Gold Palaces, Jet Deals and McDonald’s: Trump at Home in Middle East

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(Bloomberg) -- Donald Trump beamed from the passenger seat of a golf cart as Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman took the wheel and personally whisked the US president to a desert oasis dinner in an ancient city.

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Trump received the full royal treatment and here in the Gulf, it was clear he was among friends. His swing through the richest countries in the Middle East provided him with some quick wins. They took the form of billions in investments — though some dollar figures haven’t been accounted for and thus far amount to a mirage.

During the first planned overseas trip since his January inauguration, Trump returned to the global stage on his own terms, looking to burnish his image as a dealmaker. On display was his transactional approach to foreign policy, an unabashed drive for commercial deals — including with countries where his family has business interests — and a disregard for conventions and longstanding US foreign policy objectives.

Trump during his four-day tour embraced strongmen in ways new even for him. It’s a stark contrast to the derision and scorn with which he treats democratic US allies, such as Canada and those in Europe. He sees Arab rulers as natural partners in his push to shake up the global order.

“I like him too much,” Trump said of MBS, as the de facto Saudi ruler is commonly known.

Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed of the United Arab Emirates is a “magnificent man,” Trump said, and the president noted he had “been friends for a long time” with Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad.

The monarchs returned the favor with fighter-jet escorts of Air Force One, sword dances and state dinners in opulent palaces.

The contrast with Trump’s approach to America’s partners in Europe and North America is stark.

Back in 2017, Trump looked uncomfortable among fellow Western leaders in Sicily during his first Group of Seven summit. While his counterparts walked together in the hilltop city of Taormina, he rode in a golf cart alone.

It was an image that at the time underlined Trump’s isolation. Now in his second term in office, it’s his traditional allies in Europe that have been left out. An emboldened Trump is instead gravitating toward and seeking to emulate the absolute rulers he’s long praised and found kinship with.