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The Latest: Trump gears up for address to Muslim world

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The Latest on President Donald Trump’s first trip abroad (all times local) :
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) – The Latest on President Donald Trump’s first trip abroad (all times local) : 5: 01 p.m. The leaders of Arab and Muslim-majority countries are gathering to hear President Donald Trump speak in Saudi Arabia. The president is set to deliver a speech Sunday calling for unity across the Muslim world in the fight against terrorism. Excerpts released by the White House show he’ll tell Muslim leaders that stamping out terror threats will require “honestly confronting the crisis of Islamist extremism and the Islamist terror groups it inspires.” The speech will be Trump’s first substantive remarks since he landed in the Middle East Saturday. He’s on a five-stop tour that will include stops in Israel and Italy. ____ 3: 07 p.m. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has instructed all his Cabinet ministers to attend the official greeting for President Donald Trump, after some of them planned on skipping the event. The move Sunday is the latest in a series of last-minute schedule changes to a presidential visit far different from the meticulously-planned operations of the past. Trump’s arrival was initially planned to include speeches and greetings with a long list of dignitaries on the tarmac of Israel’s international airport. Later, the White House asked for a brief ceremony to avoid the heat. As a result, most ministers were planning to skip the event. The Haaretz newspaper reports that Netanyahu fumed at his ministers and ordered them all to attend Monday’s ceremony. Netanyahu is eager to make a good impression on Trump during the president’s first trip abroad. ____ 2: 32 p.m. President Donald Trump will tell Muslim leaders that stamping out terror threats will require “honestly confronting the crisis of Islamist extremism and the Islamist terror groups it inspires.” That’s according to excerpts released by the White House ahead of Trump’s speech Sunday calling for unity across the Muslim world in the fight against terrorism. Trump will tell an audience of leaders of Muslim-majority countries that he is “not here to lecture” and “not here to tell other people how to live, what to do, who to be, or how to worship.” He’ll say that, “This is not a battle between different faiths, different sects, or different civilizations, ” but “a battle between good and evil.” Trump often used anti-Islamic rhetoric during his presidential campaign and repeatedly stressed the need to say the words “radical Islamic terrorism.” That phrase was missing from a draft of the speech obtained by The Associated Press last week. ____ 1: 43 p.m. President Donald Trump is thanking Kuwait for its help in the fight against terror – and is pledging to update the public on their efforts soon. Trump says during a meeting with the Emir of Kuwait on Sunday that he’ll hold a news conference in two weeks to discuss the battle against the Islamic State group. He’s also praising the U. S.’s relationship with Kuwait and, in particular, the wealthy nation’s frequent purchases of American military equipment. The Emir of Kuwait also invited the president to visit. Trump has been holding a whirlwind of meetings with Arab leaders in Saudi Arabia in the hours before he delivers a speech on how the Islamic world can help fight extremism. ____ 1: 16 p.m. A senior Israeli Cabinet minister has voiced concern about the U. S.’s $110 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia. Yuval Steinitz, a confidant of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said Israeli officials will have to “hear the explanations” of the deal when President Donald Trump arrives in Israel on Monday. Steinitz says it is crucial that Israel maintain its military edge over its Arab neighbors, despite warming ties with Sunni Arab countries like Saudi Arabia. Steinitz says, “This is not a country that we have diplomatic relations with” and that it “is still a hostile country and nobody knows what the future holds.” Steinitz says the deal is “definitely something that should trouble us.” ____ 12: 36 p.m. First lady Melania Trump paid a visit to the American International School in Riyadh on Sunday while her husband held a series of bilateral meetings with Arab leaders. The first lady delivered Dr. Seuss books to a pre-school classroom, spoke to sixth graders on a soccer field and clapped along to a rendition of “Lean on me” in the school’s library. She was joined by the Saudi education minister. It’s the first lady’s first visit to the country and her first experience representing the U. S. on a foreign stage. ____ 12: 20 p.m. The White House says it’s aware that North Korea has launched a midrange ballistic missile in the North’s latest weapons test. White House officials traveling in Saudi Arabia with President Donald Trump say the system, which was last tested in February, has a shorter range than the missiles launched in North Korea’s most recent tests. South Korea’s military says the missile was fired Sunday from an area near the North Korean capital of Pyongyang. The U. S. has sought to push back against North Korea’s work to speed up the development its nuclear weapons and missile program. ____ 11: 45 a.m. President Donald Trump is joining with leaders of the Gulf Cooperation Council in an effort to counter the financing of terrorism. White House adviser Dina Powell tells reporters that a memorandum of understanding signed by the U. S. and GCC nations represents the “farthest reaching commitment” to not finance terrorist organizations. She says it includes a pledge to prosecute the financing of terrorism, including individuals. Along with the U. S., the participants include Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The White House did not immediately release a text of the agreement. Trump and the GCC leaders watched as Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef and U. S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson exchanged documents. ____ 10: 20 a.m. President Donald Trump is making plans for another foreign trip as he eases into his first. Trump said Sunday he would accept an invitation made by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi to visit Egypt. Trump said the visit would happen before long. Trump is also calling el-Sissi his “friend” and praising him for the release of U. S. aid worker Aya Hijazi, who had been held captive for three years. Through a translator, el-Sissi said Trump “had a unique personality” that allowed him “to do the impossible.” Trump smiled and said “I agree.” Trump was also overheard complimenting el-Sissi’s shoes. ____ 9: 58 a.m. President Donald Trump says that he and the Emir of Qatar will discuss the purchase of “lots of beautiful military equipment.” Trump and Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani met Sunday morning in Riyadh in a bilateral meeting. The president said the two nations had been “friends for a long time.” He added that “no one makes” military equipment like the United States and said a deal would create jobs for the U.

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