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Trump's family is rapidly striking business deals in the Mideast

Mint Kolkata

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May 14, 2025

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar stand out for their warm embrace of Trump Inc.

- Eliot Brown & Stephen Kalin

When President Trump tours the Middle East this week, he will be looking to secure investments in the U.S. from the world's richest petro-states. His family businesses and close associates already have been striking deals in the region at a rapid clip.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, the three countries on the president's itinerary, stand out for their warm embrace of Trump Inc.

In the past year, Trump-branded residential towers have been launched in Dubai and Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, and a developer in April unveiled a Trump luxury golf resort at a state-owned project in Qatar at an event featuring Eric Trump and a Qatari minister.

A U.A.E. state and royal family fund earlier this month used $2 billion of a new crypto stablecoin issued by Trump's World Liberty Financial to invest in a crypto exchange.

The Trump administration is in talks with the Qatari government about accepting a plane that would serve as a temporary replacement for the U.S.'s aging Air Force One jets—and later be donated to Trump's presidential library for his use, people familiar with the matter have said.

Sovereign or royal funds from all three states have committed more than $3.5 billion to a private-equity fund run by Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law.

In addition, state-backed funds from Qatar and the U.A.E. were major investors in a $6 billion fundraising round for Trump adviser Elon Musk's xAI. In February, Dubai tapped his Boring Company to build an 11-mile tunnel network.

Saudi Prince Al Waleed Bin Talal Al Saud, a nephew of the king, is an investor in xAI.

This open commingling of geopolitics and personal interest breaks with longstanding American norms.

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