At a White House cabinet meeting yesterday, Donald Trump boasted, “We’re bringing our soldiers back home from the endless wars. We’re doing great.” In reality, of course, the president isn’t actually withdrawing U.S. troops from Syria, despite his claims to the contrary, and he’s deploying additional U.S. troops to Saudi Arabia.
On the latter, however, Trump has an amazing defense. Saudi Arabian officials, the Republican declared last week, have “agreed to pay for the cost of those troops. They’ve agreed to pay fully for the cost of everything we’re doing over there…. Saudi Arabia is paying for 100 percent of the cost, including the cost of our soldiers. And that negotiation took a very short time — like, maybe, about 35 seconds.”
In other words, there were private negotiations — which the White House had not previously disclosed — between the Trump administration and Saudi officials, and as part of those talks, Saudi Arabia agreed to pay “for 100 percent of the costs” of the American troop deployment, “including the cost of our soldiers.”
To hear Trump tell it, this will be the first time in American history that U.S. troops have been deployed abroad at literally no cost to taxpayers. It led the Washington Post to wonder what in the world the president was talking about.
White House officials would not explain what Trump meant. So, we checked with the Pentagon for more details on the supposed payment arrangement. Officials at the Defense Department deflected our inquiry. […]









