Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Obama aide, Chinese official have dust-up as president departs Air Force One

WATCH ABOVE: A Chinese official confronted U.S. President Barack Obama's national security adviser on the tarmac on Saturday prompting the Secret Service to intervene, an unusual altercation as China implements strict controls ahead of a big summit. The stakes are high for China to pull off a trouble-free G20 summit of the world's top economies, its highest profile event of the year, as it looks to cement its global standing and avoid acrimony over a long list of tensions with Washington – Sep 3, 2016

HANGZHOU, China – If President Barack Obama was hoping for a graceful start to his final trip to Asia as commander in chief, this wasn’t it.

Story continues below advertisement

A confrontation between a White House aide and a Chinese official, and other diplomatic dust-ups were out in the open from the moment Air Force One landed in Hangzhou, site of an economic summit.

READ MORE: Justin Trudeau urges G20 leaders to fight ‘divisive, fearful rhetoric’

The first sign of trouble: There was no staircase for Obama to exit the plane and descend on the red carpet. Obama used an alternative exit.

On the tarmac, a quarrel broke out between a presidential aide and a Chinese official who demanded the journalists travelling with Obama be prohibited from getting anywhere near him. It was a breach of the tradition observed whenever the American president arrives in a foreign place.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

READ MORE: US, China sign on to Paris climate change agreement

When the White House official insisted the U.S. would set the rules for its own leader, her Chinese counterpart shot back.

Story continues below advertisement

“This is our country! This is our airport!” the Chinese official yelled.

WATCH: Justin Trudeau hopes to strengthen relationship with China ahead of G20 summit

Also, a Chinese official tried to keep Obama’s national security adviser, Susan Rice, away from her boss.

Rice seemed less than amused by the incident when asked about it by a reporter.

“They did things that weren’t anticipated,” she said.

Story continues below advertisement

Later, two Chinese officials – one working to assist the American delegation – had to be physically separated after trying to hit each other outside an event.

WATCH: Trudeau calls Great Wall of China ‘beautiful’ during visit with family
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article