Trump visits the Middle East: All the countries visited by US presidents

For the second time in his presidency, Donald Trump has chosen Saudi Arabia as the destination for his first official state visit, following brief stops in Italy and the Vatican for Pope Francis’s funeral.

Trump arrived in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday just before 10am local time (07:00 GMT), where he was greeted by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The US president will visit Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) from May 13 to 16, 2025.

Which countries did Trump visit in his first term?

Trump visited 25 countries during his first term as the US president from January 2017 to January 2021.

The countries that Trump visited most during his first term include:

  1. France – Four times
  2. Japan, United Kingdom – Three times
  3. Belgium, Germany, Ireland, Italy, South Korea, Switzerland, Vietnam – Two times
  4. Afghanistan, Argentina, Canada, China, Finland, India, Iraq, Israel, North Korea, Palestine, Philippines, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Vatican City – Once

The order of his trips is listed in the infographic below.

Trump became the first US president to make the Middle East his first foreign destination, visiting Saudi Arabia on May 20-21, 2017.

He held bilateral talks with Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz and then-Deputy Crown Prince and Defence Minister Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) as the two countries signed a $110bn arms deal.

Trump also took part in the Riyadh Summit, a gathering of leaders from more than 50 Muslim-majority nations.

Jordan''s King Abdullah II, Saudi Arabia''s King Salman, U.S. PresidentTrump, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan and Qatar''s Emir Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al-Thani pose for a photo
(Front R-L) Jordan’s King Abdullah II, Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, US President Donald Trump, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani pose for a photo during Riyadh Summit, Saudi Arabia, May 21, 2017 [Jonathan Ernst/Reuters]

After visiting Saudi Arabia, Trump travelled to Israel, where he met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and became the first sitting US president to visit the Western Wall in Jerusalem. He then met Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in the occupied West Bank city of Bethlehem.

Trump’s visit to India on February 24-25, 2020, was his final international trip before the COVID-19 pandemic led to global travel restrictions.

The first country visited by each US president

A US president’s first trip is often seen as a signal of their priorities and foreign policy direction, setting the tone for how the US will engage with the world over the next four years.

In 1906, Theodore Roosevelt became the first sitting US president to travel abroad when he visited Panama to inspect the construction of the Panama Canal, a key project for US trade and military strategy.

More recently, in 1993, Bill Clinton’s first trip was to Canada, setting the stage for NAFTA. In 2001, George W Bush visited Mexico, focusing on trade and immigration. Barack Obama’s first trip in 2009 was also to Canada, emphasising multilateral diplomacy. Joe Biden’s first trip in 2021 was to the UK, where he attended the G7 Summit, highlighting traditional alliances and climate change.

The graphic below shows the first country visited by each US president.

INTERACTIVE - The first county visited by each US president-1747121985
(Al Jazeera)

Number of first presidential trips:

  1. Canada – 5 (Kennedy, Johnson, HW Bush, Clinton, Obama)
  2. UK – 4 (Wilson, FD Roosevelt, Carter, Biden)
  3. Panama – 3 (T Roosevelt, Taft, Harding)
  4. Mexico – 3 (Ford, Reagan, Bush)
  5. Belgium – 2 (Truman, Nixon)
  6. Saudi Arabia – 2 (Trump, first and second term)
  7. Cuba – 1 (Coolidge)
  8. Honduras – 1 (Hoover)
  9. South Korea – 1 (Eisenhower)

All US presidential trips abroad (1906-2024)

The table below shows the more than 800 presidential trips conducted by 21 of the US’s most recent presidents, starting with Theodore Roosevelt in 1906.

The countries visited the most number of times include:

  1. UK (69 times)
  2. France (51 times)
  3. Canada (41 times)
  4. Mexico (35 times)
  5. Italy (33 times)

The countries visited by the most number of US presidents include:

  1. Italy (15 presidents)
  2. Mexico (15 presidents)
  3. UK (15 presidents)
  4. France (14 presidents)
  5. Vatican City (14 presidents)

Philippines election results: Who won, who lost and what’s next?

Former Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, detained at the International Criminal Court (ICC), is on course to win the mayoral election in his home Davao City, and five candidates backed by his family are leading the Senate race as midterm election results appear to show the Duterte political dynasty’s continued grip on power.

The results are a big boost for Vice President Sara Duterte, Rodrigo Duterte’s daughter, who faces impeachment by the Senate in July. A two-thirds majority is required to remove her from office and bar her from running in future elections, including the 2028 presidential one.

Twelve out of 24 Senate seats and all 317 seats in the House of Representatives were among the 18,320 elective positions up for grabs in the key election. Nearly 69 million people were registered to vote in the Asia Pacific country.

Who won the election?

With 97 percent of the votes reported, candidates backed by President Marcos Jr are on course to win six of the 12 seats in the Senate.

Duterte’s supporters, including staunch ally Christopher “Bong” Go are set to win five seats. One candidate who is winning a seat has been affiliated with both political families.

Rodrigo Duterte is set to win the mayoral seat in Davao after receiving more than 65 percent of the votes.

Duterte was the mayor of the southern city thrice, serving a total of 22 years. If he wins, it is likely that the role would be assumed by the city’s vice mayor, a position currently held by his son, Sebastian Duterte.

In the Philippines, candidates facing criminal charges, including those in detention, can run for office unless they are convicted.

What’s at stake?

While President Marcos Jr and Vice President Sara Duterte were not on the poll, their candidates were vying for positions from the Senate to municipal offices.

Sara Duterte is a strong contender for the 2028 presidential election. Her political future can be decided by the 24-member Senate. She requires support of nine Senate members to avoid conviction.

The 12 elected Senators will form half of the jury in her impeachment trial, which is tentatively set for July. If found guilty, she will be removed from office and barred from contesting future elections.

She was impeached by the House of Representatives in February after being accused of crimes ranging from the misuse of public funds to plotting Marcos’s assassination.

Sara Duterte says the impeachment is part of a political vendetta as the two families battle for power.

The fate of hundreds of governors and thousands of seats for city mayor and municipal mayors were also decided in this election.

The official results will be out within a week.

What is the political rivalry between the Marcos and Duterte families?

Sara Duterte is the daughter of former President Duterte, who was arrested and flown to the ICC at The Hague on March 11 by the Marcos Jr administration.

The elder Duterte was accused of “crimes against humanity” for the estimated deaths of 30,000 people during his tenures as mayor and president.

More than 7,000 people were killed during anti-drug operations while he was in power between 2016 and 2022, according to police records. Human rights advocates suggest the actual death toll was higher.

Marcos Jr allied with the Duterte family, which enjoyed popularity, during his successful 2022 presidential campaign, with Sara Duterte as his running mate. But the ties soon soured over policy differences and Marcos’s rejection of the war on drugs launched by Sara Duterte’s father, Rodrigo Duterte.

Finally, the alliance crumbled due to faltering support for Marcos Jr among supporters of the Duterte family after the arrest of Apollo Quiboloy, who was the spiritual adviser of former President Duterte. Quibology, an influential pastor, was charged with sex trafficking.

The arrest of Rodrigo Duterte on a warrant issued by the ICC further inflamed tension between the two political dynasties.

Until Rodrigo Duterte’s arrest, Marcos Jr repeatedly rejected the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) jurisdiction over his country, deeming the ICC “a threat” to the country’s sovereignty. Marcos Jr had held he would not assist the ICC in the elder Duterte’s arrest.

“Let me say this for the 100th time. I do not recognise the jurisdiction of ICC in the Philippines. The Philippine government will not lift a finger to help any investigation that the ICC conducts,” Marcos Jr said in early 2024.

In 2019, (Rodrigo) Duterte had removed the Philippines from the ICC, meaning the country was not required to detain someone with an ICC warrant against their name.

‘If he wins again he might not stop’ – will Spieth join Grand Slam club?

Getty Images
  • 51 Comments

World number one Scottie Scheffler has just won a tournament by eight shots. Bryson DeChambeau is back in the winners’ circle on LIV Golf. Rory McIlroy has finally completed the career Grand Slam.

There are narratives around every corner at the US PGA Championship, the next major of the season, which gets under way at Quail Hollow on Thursday.

And yet one golfer is going under the radar – but his plotline could be the biggest of them all.

It is 10 years since Jordan Spieth’s incredible breakout season on the PGA Tour, where he won the Masters, the US Open and went close at both the Open Championship and the US PGA.

In 2017 he added the Claret Jug, to secure an annual shot at the career Grand Slam.

However, eight attempts later – and none particularly close – the 31-year-old arrives at this latest effort as a side story but perhaps ready to write headlines of his own. Three top 10s in 2025 suggests he is on the climb.

‘A belief that has no boundaries’

Jordan Spieth in 2010Getty Images

The Texan has not won any tournament since April 2022 and it is easy to forget just how good peak-Spieth was.

As a junior, he was a dominant force in US golf. So much so says Fields, that he was in demand from the moment he turned 13.

“We started recruiting him from eighth grade,” Fields says. “The first time I saw him play a pitch shot, I was like ‘oh my! We’re getting that guy!’.

“It was a hell of a process. Everyone wanted Jordan Spieth.”

Understandably so.

In 2011, Spieth became only the second player in history to win multiple US Junior championships – Tiger Woods being the other – and was making noise on the PGA Tour as an amateur even before starting college.

“I remember exactly where I was when he told me he was coming to us,” Fields says. “February 7, three in the afternoon and he called me. It was a monumental moment.”

For Fields and the University of Texas, Spieth was another great player on a long list of famous alumni that includes 10 major championship titles from the likes of Ben Crenshaw, Justin Leonard and latterly, Scheffler.

Spieth was only there for a year and a semester but he made his mark, helping the college clinch the national championships in 2012 before turning pro at the end of the calendar year.

And in Fields’ eyes, there was something different about the steely-eyed 19-year-old.

‘One of the great golf years ever’

While McIlroy waited 11 years for his Green Jacket, Spieth ripped up the Masters from the moment he arrived at Augusta.

A runner-up on debut in 2014, he won wire-to-wire in 2015, equalling the then tournament record of 18 under par and recording 28 birdies over the four days – three more than anyone else in history.

He then backed it up by taking the second major of the season, becoming the first since Woods in 2002 to win the Masters and the US Open in the same year.

On to the Old Course at St Andrews for The Open and Spieth was once again in the mix, finishing just a shot outside of a play-off ultimately won by Zach Johnson.

He still almost grabbed a third major of the year at the US PGA, then held in August. There, he finished runner-up to Australia’s Jason Day.

The result lifted him to world number one and he would win the Tour Championship and FedEx Cup to round off a wonderful season.

Two major titles and a score to par of 51 under across the four championships made it “one of the great years ever”, according to Crenshaw at the time.

Why has he not dominated?

Jordan Spieth and his son SammieGetty Images

Spieth’s CV consists of 13 PGA Tour wins, three majors and a Ryder Cup haul of eight wins and three ties from 18 matches.

It is certainly impressive – but perhaps not the amount of victories he initially threatened to post.

Going three years without winning a tournament is anathema to a man who seemed poised for a long run as world number one.

“I know there is pain involved in not winning,” says Fields. “All golfers develop scar tissue.”

After winning The Open in almost miraculous fashion in 2017 – his three-shot lead going into the final round was wiped out in four holes before he picked up five shots in four holes from the 14th to win by three – Spieth has only two more victories on his resume.

In that time, he has got married, had two children with a third on the way, done a heavy amount of work on his swing and, last year, had significant surgery to fix a long-standing wrist injury.

His major record has been inconsistent over the past five seasons with four top-10 finishes in the sport’s biggest tournaments.

“His whole life has been in evolution,” says Fields. “But nothing has changed in his brain. I just think he is re-balancing. Rory did the same thing – I think Tiger did it five times.

“It doesn’t change who these guys are.”

Like McIlroy, Spieth is one of golf’s most recognisable personalities. A player whose glorious highs are mirrored by devastating lows – all conducted to the soundtrack of his on-course chatter with stoic caddie Michael Greller.

Nevertheless, Fields is convinced Spieth will start winning tournaments again and, as if to underline his old coach’s confidence, he raced up the leaderboard on the final day at the Byron Nelson in nine under par to finish fourth, his lowest round for four years.

It was the third time he has finished in the top 10 so far in 2025.

“I guess all that there is to say is that it feels close,” Spieth said afterwards. “I’m not going to try to force anything, and this was a good improvement.”

In the past, Spieth has talked about winning the career Grand Slam at the US PGA Championship as “the elephant in the room” and that doing so would feel like he had “accomplished golf”.

Before McIlroy’s Masters win, the other five members of that exclusive club had all completed golf’s holy grail within three attempts.

What information do we collect from this quiz?

Related topics

  • Golf

‘If he wins again he might not stop’ – will Spieth join Grand Slam club?

Getty Images
  • 51 Comments

World number one Scottie Scheffler has just won a tournament by eight shots. Bryson DeChambeau is back in the winners’ circle on LIV Golf. Rory McIlroy has finally completed the career Grand Slam.

There are narratives around every corner at the US PGA Championship, the next major of the season, which gets under way at Quail Hollow on Thursday.

And yet one golfer is going under the radar – but his plotline could be the biggest of them all.

It is 10 years since Jordan Spieth’s incredible breakout season on the PGA Tour, where he won the Masters, the US Open and went close at both the Open Championship and the US PGA.

In 2017 he added the Claret Jug, to secure an annual shot at the career Grand Slam.

However, eight attempts later – and none particularly close – the 31-year-old arrives at this latest effort as a side story but perhaps ready to write headlines of his own. Three top 10s in 2025 suggests he is on the climb.

‘A belief that has no boundaries’

Jordan Spieth in 2010Getty Images

The Texan has not won any tournament since April 2022 and it is easy to forget just how good peak-Spieth was.

As a junior, he was a dominant force in US golf. So much so says Fields, that he was in demand from the moment he turned 13.

“We started recruiting him from eighth grade,” Fields says. “The first time I saw him play a pitch shot, I was like ‘oh my! We’re getting that guy!’.

“It was a hell of a process. Everyone wanted Jordan Spieth.”

Understandably so.

In 2011, Spieth became only the second player in history to win multiple US Junior championships – Tiger Woods being the other – and was making noise on the PGA Tour as an amateur even before starting college.

“I remember exactly where I was when he told me he was coming to us,” Fields says. “February 7, three in the afternoon and he called me. It was a monumental moment.”

For Fields and the University of Texas, Spieth was another great player on a long list of famous alumni that includes 10 major championship titles from the likes of Ben Crenshaw, Justin Leonard and latterly, Scheffler.

Spieth was only there for a year and a semester but he made his mark, helping the college clinch the national championships in 2012 before turning pro at the end of the calendar year.

And in Fields’ eyes, there was something different about the steely-eyed 19-year-old.

‘One of the great golf years ever’

While McIlroy waited 11 years for his Green Jacket, Spieth ripped up the Masters from the moment he arrived at Augusta.

A runner-up on debut in 2014, he won wire-to-wire in 2015, equalling the then tournament record of 18 under par and recording 28 birdies over the four days – three more than anyone else in history.

He then backed it up by taking the second major of the season, becoming the first since Woods in 2002 to win the Masters and the US Open in the same year.

On to the Old Course at St Andrews for The Open and Spieth was once again in the mix, finishing just a shot outside of a play-off ultimately won by Zach Johnson.

He still almost grabbed a third major of the year at the US PGA, then held in August. There, he finished runner-up to Australia’s Jason Day.

The result lifted him to world number one and he would win the Tour Championship and FedEx Cup to round off a wonderful season.

Two major titles and a score to par of 51 under across the four championships made it “one of the great years ever”, according to Crenshaw at the time.

Why has he not dominated?

Jordan Spieth and his son SammieGetty Images

Spieth’s CV consists of 13 PGA Tour wins, three majors and a Ryder Cup haul of eight wins and three ties from 18 matches.

It is certainly impressive – but perhaps not the amount of victories he initially threatened to post.

Going three years without winning a tournament is anathema to a man who seemed poised for a long run as world number one.

“I know there is pain involved in not winning,” says Fields. “All golfers develop scar tissue.”

After winning The Open in almost miraculous fashion in 2017 – his three-shot lead going into the final round was wiped out in four holes before he picked up five shots in four holes from the 14th to win by three – Spieth has only two more victories on his resume.

In that time, he has got married, had two children with a third on the way, done a heavy amount of work on his swing and, last year, had significant surgery to fix a long-standing wrist injury.

His major record has been inconsistent over the past five seasons with four top-10 finishes in the sport’s biggest tournaments.

“His whole life has been in evolution,” says Fields. “But nothing has changed in his brain. I just think he is re-balancing. Rory did the same thing – I think Tiger did it five times.

“It doesn’t change who these guys are.”

Like McIlroy, Spieth is one of golf’s most recognisable personalities. A player whose glorious highs are mirrored by devastating lows – all conducted to the soundtrack of his on-course chatter with stoic caddie Michael Greller.

Nevertheless, Fields is convinced Spieth will start winning tournaments again and, as if to underline his old coach’s confidence, he raced up the leaderboard on the final day at the Byron Nelson in nine under par to finish fourth, his lowest round for four years.

It was the third time he has finished in the top 10 so far in 2025.

“I guess all that there is to say is that it feels close,” Spieth said afterwards. “I’m not going to try to force anything, and this was a good improvement.”

In the past, Spieth has talked about winning the career Grand Slam at the US PGA Championship as “the elephant in the room” and that doing so would feel like he had “accomplished golf”.

Before McIlroy’s Masters win, the other five members of that exclusive club had all completed golf’s holy grail within three attempts.

What information do we collect from this quiz?

Related topics

  • Golf

Super Eagles Striker Tolu Arokodare Wins Best African Player Prize In Belgium

Nigerian striker Tolu Arokodare has added another feather to his cap, scooping the Ebony Shoe award, a prize that recognises the best player of African descent in the Jupiler Pro League.

Tolu, 24, saw off competition from compatriot and Club Brugge’s Raphael Onyedika; Union Saint-Gilloise’s duo of  Noah Sadiki (DR Congo) and Promise David (Canada), and Genk teammate Zakaria El Ouahdi (Morocco) to land the coveted award.

He got the prize on Monday night at the African Awards 2025 held at the Tangla Hotel in Brussels, Belgium.

READ ALSO: Nigeria’s Flying Eagles Beat Senegal, Soar Into U-20 AFCON Semi-Final

The Nigerian is one of the standout performers in Belgium this campaign, with 20 league goals and six assists under the tutelage of Thorsten Fink.

His impressive form puts him second on the leading goalscorers’ log in the Jupiler League. Tolu also has two goals to his name in the Belgian Cup this season.

He is the 34th winner of the Ebony Shoe prize, and the sixth Nigerian to bag the award. Other Super Eagles players who have won it include Daniel Amokachi (1992, 1994), Victor Ikpeba (1993), Godwin Okpara (1995), Celestine Babayaro (1996), and Paul Onuachu.

Onuachu was the last Nigerian to win it in 2021.

READ ALSO: Nigerian Striker Awoniyi Rushed To Hospital For Abdominal Surgery

Kevin Denkey, Moumou Dagano, Souleymane Oulare, and Onuachu are the other Genk players to get the Ebony Shoe award.

Following the award, his club said the “entire Genk family is extremely proud of this achievement”. The blue-white believe that,” With two match days to go, he still has a chance to become top scorer of the season”.

Shinnie, Cowie & relegation shootouts in focus

The penultimate round of Scottish Premiership football is staged on a hectic Wednesday night when all 12 teams are in action and key tussles at either end of the table could be settled.

Hibernian would effectively secure third place if Aberdeen fail to take something against champions Celtic at Pittodrie, while a win over Hibs could propel St Mirren into the European places.

The shootout at the bottom is more compelling, though, with basement club St Johnstone travelling to Heart of Midlothian and flatlining Ross County, one place above them, pitted against 10th-placed Dundee.

One of the current bottom three will be condemned to relegation.

Game of the night: Hearts v St Johnstone (19:45 BST)

They were calling time up in Perth’s Last Chance Saloon when County came south on Saturday, and anything but three home points would have ended St Johnstone’s 16-year stay in the Premiership.

Simo Valakari’s men won a nerve-shredding battle, squandering a glut of chances and seeing Ronan Hale’s last-gasp equaliser disallowed in a 2-1 victory.

St Johnstone slither a little higher on the greasy pole, moving within three points of the Highland side with six more on offer.

They have another whopper on the cards this midweek.

Hearts have nothing tangible to play for, but have roused themselves following Neil Critchley’s dismissal, Lawrence Shankland rediscovering his best position and his goal-scoring mojo, and the club extinguishing any fears of being sucked towards the play-off berth.

And to make matters worse for their visitors, St Johnstone have a heinous record in this fixture.

They have lost nine matches in a row against Hearts, last winning in September 2022, and have not prevailed at Tynecastle in five-and-a-half years, when a Christophe Berra own goal earned them a 1-0 triumph and current St Johnstone striker Uche Ikpeazu was leading the line for the home team.

Player to watch: Graeme Shinnie (Aberdeen)

Aberdeen were shredded by Rangers in a chastening second half on Sunday afternoon.

Competitive in a tepid first 45 minutes, they capitulated after the interval, shipping four unanswered goals and raising searching questions about their Scottish Cup final credentials.

Aberdeen totem Willie Miller hammered the Dons defence, highlighting their full-backs’ propensity to run forward rather than dig in to help their centre-backs, leaving vast expanses of Govan turf for Rangers to exploit.

A similarly porous display against Celtic would not only torpedo Aberdeen’s bid to finish third, but strike a huge psychological blow against their cup final opponents 10 days out from the Hampden showpiece.

In that regard, captain Graeme Shinnie’s experience, leadership and snarl will surely be key.

Deployed at left-back, he is likely to face fit-again Nicholas Kuhn, one of the stars of the Premiership season, and an array of attacking ammunition from the champions’ arsenal.

Manager in the spotlight: Don Cowie

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Rewind a few months and there was little anxiety over Ross County’s Premiership status.

They had a clear identity, claimed some decent scalps and seemed secure enough in mid-table. As recently as early March they occupied eighth place, seven points clear of the bottom two and 10 ahead of St Johnstone at the foot of the log.

A seven-game losing run has dynamited any positivity and placed Don Cowie in the crosshairs of angry fans, some of whom have grown tired of his post-match mantra that County “can’t feel sorry for ourselves”.

The Staggies have set a new club record for consecutive top-flight defeats at the worst possible time, and with ever diminishing opportunities to haul themselves out of trouble.

They have plummeted to 11th spot, three ahead of St Johnstone and two behind Wednesday’s hosts Dundee, but with the poorest goal difference of the trio.

There are two crumbs of comfort.

Firstly, County have beaten Dundee three times already this season, and handsomely at that – an aggregate scoreline of 8-1.

And secondly, the club acquired the slightly unenviable tag of play-off specialists, having eased Raith Rovers aside last summer and stunned Partick Thistle with an incredible comeback victory on penalties a year earlier.

Related topics

  • Scottish Premiership
  • Scottish Football
  • Football