Trump hopes his Mideast travels will produce allies and billions — but there was one big snub
Khaled is more than just a taxi driver; he’s about to become my first impression of Saudi Arabia. He’s waiting for me just outside the automatic customs doors of Riyadh’s King Khalid International Airport, radiating the quiet confidence of a man who’s been standing in that same spot since sunrise, though I’ll never know how long he’s actually been there. I like a hustler who doesn’t speak my language. We settle into his white minivan as I realize it’s a casual 104 degrees outside and still climbing.
There are English signs everywhere, but Khaled speaks maybe five words of it and doesn’t seem like he reads a word. And so, I punch the hotel address into his GPS, and off we go.
Within moments, and in doing my due diligence as a press corps colleague ahead of the US presidential visit, I hit him with the philosophical icebreaker of the decade: “What do you think of Trump?”
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