Trump company strikes Qatari golf resort deal in a sign it's not holding
back from foreign business
[May 01, 2025] By
BERNARD CONDON
The Trump family company struck a deal Wednesday to build a luxury golf
resort in Qatar in a sign it has no plans to hold back from foreign
dealmaking during a second Trump administration, despite the danger of a
president shaping U.S. public policy for personal financial gain.
The project, which features Trump-branded beachside villas and an
18-hole golf course to be built by a Saudi Arabian company, is the first
foreign deal by the Trump Organization since Donald Trump took office
and unlike any done in his first term. Back then, he forswore foreign
deals in an extraordinary press conference surrounded by stacks of legal
documents as he pledged to avoid even the appearance of conflict of
interest.
Noah Bookbinder, president of a watchdog group that has sued Trump for
alleged ethics violations, blasted the Qatari deal.
“You want a president making decisions that are in the best interest of
the United States, not his bottom line,” said Bookbinder, who leads
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.
In addition to a Saudi Arabian partner, called Dar Global, the planned
resort north of the Qatari capital of Doha will be developed by a Qatari
company called Qatari Diar, which is owned by the Qatari government.
That would appear to violate the Trump Organization’s much weaker,
second-term ethics pledge that, while it would pursue foreign deals,
none would include foreign governments.

When asked for clarification, the Trump Organization said its deal was
with the Saudi firm, not the Qatari one, though Trump's son Eric, who is
in charge of the business, mentioned both companies in an earlier
statement.
“We are incredibly proud to expand the Trump brand into Qatar through
this exceptional collaboration with Qatari Diar and Dar Global,” he
said.
The deal Wednesday for the Trump International Golf Club and Trump
Villas is unlikely to be the last of its kind. It follows several other
deals made before Trump was sworn in, including one for a golf resort in
Vietnam late last year with a firm with ties to the Communist Party.
The deals have drawn outrage from government watchdogs but mostly
silence from Trump's fellow Republicans in Congress.
The Associated Press reached out to the two Republicans who chair the
foreign relations committees in the Senate and House, Sen. James Risch
of Idaho and Rep. Brian Mast of Florida, but neither responded.
Any deal with Saudi Arabia is seen as especially problematic in foreign
policy circles. Trump’s close ties to Saudi Arabia’s crown prince,
Mohammed bin Salman, drew heavy criticism in his first term after the
2018 killing of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi columnist for The Washington
Post who had written critically about the monarchy.
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President Donald Trump gestures to supporters gathered for a
Presidents Day rally as he leaves the Trump International Golf Club,
Monday, Feb. 17, 2025, in West Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Ben
Curtis)
 Khashoggi is believed to have been
dismembered, a killing that the U.S. intelligence community
concluded was approved by the crown prince.
The deal on Wednesday with the Saudi firm Dar Global, a London-based
international arm of developer Dar Al Arkan, follows deals with it
for two Riyadh projects in December. Dar Global is not owned by the
Saudi government, but it has close ties to the royal Saudi family.
Another government tie to Trump is through his son-in-law Jared
Kushner. The Saudi sovereign wealth fund has reportedly invested $2
billion in an investment fund run by Kushner. And the Saudi
government-backed LIV Golf has hosted tournaments at Trump's Doral
resort near Miami.
Despite Trump's pledge in his first term to not make moves that
would appear to conflict with his personal financial holdings and
business, he ended up opening the doors to all sorts of potential
pay-to-play deals. His hotel down the street from the White House
hosted scores of corporate lobbyists, CEOs, members of Congress and
diplomats. Trump once suggested holding a G7 meeting of global
leaders at Doral before he backed down after an outcry over ethics
concerns.
Several lawsuits were filed against the first Trump administration,
alleging it violated the emoluments clause of the U.S. Constitution,
which bans a president from accepting gifts or payments from foreign
or domestic governments. One case was appealed to the Supreme Court
but was never heard because Trump had already left the presidency at
that point and the issue was moot.
This time, the hotel is gone, sold to a Miami investment firm, but
other sources of potential conflicts of interest have emerged.
The Trump Organization also owns much of the publicly traded parent
company of social media platform Truth Social, which allows Trump to
financially benefit from traffic to the site where his postings as
U.S. president are widely followed. The family also has a stake in a
cybercurrency trading platform called World Liberty Financial as
Trump has pushed for less regulatory oversight on cybercurrencies.
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