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The Ingraham Angle 10/12/25 VOLLEDIGE EINDSHOW | Lees meer 12 oktober 2025

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00:00Good evening, everyone. I'm Laura Ingraham. This is the Ingraham Angle from Washington
00:04tonight. As always, thanks for spending some time with us. This is a Fox News alert. Tish
00:09is in trouble. The New York attorney general was just indicted. We're going to have more
00:13on that in moments. But first, it does feel like Christmas in October, does it not?
00:19Celebrations continued across the Middle East over the historic peace agreement between Israel
00:24and Hamas. And at the White House, Team Trump took a much-deserved victory lap.
00:30You settled seven wars or major conflicts, but wars. And this is number eight. I think
00:36it's going to be a lasting peace, hopefully an everlasting peace. Peace in the Middle East.
00:42Let's face it, only Donald Trump, with his relentless pursuit of peace and his team's
00:47outside-the-box thinking, could have gotten it done. Remember, a month ago, I never thought
00:51this was possible. You convened an historic meeting, not simply of Arab countries, but
00:55of Muslim-majority countries from around the world, including Indonesia was there, Pakistan
01:00was there, and created this coalition behind this plan. The president had some extraordinary
01:05phone calls and meetings that required a high degree of intensity and commitment, and made
01:15this happen.
01:15This was a team effort, and the president, as any great coach would do, spread the credit
01:22around.
01:23We did, as a group, with Steve and Jared and Marco and me and all of us. We got the hostages
01:30back. We got many of them back. JD, you were fantastic. And Pete, you were great. Susie,
01:36I want to thank you very much. CIA, John Ratcliffe, he's done an incredible job. So I want to thank
01:41you all. And if I'm missing anybody, I apologize. But you've been amazing.
01:46I want to thank the Academy. Well, since he was sworn into office, Trump never lost sight
01:52of the human cost of this conflict, the suffering on both sides, especially of the families of
01:57the hostages.
01:58The first thing we're doing is getting our hostages back, okay? And that's what people
02:02wanted more than anything else. They wanted these hostages back that have lived in hell like
02:08nobody has ever even dreamt possible. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick was with some of the
02:14families last night. President Trump, you have the best crowd in the world. What do you guys have
02:19to say to President Trump? Thank you. Thank you. You did it. You did it. Thank you. This is amazing.
02:32Mr. President, we believe in you and we trust you will fulfill the mission until every hostage,
02:38every 48 of the hostages are home. Thank you so much. Blessed be the peacemakers.
02:44The hostages will come back. They're all coming back on Monday.
02:47All of them.
02:51And typical Trump, he's already focused on phase two.
02:55What is phase two? When does it begin?
02:57We'll talk about that because you sort of know what phase two is, but we will. There will be
03:02disarming. There will be pullbacks. There will be a lot of things happening. You can't live right
03:06now in Gaza. The place is a horrible situation. Nobody's ever seen anything like it. So yeah,
03:13we're going to create better conditions for people.
03:16That's an ambitious goal. And the president says, don't worry. He's not getting us into the Bush
03:21era nation building business. This is about securing a lasting peace, which will be better
03:27for America in the long run. Look, let's face it. Trump keeps winning. By getting this deal done,
03:33he proved not just the skeptics abroad wrong, but the chorus of naysayers here as well.
03:40The two state solution is the only way to achieve a just and lasting peace.
03:47Joe Biden is fighting for peace in the Middle East, is fighting to end the hostilities between
03:55Israel and Gaza. It's Joe Biden that's standing for peace and a lasting peace at that. And it's
04:02the Republicans that frankly would stoke the flames of war in the Middle East.
04:07We're going through that kind of crisis, I think, now in the Middle East. There are a lot of decisions
04:11that have to be made. I don't think Trump is capable of making the decisions.
04:16Oh, I was hoping my staff found that soundbite. I love it, John Bolton. Eat your words.
04:21Now, all of those seasoned pros in diplomacy and foreign affairs, they spent decades bungling
04:29things in the Middle East. But Trump assembled a group of really smart people who figured it out.
04:35Now, what they might have lacked in foreign policy experience, they made up for in drive and common
04:41sense. I kept thinking this all day long. Isn't it a relief after four long years of Antony Blinken
04:48and the auto pen to have a president capable of great things with the dream team hammering out all
04:54the deal points? Obviously, the president of the United States, a New York real estate billionaire,
05:00one of the most famous New Yorkers in the world, has a lot of interaction with a lot of people who are
05:04very pro-Israel. I think that was an important set of experiences and life experiences that he
05:09brought to the table. He also, of course, knew one of the most famous Palestinians in the world,
05:13Chuck Schumer. And I think without that background of knowledge, it would have been impossible to get
05:18us to this. Okay. I love that moment because it's nice to see a cabinet laughing with the president,
05:24not at him. So this was just such a monumental accomplishment that even the president's most
05:30vicious, venal critics had to admit, yeah, this deal was big.
05:36Joe Biden could never do that. And Donald Trump was able to do it and did it at the decisive moment
05:44when he said, essentially, this war must end and Israel cannot annex the West Bank, which many
05:50right-wing Israelis wanted. It is a remarkable achievement. He has done this through diplomacy,
05:55pressure, and the sheer force of his personality and persistence. Even if someone with whom you
06:01disagree about 99 things does the 100 really well, you should say so. And so all credit to President
06:11Trump. Hell has frozen over. Now, as for the few diehard Trump haters claiming that he did this
06:18just to get the Nobel Peace Prize, just stop. You're so embarrassing yourselves.
06:22With so many lives on the line for so long, Trump has bragging rights, period.
06:29Nobody in history has solved eight wars in a period of nine months. And I've stopped eight wars. So
06:37that's never happened before. But they'll have to do what they do. Whatever they do is fine. I know
06:43this. I didn't do it for that. I did it because I saved a lot of lives.
06:46Here with us is Robert Greenway, the architect of the Abraham Accords. Robert, this is so big.
06:53I've been smiling all day long. And this is just crossing the wires. The U.S. is sending about 200
06:59troops to Israel to support and monitor Gaza. Is that a good move?
07:06Well, it's great to be with you. And thanks for having me. And like you and many others,
07:11I've been smiling at the news since it was announced. Look, we don't know the details yet
07:16of what an international peacekeeping or observing force would do, what a U.S. role would be.
07:21It's not a surprise that the U.S. would put additional assets on the ground to ensure that
07:25the transition of remains and hostages takes place. And so until I think we know the details of
07:30what they'll be doing, I think we can side with the president and cast on his judgment
07:35and recognize that it's unlikely they'll be on the ground in Gaza, but supporting rather
07:39an international effort. Robert, a lot of people say that phase two
07:44with rebuilding and figuring out who's going to run Gaza is going to be much more complex.
07:51Nevertheless, Hamas has no leverage now with the hostages being released. That was the sword.
07:57They were hanging over everyone and everything. So in the end, phase two, how do you perceive it's
08:04going to go? Well, you're right. In a sense, some of the most difficult things will follow the
08:11transfer, but the loss of leverage, the gathering of an international community to support the deal
08:16really forced Hamas's hand and allowed this to happen. President Trump and the team deserve all
08:20the credit, of course. The next few steps after the transfer will be among the most difficult.
08:25Look, we haven't seen it happen in Lebanon where technocrats were supposed to take charge of the
08:29government there and Hezbollah has not yet surrendered control. I don't know that the
08:34same will happen here, but having the hostages return and losing that leverage then opens up a
08:39broad vista of accountability mechanisms that could be in place if they fail to make that transition.
08:45And of course, reconstruction can't occur unless technocrats come in and some form of security
08:49is established. Now, Robert, I've heard on social media conservatives complaining that this is
08:56Trump's nation building exercise. Why is that not correct?
09:04Well, I think we've seen him rail against that since his campaign in 2016 and ever since. We have
09:10years to evaluate what he's done abroad. And in no sense of the word has he involved us in,
09:16supported or expanded nation building. Exactly the opposite. So I think it would be inconsistent
09:21with his statement and his actions. And I think we all know that that's not the case here. Look,
09:26he's the president that's introduced peace and ended conflict, eight, according to his account.
09:31And it's a remarkable achievement. We haven't seen any nation building and I don't think there's any
09:35evidence of it to occur in Gaza.
09:36Now, Robert, you worked with Jared Kushner tirelessly on the Abraham Accords. No one thought that was
09:45possible, by the way. And you all pulled that off. Explain how that experience that he had with you
09:52and working side by side with you helped him and Whitcoff together on this jaunt across the Middle East
09:59and also working with Turkey, Indonesia. The president gave all of them credit today. How important was that
10:05initial experience? Well, look, it was a privilege for me to watch Jared and the president and other
10:12members of the team in action. And I learned a tremendous amount watching him and the president
10:17see clearly what others could not. They listened to all opinions. They evaluated judgments, but they
10:23prized facts first and foremost. And so they saw the reality shifting on the ground and they were able
10:29to implement and chart a path through it. That led to the brokering of the Abraham Accords.
10:33And Jared was principal in executing that and the president's direction. And so now I think what
10:38we're seeing is exactly the same. We're building on the foundations that they built and we're using
10:43the relationships that all of them have nurtured over the last few decades. And now it's bearing
10:47fruit. And I think now we'll also see an expansion of the accords. Robert, yes or no? Will he get the
10:53Nobel Prize or will the committee do what the committee does and keep hating Trump?
10:58It's a great question. I'm beginning to think the Nobel Prize is an insult, but if it's not,
11:04he certainly deserved it the first term. He's more than deserved it now.
11:08All right, Robert, great to see you. Thanks for joining us tonight.
11:11So the Gaza, the Israel agreement is, as we said, peace deal number eight for President Trump.
11:16So which one will be number nine? And how will the president get that one done?
11:21If you look at the people, you know, is Russia, Ukraine? I think we'll do that too.
11:26We've a lot of reasons for them to do it. And I think they'll be coming to the table pretty soon.
11:33But this was this is the biggest of them all. This is a big one. Although I think India
11:37and Pakistan is very big. Two nuclear nations. I made that. I did that based on trade and
11:43because of the tariffs. If we didn't have tariffs, you wouldn't have been able to do it. But I said,
11:46if you if you guys are going to fight, I'm putting 100 percent tariffs on each of you
11:50and they immediately stop fighting. That's the power of the purse here with me now. Treasury
11:56Secretary Scott Besson. Mr. Secretary, thanks for joining us. There's already sanctions on Russia.
12:01The president urged all the NATO countries to place tariffs on China if it continues to buy Russian
12:07oil. What more can we do financially to put the squeeze on Russia here?
12:11Laura, good to be with you. And we're doing a lot on Russia. But the real culprits here
12:18have been the China and India in terms of buying Russian oil. They are keeping the Russian war
12:25machine going. And we put a 25 percent Russian oil tariff on India. And I think soon we're going
12:34to see a rebalancing where they're buying less Russian oil, more American oil. And if we were to do the
12:39same thing on China, I think the war would end quickly. But we need our NATO or European allies
12:46to join us. Its sources and uses and the source of the Russian money is this oil and China's the
12:53leading buyer. So it's ag and oil. And do you think in your estimation, you've run all the numbers,
12:58would this war be possible now were it not for China and India's involvement in those purchases?
13:05Absolutely not. So they're keeping the war going. They're keeping the war going. But as I said,
13:11it's my strong belief that India is going to start rebalancing over the next few weeks and months.
13:17And we will see a diminishment of Russian oil in favor of U.S. oil. Explain to our viewers what is
13:23going on with Argentina, because the U.S. Treasury today directly purchased Argentine pesos and finalized
13:32this 20 billion currency swap framework with Argentina's central bank. So the intent, I guess,
13:37is to provide assistance from the Latin American country's economic turmoil. It's clear how
13:43Argentina benefits from this deal. What do we get out of it? We get a lot out of it. Argentina is a beacon
13:50in Latin America. President Malay has done the right thing. He is trying to break a hundred years
13:57a bad cycle in Argentina. He is also a great ally for the U.S. He'll be coming to the Oval Office next
14:07Tuesday. And he is committed to getting China out of Argentina. They're all over the place in Latin
14:15America. And when people say to me, how is this not America first? I'll tell you why it's not. Do you
14:20want to be shooting at more gunboats like in Venezuela? We do not want a failed state.
14:25So this isn't a bailout? Sorry, it's not a bailout at all. There's no money being transferred. The ESF
14:32has never lost money. It's not going to lose money here. I've been doing, I was in the investment
14:38business, mostly currencies, for 40 years. You're supposed to buy low, sell high. And the Argentine
14:45peso is undervalued. We're going to have an election in Argentina the 26th of this month. We think
14:53President Mele will do quite well. And he is putting the Peronist path behind them. And people
15:00in the U.S., especially on the left, they are willing to, you know, Senator Warren tried to put
15:08a bill in front of the Senate that the Exchange Stabilization Fund could not bail out Argentina,
15:13which I think is rich because she's an American Peronist. You know, don't cry for me, Massachusetts.
15:19And when Joe Biden was in office, what was it? What was their idea of foreign aid? It was
15:25circumcisions in Malawi and drag shows in Central America. So we are going to use Argentina as an
15:32example. We back up our allies. And the Obama administration missed a big opportunity in the
15:39eight years he was in as many Latin American governments went center right. So we are seeing
15:45Argentina, Paraguay, Ecuador, Bolivia, I think Colombia in the next election. So it is.
15:53This is key for us. China is all over Central America, Latin America, Mexico, South America.
15:59It's critical that we maintain really good relations and that these are strong economic
16:04capitalist systems, is it not? It is. And we also saw China put on more rare earth export
16:11controls last night. And Argentina is rich in rare earths and rich in uranium. And I think they are
16:18committed to U.S. private companies coming in and being good partners with them. So China is trying
16:23to put more export controls on minerals, rare earths, heavy, heavy rare earths, heavy and medium
16:28rare earths, some other things related technologies. That's their usual leverage play before the big trade
16:36negotiations, correct? Well, that and holding the American soybean farmers hostage. They politicized
16:42these soybean purchases. And most of them have gone to Brazil. And, you know, we're not going to let that
16:48happen. And I believe that the Chinese will have to come back at the end of the season and buy soybeans.
16:54But in the meantime, we just give $20 billion to the farmers. And why have that give them that leverage at all
17:00in those deals? Well, we would have made an announcement this week if it weren't for the
17:06government shutdown, if Chuck Schumer would end the Schumer shutdown, we would have announced an
17:12ag program to bridge our farmers until the next season. And that will be through direct subsidies
17:20and through the Farm Credit Bureau, because it's important that our farmers get credit. So for next
17:26year's planning season. Food security. Your old friend, Jamie Dimon, had some comments about where
17:32the stock market might be going. This is what he said. I am far more worried about that than others.
17:38So if you said, I'm not talking about probabilities, I would give it a higher probability than I think
17:43is probably priced in the market and by others. So if the market's pricing in 10%, I would price in,
17:48I would say it's more like 30. And I'm not saying that. I'm not saying. Yeah, I'm not saying next year.
17:53Because the timing of these things is almost impossible to figure out.
17:57All right, Mr. Secretary, this is a game. We see, we hear these guys on this stuff all the time,
18:02but 10%, 30%, what do we take away from that? Well, what Jamie Dimon has learned on Wall Street,
18:09there are two things you're never supposed to do at the same time, predict the price and the timing.
18:14So, you know, he's saying we're going to go down. He doesn't say when. Could it be 2028? Could it be
18:20next month? We don't know. But what this administration is doing is laying solid economic
18:25ground. And under President Trump's leadership, Wall Street and Main Street can both do well.
18:33Obviously, if you're the CEO of the world's largest or America's largest bank, what you care about is
18:39Wall Street. And we care about both. Main Street and Wall Street. All these people naysayers. Are
18:44they shorting the market? I don't think so. Mr. Secretary, great to see you. Thanks for coming on.
18:48We can't wait to follow what happens in Korea coming up in a couple of weeks. All right,
18:52coming up, Tish has to go fish for a lawyer. How the Democrat AG is responding to facing federal
19:00charges next. As I said, it's like Christmas morning, a major update to a story the angle
19:07broke months ago. The New York AG who thought should ride a Trump conviction all the way to
19:13the governor's mansion is now under indictment herself in the Eastern District of Virginia
19:18for mortgage fraud. She's charged with one count of bank fraud and one count of false
19:22statements to a financial institution. She claimed a property in Virginia was a primary residence
19:27when she applied for a mortgage. Oops. Well, moments after the news broke, Tish tried to fish
19:33for sympathy. Today, I'm not fearful. I'm fearless. And as my faith teaches me, no weapon formed against
19:44me shall prosper. We will fight these baseless charges aggressively. This is nothing more than
19:50a continuation of the president's desperate weaponization of our justice system.
19:56It's like a Bond villain. Now, what would she know about weaponization?
20:01I believe that the president of these United States can be indicted for criminal offenses.
20:06No one is above the law, including this illegitimate president.
20:11Oh, we're going to definitely assume we're going to be a real pain in the a**. He's got to know my
20:15name personally. President Trump cannot avoid justice in the great state of New York.
20:20The president of these United States is not above the law.
20:26Yeah, we get it. Here with me, Mike Davis, founder and CEO of the Article 3 Project,
20:30Jonathan Fahey, former federal prosecutor. He was also assistant U.S. attorney in the Eastern
20:35District of Virginia where these charges were filed. Both you gentlemen worked together. You were a
20:38junior lawyer back then, Mike, and you were like five minutes ago, and you were his basic boss,
20:43which is so cool. I can't believe that. Anyway, Democrats are saying, Jonathan, this is a minor
20:48issue. It's a fishing expedition on Tish, political payback. But is she in trouble?
20:53By reading this indictment, I really think so because it said specifically she signed something
20:59saying this would not be used for a rental property or anything else. It would be used by her. And in
21:04fact, she rented it out. And the worst part about it is she made about $18,000 because of doing so
21:11because she got a lower rate. So this isn't some totally insignificant case. I am interested in all
21:17of her statements there or kind of, you know, all the just nonsense. But what is the defense? Is she
21:23going to say she actually didn't rent it out? Or is she going to say she lived there? She's got a
21:27problem here, at least by the face of this indictment. Mike, a lot of those neighbors didn't
21:31seem to see her a lot. It turned out, right? She wasn't in town a lot. Maybe they just missed her.
21:36Well, because under New York statute, the New York attorney general has to reside
21:41in New York. So I don't know how you can reside in New York and also have this by locate. Yeah.
21:47I mean, it's it's amazing to me. Remember, she went after President Trump under a mortgage fraud
21:52theory when President Trump paid back sophisticated Wall Street banks on time, as agreed in full
21:58with interest. And Tish James waged her lawfare, tried to bankrupt. How many segments do you think
22:03we all did on the on just the hunting of Donald Trump? I mean, I don't even countless segments.
22:08So she weaponized the New York legal system against him. This is seems if it's true,
22:16seems cut and dry case. Obviously, she's innocent until proven guilty. But so I don't know what
22:20she's really crying about here. But I want to go to a ruling that just was handed down
22:24in Illinois. A Biden appointee, April Perry, issued a partial temporary restraining order,
22:30a TRO on the National Guard being deployed to Chicago. We're still waiting to find out which
22:35portions of the state's request were denied and when the TRO will take effect. But 200 Texas National
22:42Guard troops are already on the ground there, Jonathan. So what happens next?
22:47Trump administration is going to appeal this and they're going to win. And here's why,
22:50because the on the Seventh Circuit, are they going to win at this? I think they'll win at the
22:55Seventh Circuit or the Supreme Court, because a couple of reasons the the judge is based on this
23:00ruling on what the people in Chicago are saying. These are the same people that are using their
23:05authority, both Pritzker and Johnson, to stop the enforcement of federal law. So they're going
23:10to rely on their their judgment. And Pritzker doing it, you know, saying these are my people.
23:15You can't go through me. And I don't think he means literally. I think he means with his authority.
23:19You need a backhoe. Yeah, exactly. And then Brandon Johnson has an executive order that's not only
23:24unconstitutional, it's illegal, meaning anyone following it would be violating federal law.
23:28So they're taking their word for what's going on on the street. President Trump has every right,
23:33and not only a right, a responsibility to enforce immigration law. And they're not letting them do
23:38it. They're trying to prevent it. Mike, this is being challenged in Portland and obviously now in
23:43Chicago. Is the president on strong legal ground here? Very strong. He has power as the chief executive
23:50officer and the commander in chief under Article two of our Constitution. He also has federal statutory
23:56duty to protect federal law enforcement. It's going to get worse unless this is handled,
24:01correct? I mean, it seems like this is going to grow. This is virus of Antifa like or Antifa
24:06protest, anti-ice protests. And people are I mean, I fear people are going to die in these protests if
24:12it keeps going. Yeah, exactly. People are going to die. And the worst thing about it is we have
24:17politicians like Pritzker who's putting his presidential ambitions ahead of public safety
24:22of his citizens. Shameful. Mike and Jonathan, the dream team here. Thank you both very much.
24:28And coming up, the lefty leader who just launched a rebellion against ICE.
24:36Trump targets massive investments in first Middle East trip. President Trump's Persian Gulf
24:44tour is his first major foreign visit of his second term and comes amid regional war and nuclear talks.
24:51President Donald Trump is embarking this week on a high-stakes tour of the Persian Gulf region,
24:58targeting business deals and strategic partnerships with three oil-rich nations,
25:04Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar. The trip marks Trump's first major foreign visit
25:11of his new term and comes as nuclear negotiations with Iran drag on and as war continues between Israel
25:17and Palestinian terror organizations, Hamas, in the Gaza Strip. While business in the official focus,
25:25the backdrop is anything but calm. White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt described the mission
25:32as part of Trump's broader vision that extremism is defeated through commerce and cultural exchanges.
25:39Under former President Joe Biden, U.S. relations with the Gulf states cooled, particularly after Biden
25:45has been vowed to make Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman a pariah over the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal.
25:52But Trump has reversed course embracing a more transactional approach that has worn ties with regional leaders.
26:00The overall goal here is that the United States is reminding our Middle East allies that we're here to stay,
26:07but we're here to stay, said Greg Rowan, Executive Director of the Middle East Forum.
26:12We're here to promote our joint interests rather than the abandonment policies under the previous administration.
26:20Big money, big expectations. Saudi Arabia has already pledged $600 billion in U.S. investments,
26:28spanning weapon purchases, technology transfers, artificial intelligence and the stock market.
26:35Trump has said he believes the Saudis may ultimately commit up to $1 trillion.
26:40While Saudi leaders aim to diversify their economy away from oil,
26:44those massive investments still depend on oil revenues,
26:47which could be threatened by Trump's push to lower global energy prices.
26:51In addition to economic deals, Trump and bin Salam are expected to discuss a possible civil nuclear program
26:58and expanded defense cooperation, such as agreements were once linked to a potential Abraham Accord-style normalization
27:05between Saudi Arabia and Israel.
27:09But Riyadh has made clear it won't recognize Israel unless Palestinian statehood is on the table,
27:15something Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin has strongly opposed.
27:19No stop in Israel is scheduled during Trump's tour.
27:26Israeli normalization in any Saudi U.S. project is an outdated option,
27:30said Saudi geopolitical analysts.
27:34The second Trump administration is doubling down on its strategically autonomous Middle East policy.
27:39In a possible goodwill gesture ahead of the trip,
27:42Ham has released Israeli-American hostage Eden Alexander
27:47and moved Trump called Monumental in the push to end the conflict in Gaza.
27:53And as the UAE seeks to boost its tie with the U.S.
27:56and become a global AI leader by 2030,
27:58it will need American micro-trips.
28:00The UAE has gone even further than the Saudis, promising $1.4 trillion in the U.S.
28:07Investments over the next decade focus on AI, semiconductors, manufacturing and energy.
28:14Biden has tightened curbs on AI exports to keep such technologies out of the hands of adversaries
28:19at a time when China drew closer to Middle Eastern states, especially the UAE.
28:23On Thursday, he announced Trump would rescind the Biden error restrictions.
28:32Itinerary? Three days, three power centers.
28:36Trump's whirlwind golf visit begins Tuesday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia,
28:40where he'll headline the U.S. Saudi investment form alongside Saudi Arabian ministers,
28:45White House, Kryptoska, David Sachs and other business leaders.
28:49On Wednesday, he'll attend the Gulf Cooperation Council meeting before flying to Qatar for talks
28:54from Emir Tamin bin Hamad al-Tani and a visit to the U.S. military's Al-Urad airbase.
29:01Thursday's final stop is Abu Dhabi, where Trump will meet UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan.
29:09The Qataris are pulling out all the stops to impress.
29:12They've overturned the use of a Royal Boeing 747A typically reserved for the Qatari royal family to serve as Air Force One.
29:21Since being named a major non-NATO ally by Biden in 2022, Qatar has deepened its tights to the U.S.,
29:29hosting American troops and mediating sensitive negotiations, including ongoing back-channel talks between Israel and Gaza.
29:35Doha also maintains close contact with Syria's new president, Ahmed al-Shahra, who ousted Bashar al-Assad
29:44and is now seeking sanctions relief and normalised ties with the West.
29:48Regional leaders will have an opportunity to address the situation directly with the president, said regional expert Jonathan Baiss.
29:55Trump is the only man that can lead the way.
29:57Iran watching closely.
30:01While a fourth round of Iran nuclear talks in Oman over the weekend failed to produce a breakthrough,
30:07Tehran is expected to keep a close eye on Trump's Gulf meetings.
30:10Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi made unannounced visits to both Saudi Arabia and Qatar ahead of Trump's arrival,
30:20likely in the hopes of passing messages through those governments to Washington.
30:24But all three of Trump's hosts, nations, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar remain wary of Iran's ambitions.
30:34The region needs to openly address the problem of the IRGC, said Baiss, referring to Iran's elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
30:43The IRGC is trying to undermine every single country in the region.
30:47The IRGC is currently recruiting units in the region.
30:48The IRGC are now forming the US whose force is not a liquidation for all of the oil,
30:50around the oil, and the natural oil.
30:51The IRGC is now forming the EUF and the US.
30:52The IRGC is now forming the EUF.
30:53The IRGC's now forming the EUF and the government and its welfare.
30:55The IRGC is now forming the eastern central region.
30:56The IRGC are forming the EUF- Нам
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