loath to fight face on, preferring instead to strike through their proxies. But those proxies are in disarray, and it is here that we perhaps find the reason that the Israelis have finally carried out an attack they have been talking about for so long – and it all goes back to the horrors of October 7, 2023. Back then, Iran ringed Israel with proxies. But no longer. Hamas may fight on among the rubble of Gaza but it is ravaged, a shadow of what it once was. Hezbollah was once the finest fighting force Israel faced. Now its leader is dead, and its military command crippled by the stunning Israeli pager operation last year when intelligence services turned the terrorist group's communications devices into bombs. Without Hezbollah to protect him, Tehran's Syrian vassal Bashar al-Assad was finally overthrown last year. He now languishes in exile in Moscow, a guest of Vladimir Putin for life. Assad's fall is a strategic catastrophe for Tehran. Not only has it lost face for its failure to protect him, but without Assad it no longer has a land bridge to supply Hezbollah with weaponry in Lebanon. October 7 was the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, and it was carried out by Iran's proxy Hamas. It was supposed to change everything for Israel and for the Middle East. And it did, just not in the way the so-called Axis of Resistance planned. The line between this strike and that day is both clear and straight. Israel has dismantled the proxies, the limbs of the beast, and is now gunning for its head, Iran. Already, politicians and commentators the world over are squawking their disapproval, arguing that the Israelis had no right to launch this stunning offensive because the Iranians don't yet have a nuclear bomb. Others shriek that this is a violation of the rules-based order and international human rights law. Let's be clear, however: Israel – or any other sovereign state in the world – must be able to live within its borders without bombardment year after year from the proxies of a state that repeatedly says it will wipe it off the face of the earth. When that state also amasses massive quantities of highly enriched uranium, you not only have a right but a duty to act against it. That's what the Israelis have done. And it was a long time coming. The world is not what it was. I watched the rules-based order die in the killing fields of eastern Ukraine. I saw international human rights law reveal itself as a joke in Assad's prisons. The world is cruel and full of horrors. The Israelis understand this – and they act. And yesterday in Iran they performed a service not just for themselves, but for the Iranian people, and all those across the world who care about fighting theocratic murderers – in all their guises.

EXCLUSIVE White House invites MAGA-friendly UFC fighters to generate buzz at Trump's big military parade
EXCLUSIVE White House invites MAGA-friendly UFC fighters to generate buzz at Trump's big military parade

Daily Mail​

time39 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE White House invites MAGA-friendly UFC fighters to generate buzz at Trump's big military parade

Former UFC fighters Tim Kennedy and Luke Rockhold have been invited by White House officials to join Donald Trump at his big military parade this weekend. Trump is staging the event in Washington, D.C. to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the US Army on Saturday, which also happens to mark his 79th birthday. While forecasted thunderstorms are threatening to literally rain on his parade - with a Pentagon source confirming that it will be canceled or postponed in the event of lightning - the president will have two ex-MMA stars alongside him to generate a buzz if it indeed goes ahead. Kennedy, an American soldier as well as a retired mixed martial artist, and former UFC Middleweight champion Rockhold are on a list of over 30 celebrities set to attend after receiving personal invites from the White House. Both men will be there to both drum up support for Trump, who is of course good friends with UFC President Dana White, and celebrate the history of the US Army, something Kennedy is very familiar with himself after spending over two decades in the military. Earlier this week the 45-year-old took to Instagram in his army uniform to give fans a sneak preview of the parade setup, saying in a video: 'This is an amazing opportunity, this is a once in a lifetime chance to see and celebrate American soldiers and their service.' Ex-UFC stars Tim Kennedy (left) and Luke Rockhold (right) were invited by White House chiefs He later added: 'Check it out this Saturday. Support the greatest nation that ever existed.' Kennedy, who won 18 of his 24 professional MMA bouts, is a well-publicized Trump supporter and even joined the president in Oval Office back in April as part of a special event to honor US veterans. Rockhold, meanwhile, recently reached out to Trump with a plea after his good friend and fellow ex-MMA fighter Cain Velasquez was sentenced to five years in prison for the attempted murder of a man he believed had molested one of his relatives. In his own career, the 40-year-old won 16 of his 22 contests and captured the UFC's middleweight crown in 2015. Ahead of Saturday's parade, A Pentagon source confirmed to the Daily Mail that if there's lightning in the area it will have to be canceled or postponed. A White House spokesperson pressed that some show would go on. 'Any changes to the Army Birthday Parade will be announced by the Department of Defense of America 250 Commission. No matter what, a historic celebration of our military servicemembers will take place!' deputy press secretary Anna Kelly said to the Daily Mail. The Weather Channel's current forecast for Saturday in Washington calls for cloudy skies in the morning with thunderstorms developing later in the day. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Tim Kennedy (@timkennedymma) Instead of doing a traditional daytime parade, organizers decided to have it kick off down Constitution Ave. at 6:30 p.m. The parade itself will only last an hour - with a concert planned directly afterward followed by a fireworks display over the National Mall. Trump has long wanted to have a military-style parade, after seeing France's Bastille Day festivities, which also marked the U.S.'s 100th anniversary of entering World War I, in July of 2017. During his first term he was dissuaded from holding one over cost concerns.

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