Wednesday, November 19, 2025

After ‘Disgusting Display’ at White House, Omar Says Congress Must Stop Trump Sale of F-35s to Saudis

“Trump is prioritizing weapons-contractor profits and his own family’s business interests,” said US Rep. Ilhan Omar.



US President Donald Trump greets Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on November 18, 2025 at the White House.
(Photo by Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

Jake Johnson
Nov 19, 2025
COMMON DREAMS

The deputy chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus said Tuesday that lawmakers should pull out all the stops to prevent US President Donald Trump from selling F-35s to Saudi Arabia following Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s White House visit.

Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) called the White House reception for bin Salman, who is commonly known as MBS, a “disgusting display” and a “new low in longstanding US support for the repressive monarchy,” pointing to Trump’s whitewashing of the crown prince’s role in the horrific murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018.

Omar also condemned Trump’s attack on ABC News reporter Mary Bruce, who asked about Khashoggi’s murder during the crown prince’s White House visit.

“It is truly disturbing that the president of the United States dismissed Khashoggi’s entrapment, murder, and dismemberment at the hands of MBS’ assassins simply as, ‘things happen,’” said the Minnesota Democrat.

Omar called on fellow lawmakers to join her in working to block Trump’s “reckless and corrupt deals” with the Saudis, including his proposed sale of F-35 fighter jets.

“With announced sales of F-35 warplanes and billions in financial investments, Trump is prioritizing weapons-contractor profits and his own family’s business interests, including Jared Kushner’s private equity firm that took $2 billion from MBS,” said Omar, who noted that the Saudis have used US arms to devastating effect in Yemen.

The details of Trump’s proposed F-35 sale are not yet fully clear, but the US president indicated on Tuesday that the agreement would not include any conditions. The Saudi regime is one of the world’s worst human rights abusers, wielding the death penalty and other repressive tactics to violently crush dissent.

“We’re going to have a deal. They’ve going purchase F-35s,” Trump said Tuesday. “They’re buying them from Lockheed and it’s a great plane.”

Once Congress is formally notified of the proposed sale, lawmakers will have a limited window to consider a resolution of disapproval that, if passed, would block the transaction.

“While the defense industry and American billionaires will profit handsomely with the gifts Trump is doling out to MBS. The American people will be left holding the bill.”

During Tuesday’s meeting, Trump announced that his administration has designated Saudi Arabia as a “major non-NATO ally,” a status that enhances military cooperation between the two countries. Israel is also a “major non-NATO ally” of the US.

Omar said Tuesday that “no American soldiers may be sent into harm’s way to defend Saudi Arabia” as part of the agreement “without a debate and vote of authorization from Congress.”

“My Progressive Caucus colleagues and I are committed to ensuring that this remains the case,” she added.

The human rights group DAWN, an organization founded by Khashoggi, also voiced concerns about the security pact, warning in a statement that Trump is working to “protect a reckless, impulsive dictator, all in the interests of personal and corporate gains.”

“While the defense industry and American billionaires will profit handsomely with the gifts Trump is doling out to MBS,” the group added, “the American people will be left holding the bill.”

7 Years After Khashoggi Murder, Trump to Reward Saudi Crown Prince With Sale of F-35s

“Sadly, we have a president who prefers the Saudi model—an autocracy run by a trillionaire family—to democracy,” said US Sen. Bernie Sanders.



US President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attend a signing ceremony at the Saudi Royal Court on May 13, 2025 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
(Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Jake Johnson
Nov 18, 2025
COMMON DREAMS


US President Donald Trump said Monday that he intends to authorize the sale of F-35 fighter jets to the autocratic kingdom of Saudi Arabia as the country’s leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, heads to the United States for the first time since the horrific 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

“We will be selling F-35s,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office ahead of bin Salman’s arrival.

The Saudis, Trump added, “want to buy them, they’ve been a great ally.”

The Saudi crown prince, commonly known as MBS, is set to meet with Trump in the White House on Tuesday, heightening concerns among experts and watchdogs about a potential security pact and corrupt business deals with the kingdom. The New York Times reported Monday that the Trump Organization, formally run by the president’s two eldest sons, is “in talks that could bring a Trump-branded property to one of Saudi Arabia’s largest government-owned real estate developments.”

“The prince is overseeing a $63 billion project that is set to transform the historic Saudi town of Diriyah into a luxury destination with hotels, retail shops and office space,” the Times noted. “Saudi officials toured the Diriyah development with Mr. Trump during the president’s official state visit in May, with the goal of piquing his interest in the project.”

Robert Weissman, co-president of the watchdog group Public Citizen, said Tuesday that “we’re seeing the complete merger of Trump’s business interests with US diplomacy and military policy.”

“Trump’s apparent authorization of F-35 sales to Saudi Arabia comes amidst reports of new Trump family business deals with the Saudi government and its affiliates,” said Weissman. “These deals seem poised to direct tens of millions into the Trump family coffers in exchange for little more than permitting the family name to be attached to development projects.”

The F-35 program, which is expected to cost US taxpayers trillions of dollars in the coming years, is widely seen as a boondoggle that primarily benefits massive defense contractors such as Lockheed Martin, the producer of the jets.

Internally, Pentagon officials have voiced concern that selling F-35s to Saudi Arabia could give China access to the jets’ technology.

“How are Americans supposed to think that Trump’s decision on F-35 sales, over internal objections, not to mention over human rights concerns, is unconnected to Trump’s business arrangements with Saudi Arabia?” Weissman asked.

US Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) said in response to bin Salman’s upcoming White House visit that “this is the dictator who had a US columnist murdered for criticizing the Saudi royal family.”

“Sadly, we have a president who prefers the Saudi model—an autocracy run by a trillionaire family—to democracy,” Sanders added.




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