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TWTW Note
US in the Middle Easr
Trump’s visit to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and UAE
The World This Week #310 & 311, Vol 7 Nos 19 & 20, 18 May 2025

  Aashish Ganeshan
18 May 2025

The following note was first published as a part of The World This Week #310 & 311, Vol 7 Nos 19 & 20, 18 May 2025
What happened?
On 13 May, the US President Trump embarked on a high-profile Middle East tour to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and, unexpectedly, Syria. In Riyadh, Trump attended a US-Saudi Arabia business roundtable and secured deals worth more than $500 billion that centered on defense, energy, and collaborative investment ventures. In Doha, he was the first American president to pay a state visit to Qatar, signing a $42 billion defense contract, together with civil aviation accords and upgrades to Al Udeid Air Base. In Abu Dhabi, the UAE and the United States announced a visionary technology partnership, including the annual sale of 500,000 Nvidia artificial intelligence chips and the creation of joint AI research centers.
 
Trump's also visited Damascus, and met the interim Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa. He lifted all American sanctions, offering a "new beginning" in return for diminished Iranian influence and possible normalization with Israel.
 
What is the background?
First, the US-Saudi Arabia relations.  Both the U.S. and Saudi Arabia have historically enjoyed a security-oriented alliance based on oil diplomacy and weapons trade. Trump's 2025 visit saw more than $500 billion worth of agreements, including co-investments in energy, infrastructure, and military modernization. At the center was the extension of the US-Saudi Strategic Vision 2030 alliance.
 
Second, the US-Qatar relations. Qatar is America's most significant defense ally in the Gulf, with the Al Udeid Air Base. Trump's unprecedented state visit to Doha—the first by any sitting or past American president—featured the signing of a $42 billion defense deal to upgrade Qatar's forces and enhance Al Udeid's capabilities, along with civil aviation, finance, AI integration, and education.
 
Third, the US-UAE relations. The UAE has become an innovation and investment leader for the US the Middle East. A record AI and semiconductor cooperation agreement was signed under Trump's May 15–16 visit to Abu Dhabi, in which the US will provide 500,000 Nvidia chips per annum to the UAE. The two countries also signed an agreement to set up a shared AI research center, which was to have hubs in Abu Dhabi and Austin. The sovereign wealth funds of the UAE committed more than $50 billion for co-investment in U.S. infrastructure and clean tech".

Fourth, US and Syria. One of the most surprising moments of Trump's 2025 Middle East visit was his meeting with Syria's acting president, Ahmed al-Sharaa. A veteran commander of a Syrian opposition group who once had ties to al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra, al-Sharaa became Syria's leader of the transitional government after Bashar al-Assad's unpublicized departure late in 2024 amid Russian and Middle Eastern pressure.

Trump had supposedly promised phased relief from sanctions and reconstruction aid in return for Syria agreeing to pull out Iranian military forces, grant Western counterterrorism access, and consider normalization with the Gulf and Western powers. Critics in Europe and Washington saw the irony and danger of giving legitimacy to a militant with a history, but Trump justified the engagement as more about placing American interests first rather than moral absolutism.
 
Fifth, Trump and the Abraham Accords. The Abraham Accords, led by Trump during his previous term normalized Israeli diplomatic relations with several Arab states, most notably the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco. The agreements were welcomed as a revolutionary reshuffling of Middle Eastern alliances, redirecting the region from traditional Arab-Israeli enmity to mutual interests in containing Iran, economic modernization, and American-led investment. While the Accords faltered during the Biden presidency, Trump's 2025 return to the Middle East marks a fresh effort to enlarge and enshrine them. Trump conveyed in Riyadh and Abu Dhabi his determination to bring other Arab states—perhaps even Saudi Arabia—into the normalization process.
 
What does it mean?
First, the timing and motive of Trump's Middle East tour. Donald Trump's trip to Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE was made during an effort to reassert the US dominance in a region increasingly wooed by China and Russia. His unexpected sit-down with Syria's interim president Al-Sharaa marks a turn toward realpolitik at the expense of dogmatic ideological posturing.

Second, strategic alignment and recalibrated loyalties. The bilateral communiqués following Trump's meetings with Saudi, Qatari, and Emirati leaders unveiled convergent strategic interests. All three states indicated a desire to deepen cooperation in the framework of the Abraham Accords and upheld their commitments to counter-terrorism, regional stability, and the US led technological development.


About the author 
Aashish Ganeshan is a post graduate student at Madras Christian College.

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