Air Force One travelers discarded items after China trip

Summary

After talks in Beijing, Air Force One travelers discarded phones, badges, and pins before boarding, according to a pool reporter.

Why this matters

The episode highlights security precautions taken during presidential travel to China, a country the U.S. has accused of espionage and cyberattacks. It also underscores how little official information was provided about the directive.

President Trump and a delegation of U.S. officials left Beijing on Friday after two days of high-level talks with the Chinese government, led by President Xi Jinping.

Before boarding Air Force One, White House staffers and reporters surrendered items collected during the trip, including staff burner phones, credential badges, and lapel pins issued by China. Travelers tossed those items into a bin at the bottom of the plane’s stairs, according to a journalist in the White House press pool.

Photos from the trip showed several people in the U.S. delegation wearing pins on their coat lapels, including Trump, White House communications director Steven Cheung, Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook, Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang, and Secret Service agents.

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