Will Trump hit reset with Muslims?
A month after Donald Trump called for a "total and complete shutdown" of Muslims entering the US, a hijab-wearing American named Rose Hamid stood up in the grandstands a few rows behind the presidential candidate.
It
was January 2016, a few weeks before Republican primary voters began to
cast their votes. As Hamid stood up in silent protest, the supporters
around her began to jeer and chant for her to "get out," until Trump
campaign officials and police officers interceded to eject her from the
arena. One person accused her of having a bomb.
"There is hatred against us that is unbelievable," Trump said as Hamid was ejected. "It's their hatred, it's not our hatred."
Now,
after receiving a king's welcome in Saudi Arabia on Saturday and
ambling from meeting to meeting with the region's Muslim leaders on
Sunday, he appears to be looking to reset relations with the Muslim
world.
Trump chose Saudi Arabia --
home to the world's two holiest Muslim sites -- for his first overseas
trip, in what his top aides have described as an overtly symbolic
gesture.
The commander in chief uttered a total of 26 words in public during the first day of his maiden foreign voyage. The entirety of his public remarks, made ahead of a meeting with the Saudi crown prince, could have fit in a single tweet.
Instead, Trump let the pictures do the talking, and he almost certainly liked what they were saying.
On Sunday, he will deliver a speech to leaders of 50 Muslim countries to outline his vision for US-Muslim relations.
But
beneath the pageantry and symbolism remains the sting that more than a
billion Muslims around the world felt after American voters elected
Trump -- a candidate who called for a "total and complete shutdown of
Muslims" entering the United States, floated the idea of surveilling US
mosques and warned that Muslim refugees represented a national security
threat.
Change the image
Senior
administration officials have offered no indication that Trump intends
to apologize for or walk back the campaign rhetoric and proposals that
experts say have fueled anti-Muslim sentiment in the US.
Trump
and his aides do, however, want to change that image as Trump looks to
make headway on the true goal of his trip to Saudi Arabia: eradicating
the threat that ISIS and other Islamist terrorist groups pose to the
United States.
"We thought that was
very important (to start the trip in Saudi Arabia) because obviously
people have tried to portray the President in a certain way," a senior
White House official said. "We thought that was a good place to start.
And, look, I mean, one of the biggest problems that we face in the world
today is radical extremism, and we have to combat that."
H.R.
McMaster, the President's national security adviser, said the speech
will be "inspiring, yet direct speech on the need to confront radical
ideology and his hopes for a peaceful vision of Islam to dominate across
the world."
A US official said the
words "radical Islamic terror" aren't included in the current draft of
Trump's speech set to be delivered in Saudi Arabia on Sunday. The
speech, however, is not in its final form and could change before Trump
delivers his remarks.
The US
official confirmed to CNN the speech will urge Muslim leaders to "drive
out the terrorists from your places of worship" and cast the fight
against radicalism as a battle of "good and evil."
The Saudi foreign minister Adel Al-Jubeir on Saturday signaled his country was hopeful Trump would truly hit the reset button.
"If
we can change the conversation in the Islamic world from enmity toward
the US to partnership with the US, and if we can change the conversation
in the US and in the West from enmity toward the Islamic world to one
of partnership, we will have truly changed our world and truly drowned
the voices of extremism, and drained the swamps from which extremism and
terrorism emanates," Jubeir said, echoing a phrase once used by Trump
on the campaign trail.
Trump has
looked to ramp up the US' fight against ISIS in Iraq and Syria, but has
done so while stressing the need for Muslim allies in the region to
increase their efforts as well, emphasizing that point in White House
meetings with leaders of 50 countries in the region. Trump has called on
Arab countries in the region to accept more Syrian refugees and sought
their help to create safe zones in Syria, among other appeals.
But
his speech on Sunday will amount to his first public pitch on the issue
and his first public appeal for Muslims around the world to view him as
a partner -- and not an enemy.
"The
one thing he absolutely needs to say is the United States is not
anti-Muslim and is not pursuing a war against Islam," said Robert Ford, a
senior fellow at the Middle East Institute and former US ambassador to
Syria.
To do so, he will need to
make a clean break with the rhetoric of his campaign that too often
blurred the lines between Islam at large and "radical Islam" -- like
when he said he believed "Islam hates us" in a CNN interview in March
2016.
Beyond his Muslim ban
proposal and call to surveil US mosques, Trump also said he was open to
creating a database of Muslims in the US -- none of which he has
disavowed.
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