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Trump: UAE and US agree that Abu Dhabi will buy the most advanced AI chip.

Donald Trump announced on Friday that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the United States agreed to open a pathway for Abu Dhabi to purchase some of the world's most advanced artificial-intelligence semiconductors from U.S. firms, which is a significant win for Abu Dhabi in its efforts to become a hub for global AI.

Trump's Gulf tour also included a visit to Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE. The UAE capital Abu Dhabi and wealthiest emirate of the UAE made a promise to increase the value of their energy investments to the U.S. by $440 billion over the next decade.

He announced deals worth over $200 billion on Thursday, including Etihad Airways' $14.5 billion investment in 28 Boeing aircraft made in the USA.

Trump said, "We work together, and the money made here comes back home to us", during a press event in Abu Dhabi. Trump was praising the U.S.-UAE business relationship.

"We made it work and you know that they were being wooed." "But there's no wooing anymore, I think we are in good shape," said he.

The crown prince replied, "Absolutely."

The AI deal finalised on Friday is a major boost for the UAE. It has been struggling to maintain a balance between its relationship with the U.S., its longest-standing ally, and China, its biggest trading partner.

The Trump administration is confident that the chips will be managed safely, and has required data centres to be managed by U.S.-based companies.

Trump stated that "Yesterday, the two countries agreed to create a pathway for UAE to purchase some of the most advanced AI semiconductors in the world from American companies. This is a very large contract."

He added that the UAE plans to be a major player in artificial intelligent will accelerate as a result.

ENERGY INVESTORS

The UAE's energy commitment was announced by Sultan Al Jaber during his presentation to Trump, the chief executive of the Abu Dhabi state-owned energy giant ADNOC, during the final stage of Trump's regional tour, which has attracted huge financial commitments.

Al Jaber, who spoke to Trump, said that the enterprise value of UAE investment in the U.S. Energy sector would increase from $70 billion today to $440 billion in 2035. He added that U.S. firms in energy will also invest the UAE.

"Our partners have committed to new investments of $60 billion for upstream oil, gas and new unconventional opportunities," Jaber stated in front of a slideshow showing projects in the UAE with the logos ExxonMobil and Oxy, two U.S.-based companies.

Jaber, executive chairman of XRG and minister for industry and advanced technologies, said that XRG is looking to invest a large amount of money in U.S. Natural Gas.

In March, senior UAE officials had already met Trump and committed to a 10-year investment framework of $1.4 trillion in the U.S., in sectors such as energy, artificial intelligence, and manufacturing, to strengthen reciprocal ties.

Trump stated that "we're making progress" for the $1.4 trillion that the UAE announced it intended to spend in the United States. The tour, which focused on investment deals and not on Middle East security crises, such as Israel's Gaza war, has been primarily focused on publically on the Gulf.

Trump engaged in diplomacy during his brief meetings with the biggest energy producers around the world.

He met with Syria’s interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa and said that he would lift sanctions against Syria on the request of Saudi Arabia’s crown prince. This is a major shift in U.S. foreign policy.

(source: Reuters)