Aya Bhattarawi
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God willing, in due time, Israel will establish Israeli communities in areas of northern Gaza where Jewish settlements were dismantled 20 years ago.
And he said, quote, we will not leave all of Gaza.
But only hours later, the Israeli defense minister issued a statement saying the government has no intention of establishing settlements in Gaza and that his remarks were made solely in a security context.
But his initial comments had already grabbed headlines in Israel and were welcomed by a far-right settler group.
The last time Prince Mohammed bin Salman visited Washington was seven years ago, just before his aides killed Saudi critic and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, sparking international outcry.
But the heir to the Saudi throne returns to Washington as a partner, not a pariah.
The prince, known also for major social and economic reforms that have changed life in Saudi Arabia, has vowed hundreds of billions of dollars in investments in the U.S.
He's expected to ask for F-35
fighter jets, advanced AI chips, nuclear technology, and a defense pack that wouldn't require congressional approval.
Underpinning those talks are personal ties between Trump and Prince Mohammed.
That was on display in May when the president chose Saudi Arabia again as his first overseas trip.
And those personal ties mix with business as billions from the Gulf flow into Trump's family ventures.
Aya Bhattarawi, NPR News, Dubai.