Trump Declares the 'Neocon' Era Over
The president’s speech in Saudi Arabia promised a new course for U.S. policy in the Middle East. Can he deliver?

President Donald Trump has a vision of a "great transformation" in the Middle East. But it's not the transformation that American leaders have talked about bringing at gunpoint. At his Tuesday speech at a U.S.-Saudi investment summit in Riyadh, the president denounced the failures of "interventionists" and promised a future "where people of different nations, religions, and creeds are building cities together, not bombing each other out of existence."
Those words came with action. In his speech, Trump promised to lift all U.S. sanctions on Syria, and the day after, he shook hands with new Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa, who had a $10 million bounty on his head from the U.S. government just six months ago. In the weeks leading up to the summit, Trump ended the U.S. war in Yemen and negotiated the release of the last American in Hamas captivity. It remains to be seen whether he can follow through.
Riyadh was only the first stop in Trump's planned four-day tour of the Persian Gulf. He also plans to stop in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. In his speech, Trump praised the oil-rich Arab monarchies of the Gulf—and used their success to attack the architects of past U.S. policy.
"The gleaming marvels of Riyadh and Abu Dhabi were not created by the so-called nation builders, neocons, or liberal nonprofits like those who spent trillions and trillions of dollars failing to develop Kabul, Baghdad, and so many other cities," Trump said. "Instead, the birth of a modern Middle East has been brought by the people of the region themselves, the people that are right here, the people that have lived here all their lives, developing your own sovereign countries, pursuing your own unique visions, and charting your own destinies in your own way."
He also offered Iran "a much better path toward a far better and more hopeful future," emphasizing that "some of the closest friends of the United States of America are nations we fought wars against in generations past." Although Trump threatened Iran with more economic sanctions if it didn't accept a deal, he didn't bring out his usual threats to bomb the country.
The Trump administration is currently negotiating with Iran over its nuclear program, and briefed the media that it was "encouraged" by the latest meeting in Oman last week. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi called the negotiations "more serious and more direct" than before.
If Trump's brief war in Yemen was a dry run for war with Iran, his outreach to Syria demonstrated his eagerness to turn enemies into friends. There were two issues at play. One was that Congress and the White House had imposed intense economic sanctions on Syria designed to weaken the rule of Bashar al-Assad. Sharaa's new government inherited that embargo despite overthrowing Assad by force.
The second issue was that Sharaa, formerly known as Abu Mohammed al-Golani, was himself a former commander in Al Qaeda. (As Trump joked, Sharaa has a "very strong past.") There was intense debate in Washington about whether to continue pursuing economic pressure. In the end, Trump decided to offer Syria a clean slate. During his handshake, Trump asked Sharaa to join an alliance with Israel, deport Palestinian rebels, and assume responsibility for accused Islamic State supporters currently being held by Kurdish-led rebels, according to a White House statement.
"This is good for Israel, having a relationship like I have with these countries," Trump told reporters on the Wednesday flight from Saudi Arabia to Qatar.
But the Israeli government and its supporters are pretty nervous about being left behind by Trump's new policies. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R–S.C.) stated in a press release on Tuesday that he has "been in close contact with Israel, as they are extremely concerned about the state of play in Syria." And Trump's peace deal in Yemen does not forbid Houthi forces from attacking Israel, which they did in the middle of Trump's speech.
Perhaps most concerning for Israel, the Trump administration has begun direct talks with Hamas, via Arab Americans for Trump founder Bishara Bahbah. The U.S. did not inform Israel, which only discovered this backchannel through spies, according to Axios. Although Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed on Tuesday that there is "no way we will stop the war," even if more hostages are released, Trump said in his Tuesday speech that he would "work to get that war ended as quickly as possible."
On Monday, Hamas agreed to release Edan Alexander, an American teenager from New Jersey captured while fighting for the Israeli army. Alexander "wouldn't be there if it weren't for us, he wouldn't be living right now, probably none of the hostages would be living right now," Trump said during the Wednesday flight. Saudi Prince Faisal bin Farhan, who serves as foreign minister, told reporters on Wednesday that he was expecting "very courageous decisions" from Trump on "resolving the broader issues of Palestine."
The prince added that he "fully supports nuclear talks between America and Iran and hopes for positive results." Trump also joked in his speech that lifting the sanctions on Syria was one of the "things I do for" Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman.
Trump has always been close to the Gulf monarchies. Saudi Arabia has invested $2 billion into a business run by Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Just before the summit, Qatar gifted the White House a $400 million luxury airplane. In the past, these states were an influence for more U.S. intervention. They used much of their influence trying to incite Washington against their mutual enemies, such as Iran and Syria, and against each other.
But the Gulf states' outlook has changed. On one hand, they're satisfied with the victories they've won so far; the Syrian government was overthrown and Iran was cut down to size. On the other hand, the success of Yemeni and Iranian missile attacks has demonstrated that even direct U.S. protection can't shield the Gulf states from the cost of further war. And the Gulf leaders seem genuinely scared that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could spill over to threaten their rule.
Of course, the Gulf states still fundamentally want U.S. protection, despite their shifts on some issues. Along with his peaceful gestures, Trump signed a new $142 billion weapons sale to Saudi Arabia. The next day, he publicly signed off on a previously agreed $2 billion drone sale to Qatar. While Trump mocked the "Western interventionists flying people in beautiful planes" to the Middle East, these arms deals historically bring hundreds of U.S. military advisers and defense contractors to the region—along with unspoken promises of more direct U.S. military assistance.
Before Trump soured on the Yemeni war, Saudi Arabia was reportedly egging on U.S. escalation. The influence that the kingdom is now using to encourage diplomacy could easily be used to encourage war again.
After all, former President Barack Obama made the same promises as Trump early in his presidency, telling an audience in Egypt that there would be "a new beginning between the United States and Muslims around the world, one based on mutual interest and mutual respect." Over the next eight years, he ended up permanently entrenching U.S. military involvement in the region.
"In a meaningful way, this is Trump delivering Obama's Cairo speech…only this time in Riyadh, and with notable tweaks, of course. But at its core, the message is much the same," wrote New Lines Magazine Editor in Chief Hassan Hassan. The only question is whether Trump can succeed where his predecessor failed.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Sarah Palin's Buttplug hardest hit.
Thought's and prayers for him and the staff of Bulwark.
Trump seems to have this crazy idea that if the US would stop trying to tell the world how to run its affairs and install puppet governments in every place that resisted, people might like us better. What a nut. We need to get the adults back in charge.
Which is why the deep state is fighting to hard to stop him still, including the IC.
Posted a link to Shellenberger and Benz about this very thing in the roundup.
Not just him. Pretty sure half the Reason staff won't concede a single point in this article. And for some reason Sarc and QWERTY didn't race to be the first to comment on this one. Can't imagine why.
Qatar's generous offer to weave the entire text of The Art Of The Deal into a one-page Persian carpet could turn Mar A Lago into a tax write off as a Presidential Library.
Despite the lie you are trying to push, the plane is being given to the air force where it will stay as an Air Force 1 for successive administrations until it is retired.
When it is retired it has been proposed to become a static display at the Trump presidential library.
The carpet would still be pretty cool though.
Not what Trump said:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2eylpdg9po
Trump has said the plane will go directly to his presidential library after he leaves office, and that he "wouldn't be using it" after his presidency.
So what you're saying is that Boeing won't be able to get the contracted plane done in time? Because 2028/29 is when it's supposed to be done.
And if the plane is decommissioned as a result of that, it's not going to be difficult for Trump to get AMARG and the Air Force Museum to sign off on the aircraft release.
As this aircraft would outweigh both 767's flown on 9-11, it should not be left parked behind Mar A Lago for an indefinite number of spring breaks to come.
That's exactly what Trump said. What you're doing is trying to imply from Trump's statement that it's "immediately" after he leaves office, which he didn't say and the White House Press Secretary's office says otherwise.
So why are you doing that? (Never mind, I know exactly why)
Because Trump is trying to cut a real estate deal for the library just north of PB, dummy.
Yeah, you're going to have to explain your inference to everyone and tell us how it's not a non-sequitur.
>>If Trump's brief war in Yemen was a dry run for war with Iran
bully! bombs fell on targets enemies gave up no Americans died.
It never occurs to reason that dealing with the Houthis might make war with Iran less likely. Nope. Peace through strength and deterrence is just crazy talk.
the right imploding over war with Iran is cute and sad because the "no boots on the ground!" crowd is yelling past the "all we need is bombs!" crowd and they're saying the same thing.
We couldn't actually find a way not to go to war with Iran. Only a commie rat bastard would do that.
Reason writers want free trade but enforcing freedom of the seas from piracy that makes free trade possible makes them squeamish.
Reason writers want free trade
Not to you specifically but "check your premises". Reason writers don't want free trade. They want free shit and as long as they can pretend that it came from their local urban garden or fair trade barista, and not Trump or some filthy dusty, they don't care how they get it. As long as Big Brother doesn't charge them for their chocolate ration, they don't give a shit.
I know it. Can you imagine people wanting to buy stuff from foreigners without having to pay punitive import taxes? How dare they! Taxing stuff to make it more expensive is patriotic! Not only that, but self sufficiency and economic isolation is the path the riches! Just look at North Korea!
Keep the ignorance alive buddy.
Once again your conflicting taxes wuth costs. Once again you're ignoring reality. Once again you're ignoring the actual drivers of costs including actions from other countries.
You, qb, stg, and Eric should start a group therapy chat.
Still boggles my mind seeing you cry about taxes yet demanding higher income taxes.
How much do you spend monthly at temu?
Poor sarcbot.
Does Trump even use the strongest tool he has, hashtag diplomacy? Worked for Obama. Oh. And bribing countries.
William Owens died in Yemen under Trump's command. Just saying.
my sincerest apologies. Long live William Owens!
He has certainly shown himself to be less of a warboner than the previous presidents of the 21st century.
Trump can succeed if he drives the neocons into the trash bin of history. He's done a pretty good job of that inside his administration but the neocon Republicans in the senate are digging in.
Shame Lindsey Graham didn’t get aids and die.
Geez. I thought I was salty.
I have a healthy hatred of people that get sexual pleasure from dropping bombs on people with my money.
I didn't say you were wrong. Just salty.
This is the Trump I voted for. World peace may be more aspirational than achievable but the message is clear, we want everyone on the planet even our former enemies to prosper, and peace is the logical step forward. And if you can't give up your ancient animosities don't ask us to save you.
Trump just can't stop being the warmongeringest warmonger to ever monger war. It must be at least WW 16 by now! I died 2 times just today from all of this war.
"If Trump's brief war in Yemen was a dry run for war with Iran"
Yemen attacked Americans and American shipping and so America attacked back. That's not a war and is completely legal.
Have you asked 47 to autopen a letter of Marque and Reprisal for the Arabian Sea on the back side of your Trump University Diploma?
He's already signed the front.
Imagine having a $10 million bounty on your ass issued by US Government.
Imagine being an Al Qaeda leader and realizing that you are only worth a $10 bounty. And no one even bothered to collect on.
Imagine getting paid 50 cents a post. Oh right, you don’t have to imagine.
I am dumber for having read this reply.
the president denounced the failures of "interventionists" and promised a future "where people of different nations, religions, and creeds are building cities together, not bombing each other out of existence."
Can we keep this version of Trump for a while?
Agreed. This part I like. The economic and culture war idiocy needs to stop, but this is exactly how we should be dealing with the world. Arms sales to allies who want to defend themselves against invaders and terrorists, sanctions on countries that are fomenting war, and repeal of those sanctions when the regime changes course (or loses power). There is a reason that carrot-and-stick has a winning track record.
Hallmarks of Trump foreign policy:
- Bribery
- Insulting allies and taking away what they had.
- Praising adversaries and giving them what they want.
- Violating treaties and agreements, some of which Trump negotiated.
- Incoherent trade policy.
- Declaring peace without even discussing it with the other side.
- More bribery.
- Threatening a war of aggression against your allies.
I will happily take the shitty neocons over Trump.
You left out "managed to avoid starting new wars"
He maintained the war in Afghanistan,m and negotiated a terrible withdrawal plan that others were left to implement, so he isn’t great. But this version I like. Here’s hoping he doesn’t change his mind.
The plan that would have left bases as the last bastion, during non fighting months, that al queda agreed to? That plan?
Liar.
He negotiated a great withdrawal and a lasting peace.
First your party sociopaths (and Liz Cheney) held it up in congress.
Then your dementia patient and his junta puppeteers threw the whole deal in the trash because orangemanbad, and said that they weren't going to do it.
Then they decided to just cut and run without even telling their allies ahead of time. Just suddenly "Surprise!" It was such a shit show that the British Parliament actually gave Biden a reprimand.
So don't you dare blame that fuckery on the deal Trump negotiated.
And you missed where he broke the deal with the Taliban by moving initially moving the withdrawal back to 9/11 so they could have a big victory spectacle on the anniversary, then moved it back up suddenly after the Taliban got pissed.
Wrong.
Leftists like war now.
I will happily take the shitty neocons over Trump.
LOL, yeah, we know. The Cheneys are your kind of people now.
Ok, less shitty than Cheney. But there are very few of those old style neocons left.
They call themselves nevertrumpers now.
You literally just said you’d take the neocons. Who the fuck do you think they are, lol.
Can’t even lie well.
But there are very few of those old style neocons left.
Neocons are neocons. There is no old or new style. I suspect you don't even know what a neocon is.
So if the neocon period is over why are we increasing the defense budget?
Because Trump is a principled constitutionalist who has no plans to get involved in any new conflicts, especially with China.
Quite right. Did you stop drinking?
The Great Power Competition strategy started before Trump took office.