When the Islamic world—which only views life & relations with non-muslims through the lens of sharia—sees the American president: call an Al Qaeda killer a “good guy”; engage in deals with 3 of the world’s leaders in the global Islamic Movement (Saudi, Qatar, Turkey); appointing… https://t.co/wFxJ9GqJM8
— John Guandolo (@JGuandolo54271) February 23, 2026
Here's the Al Queda killer that Trump called "a good guy."
SYRIA
President Trump meeting with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa in the Oval Office on Nov. 10, 2025.President Trump praised Syria President Ahmed al-Sharaa on Monday after the first-ever White House visit for a Damascus head of state — days after the US and United Nations removed sanctions on the onetime al Qaeda terrorist who formerly had a $10 million bounty on his head.
Trump engaged in deals with 3 of the world’s leaders in the global Islamic Movement: Saudi, Qatar, Turkey.
SAUDI ARABIA
The deals Trump secured during his trip will see Doha and Washington participate in agreements worth $1.2 trillion, according to the White House. This is in addition to economic deals totaling $243.5 billion, which include the sale of American-made aircraft to Qatar Airways.The White House also touted a defense deal that will "lock in Qatar’s procurement of state-of-the-art military equipment from two leading U.S. defense companies." The two countries also agreed to a multibillion-dollar agreement to strengthen their security partnership.
And TURKEY,
from Yahoo,
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump said on Thursday he believes Turkey will agree to his request to stop purchasing Russian oil and that he may lift U.S. sanctions on Ankara so it can buy advanced American F-35 jets.
Trump told reporters after his two hours of talks with Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan that their meeting was "very conclusive" on a variety of issues but offered no further details about an announcement he said would be made later.
Trump has been pressing European nations to stop purchases of Russian oil in exchange for his agreement to impose tough sanctions on Moscow to try to dry up funding for Russia's invasion of Ukraine.


No comments:
Post a Comment