'Basically yelling': Critics read between the lines in 'tired' Trump's Saudi speech
U.S. President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman pose for a group photo during the Saudi-U.S. Investment Forum, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2025. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

President Donald Trump is catching heat on social media for his speech a at business forum in Saudi Arabia Tuesday.

Trump covered a wide range of topics, including his wish that the Saudis would join the Abraham Accords and condemnation of Iran. Trump also announced an end to sanctions on Syria after the fall of Bashar al-Assad's government.

Journalist Aaron Rupar noted how Trump seemed weary, posting, "A tired sounding Trump in Saudi Arabia: "Now we're tariffing them. And uhhhhh, it's at a level nobody has seen. It's a level that's making us a very much different country and a very different Republican Party."

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The Director of London Global Strategy Institute, Mamoun Fandy, summarized the over-hour-long speech saying, “Trump politics is all personal. He showered the Saudi Crown Prince with praise, and it is obvious that the chemistry between the two men is unusual. Saudi American relations are likely to thrive during Trump’s presidency.”

Meanwhile, on Bluesky, Emissary Of Night criticized Trump for backtracking on his promise that the Saudis would join the Abraham Accords. He told his more than 30,000 followers, "Trump says it would be great for Saudi Arabia to join the Abraham Accords but that they'll ‘do it in [their] own time.’ A far cry away from his predictions last month that they'd join by the end of May."

Mandawi criticized Trump for by summing up the speech. They told their more than one thousand followers, "Trump is basically yelling ‘We are not a part of western democracy anymore!’ Isn't it obvious by the fact that his first foreign trip is to Saudi Arabia? Isn't it obvious by him accepting a plane from Qatar? Also, his tariff choices and his rhetoric about Canada and Greenland??"