HomeWorldUS presidential gift-giving: From pandas and elephants to Boeing jets, a diplomatic tradition evolves

US presidential gift-giving: From pandas and elephants to Boeing jets, a diplomatic tradition evolves

From exotic animals to symbolic artifacts, the White House has long received gifts from around the world—but Trump’s Qatar jet raises fresh legal and diplomatic questions.

May 14, 2025 / 09:06 IST
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US presidential gift-giving: From pandas and elephants to Boeing jets, a diplomatic tradition evolves
US presidential gift-giving: From pandas and elephants to Boeing jets, a diplomatic tradition evolves

Gift-giving is a time-honoured tradition in American presidential history—often symbolic, sometimes quirky, and occasionally controversial. While most people exchange gifts on birthdays or holidays, US presidents receive them nearly every day, especially from foreign leaders. These gifts serve as tokens of diplomacy, cultural exchange, and friendship. But they’re also tightly regulated by law, especially when their value stretches into the millions—as is the case with the luxury Boeing jet offered to President Donald Trump by Qatar, the Washington Post reported.

From symbolic gestures to a flying palace

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President Trump’s announcement that he plans to accept a Boeing 747 from Qatar, potentially as a temporary Air Force One, drew scrutiny not just for its optics, but for its legality. Under federal law, presidents and other federal officials can accept foreign gifts over $480 in value only if they declare them and pay appropriate taxes or turn them over to the National Archives.

Historically, foreign gifts have been ceremonial. They include everything from inline skates (Netherlands to George W. Bush) to a basketball signed by Xi Jinping (to Barack Obama). A crocodile attack insurance policy presented to Obama during a 2011 trip to Australia offered $50,000 in the event of a fatal encounter with one of the country’s most fearsome predators. And then there are animals—baby elephants for Eisenhower and Reagan, a puppy for Bush, and a Cold War-era dog from the Soviet Union for JFK.