As you‘ve probably heard, the relatively successful first half of Donald Trump’s big trip abroad took a turn Thursday in Brussels as our Queens-born president, surrounded by his snooty European counterparts, started acting like his old self again. Naturally, that involved his painfully uncomfortable take on handshakes, upbraiding allies, and describing Germany as “bad, very bad,” because of all the cars it sells in the U.S. On Friday, the president proceeded to go Full Trump when he took to Twitter to make boastful, vague claims about all the money and jobs he’d saved in the last week:

As Fortune notes, the saving of “many billions of dollars” presumably refers to the $110 billion arms deal his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, brokered with Saudi Arabia. But it’s wildly unclear how the president’s road trip saved “millions of jobs.” While Trump said in a speech that “we signed historic agreements with the Kingdom that will invest almost $400 billion in our two countries and create many thousands of jobs in America and Saudi Arabia,” the announcement was just that—a collection of words suggesting a potential future course of action. Whether or not Saudi Arabia will follow through, or what those investments might entail, remains to be seen. Some of the money Trump referred to is presumably the same $50 billion the Kingdom already committed to a SoftBank investment fund that was announced months ago. It’s also not clear how thousands suddenly became millions, unless we’re using the same math that allowed Trump to claim he had the biggest inaugural crowds in the history of inaugural crowds. (Adding insult to injury: a number of companies involved declined to confirm any “specific number” of jobs saved or supported, suggesting Trump’s original estimate of thousands was more guesswork than reality.)

In what has become a regular part of White House aide‘s jobs, officials scrambled to clarify what the Tweeter-in-Chief really meant by his morning missive, telling the Washington Post that the president wasn’t simply referring to Saudi deals but “benefits to trade from the entire trip from Saudi Arabia to the G7,” and that “any improvement on trade would save many jobs. Stopping even one bad trade deal can save millions.”

If you would like to receive the Levin Report in your inbox daily, click here to subscribe.