
Most lavish gifts to US presidents including £1,000,000 in jewels and pandas
When it comes to the art of diplomatic gift-giving, there is one unspoken rule – keep it symbolic to the nation's culture and history.
A painting here, a commemorative sword there. Nothing too flashy, which could raise eyebrows in Washington.
Yet, leave it to Donald Trump to contemplate on breaking that tradition and accept a Boeing 747-8, courtesy of Qatar's Royal Family.
Worth £303 million, the aircraft could reportedly replace the aged Air Force One – but also violate bribery and corruption rules within the constitution.
To fully understand how unorthodox this gesture is, Metro has examined some of the most expensive gifts ever given to US presidents.
To begin with, the late king of Saudi Arabia presented Barack Obama with a gold and silver watch, a gold-plated brass replica of the Makkah Clock Tower, and another watch, this one white gold.
First lady Michelle Obama accepted a diamond and emerald jewellery set and a diamond and pearl jewellery set.
And Obama's daughters Sasha and Malia a set of diamond, emerald and jewels. In total, the bling is estimated to have cost almost £1 million.
Nowhere near this price tag, but still lavish, George W Bush was gifted an emerald, ruby, and diamond encrusted, solid gold sword and dagger by a foreign shah.
In 1972, president Richard Nixon travelled to China with his wife, Patricia, who mentioned – off the cuff – her fondness for giant pandas.
As a gesture of goodwill, Chinese prime minister Zhou Enlai gifted them two giant pandas who were later transferred to Washington's National Zoo, drawing in tens of thousands of people over the years to come.
It was reported that the two animals were worth £47 million.
Honourable mentions include an ornate desk carved out of timber from the British ship HMS Resolute, gifted by Queen Victoria to president Rutherford B Hayes; two lions to president Martin Van Buren by the Sultan of Morocco; and 300 pounds of raw lamb from Argentina to George W Bush.
Putting all these together and they would still not come even close to the cost of the Qatari jet being gifted to Trump.
The Republican told reporters on Monday: 'I would never be one to turn down that kind of an offer.
'I could be a stupid person and say, ''No, we don't want a free, very expensive airplane.''
Critics of the plan worry that the move threatens to turn a global symbol of American power into an airborne collection of ethical, legal, security and counterintelligence concerns. More Trending
Jessica Levinson, a constitutional law expert at Loyola Law School, said: 'This is unprecedented. We just haven't tested these boundaries before.'
Trump tried to tamp down some of the opposition by saying he wouldn't fly around in the gifted Boeing 747 when his term ends.
Instead, he said, the plane would be donated to a future presidential library, similar to how the Boeing 707 used by president Ronald Reagan was decommissioned and put on display as a museum piece.
'It would go directly to the library after I leave office,' Trump said. 'I wouldn't be using it.'
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
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Daily Mirror
13 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
9 insane moments as Donald Trump's beef with Elon Musk implodes spectacularly
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And listen to our exciting new political podcast The Division Bell, hosted by the Mirror and the Express every Thursday.


Reuters
19 minutes ago
- Reuters
Unwelcome at Kennedy Center, LGBTQ+ orchestra defiantly plays in Maryland
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Daily Mirror
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Everything we know about Trump's friendship with Epstein after Musk bombshell
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'The second he [Trump] was in front of me, he pulled me into him, and his hands were just on me and didn't come off,' she alleged. 'It became very clear then that he and Donald were really, really good friends and spent a lot of time together.' Author Michael Wolff has claimed he has seen explosive material from Trump's years-long friendship with Epstein - including a set of lewd photographs that he says, if made public, could severely damage the former president. The writer, who spent hours interviewing the financier before his arrest in 2019, said: 'I have seen these pictures. I know that these pictures exist and I can describe them,' Wolff said, referring to a trove of alleged images featuring Trump and Epstein, who died by suicide in a New York jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. 'There are about a dozen of them,' Wolff alleged. 'The ones I specifically remember is the two of them with topless girls of an uncertain age sitting on Trump's lap. And then Trump standing there with a stain on the front of his pants and three or four girls kind of bent over in laughter - they're topless, too - pointing at Trump's pants (trousers).' The president has denied all wrongdoing. The US leader used the Epstein files as a vote winner while campaigning last year for the White House. He had hyped the Epstein files as a bombshell - a revelatory moment that would bring justice to victims and expose the powerful figures complicit in the cover-up. Instead, it has been a damp squib. The documents contained flight logs, a redacted contact book, and a masseuse list — almost all of which had already been disclosed in court or through investigative reporting. No new names. No meaningful accountability. No answers. 'He made a big deal about releasing these files, but in the end, we got nothing,' one victim told the Mirror. Critics say the release had all the hallmarks of a smokescreen: a heavily redacted, incomplete document dump designed more to protect than expose. Attorney General Pam Bondi, a Trump loyalist, admitted she had received only 200 pages, despite reports that thousands more exist. So, where are the missing files? What names are still being protected? And why, after promising transparency, has Trump delivered silence? While figures like Prince Andrew and Bill Clinton have spent years attempting to distance themselves from Epstein, Trump's tactic has always been deflection. He has downplayed and dismissed Epstein as a 'guy I didn't like' while ignoring the decade-plus of mutual admiration and frequent encounters. But as each new detail emerges - whether in a flight log, a court testimony, or a viral clip - the picture becomes harder to deny. Trump didn't just know Epstein. He welcomed him into his private club. He praised him. He partied with him. He danced beside him while Epstein preyed on girls. Trump once claimed that if the truth about Epstein ever came out, 'a lot of very important people' would be taken down. What he never clarified was who those people are.