CIJR | Canadian Institute for Jewish Research
L'institut Canadien de Recherches sur le Judaisme

Analysis

Forget Democracy in the Middle East. Trump Wants Deals

President Donald Trump walks with Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Deputy Crown Prince and Minister of Defense of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, along the West Colonnade of the White House, Tuesday, March 14, 2017. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead) 
SOURCE: FLICKR
President Donald Trump walks with Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Deputy Crown Prince and Minister of Defense of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, along the West Colonnade of the White House, Tuesday, March 14, 2017. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead) SOURCE: FLICKR

 

Batya Ungar-Sargon

The Free Press, May 14, 2025

“Trump’s commitment to the Jewish state is genuinely held and runs deep, but the Israeli right ought not seek to force a choice between his America First, peace through strength agenda and their own aims. It would be foolish to alienate the president at this moment.”

President Trump’s Middle East tour, the first foreign visit of his second presidency, got started with a bang. Breaking protocol, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman greeted President Trump on the tarmac, and for the next 12 hours, the two joked and laughed as they greeted cabinet members and dignitaries. At one point Trump was toted around in a golf cart driven by the Crown Prince himself, who wore a beatific smile. Perhaps one reason for the joy: The two nations signed a $142 billion arms deal.

But more significant than the MBS-Trump bromance was the speech Trump delivered, which denounced the failed forever wars of Republican administrations past as well as the failed appeasement of the Democrats, laying out the president’s signature strategy: peace through strength and peace through commerce as the path of the future.

In his June 2009 address in Egypt, President Obama defined his foreign policy as “based upon the truth that America and Islam are not exclusive and need not be in competition,” as the president put it. “Instead, they overlap, and share common principles—principles of justice and progress; tolerance and the dignity of all human beings.”

If Obama’s speech marked one epoch, President Trump’s address marks another. One not built on the fiction of shared principles but respect for our differences and with alliances built on the unflinching, hard reality of economic partnership—even between erstwhile foes. ….SOURCE

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