Former Massachusetts Republican Gov. Mitt Romney is in the Middle East this week for a series of meetings with foreign leaders.
Romney, who is a likely presidential contender in 2012, left Friday, Jan. 7, for a one-week trip that will take him to Afghanistan, Israel, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates.
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During the tour, he will meet with Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and King Abdullah II of Jordan. Romney met with General David Petraeus, the top American and NATO commander in Afghanistan, on Sunday afternoon.
“The purpose of the trip is not to conduct private diplomacy but to give Gov. Romney a firsthand look at what is happening in an important region of the world. The trip is being paid for by a combination of private sources,” Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom said in a statement to POLITICO.
While he’s in Afghanistan, Romney will travel with the International Republican Institute, and his spokesman said he will “train Afghans and share with local leaders his views” on various issues affecting the country.
The American Israel Education Foundation will pay for his travel to Israel.