San Diego Union-Tribune

REPORT DETAILS PRESENTS GIVEN TO BIDEN

Foreign gifts range from sentimenta­l to practical to quirky

- BY AMY B WANG Wang writes for The Washington Post.

In June 2021, Russian President Vladimir Putin met with President Biden in person at a historic first summit in Geneva. Relations between the United States and Russia were already considered to be at a low at the time: The two leaders had an array of weighty issues to discuss, among them accusation­s of Moscow interferin­g with U.S. elections, alleged human rights abuses and a lengthy list of security demands from Putin.

Still, it would have been rude to show up empty-handed.

The tensions didn’t prevent Biden and Putin from following the longtime diplomatic tradition of exchanging gifts. In Geneva, Biden gifted Putin a pair of his trademark aviator sunglasses and a crystal sculpture of an American bison, the national mammal of the United States. And Putin gave Biden a miniature Kholui lacquer writing set, valued at $12,000, according to a report published Thursday by the State Department’s Office of the Chief of Protocol.

Putin’s gift was by far the most expensive Biden received from a foreign government or head of state in 2021, according to the report. But the price in this case would

have no correlatio­n to the strength of their actual relationsh­ip. Eight months later, Russia would invade Ukraine, launching the first land war in Europe since World War II. Biden has since repeatedly cast Putin as a threat to democracy and the global order, while Putin has accused Biden of helping rally the internatio­nal community against Russia.

As for the $12,000 writing set? It has since been transferre­d to the National Archives and Records Administra­tion.

The State Department’s annual report provides a glimpse into the practice of gift-giving in diplomatic settings. All federal employees are required by law to report gifts from foreign government sources valued at $415 or more, though certain officials — the president, first lady Jill Biden, Vice President Harris and Secretary of

State Antony Blinken — were the most frequent recipients of foreign gifts, given their positions.

Gifts of state are meant to be “enduring emblems of internatio­nal cooperatio­n and friendship,” according to the National Archives, one of the federal agencies responsibl­e for keeping presidenti­al gifts. “All enrich the relations between two countries and their leaders. And each recalls a moment in history, when two nations — often separated by oceans or ideology — briefly clasped hands.”

They also can reveal plenty about the giver. In a show of regal confidence, Queen Elizabeth II gave Biden a silver-framed photograph of herself (estimated value: $2,200) in June 2021. Later that same month, then-British Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave Biden a pair of dog bowls, presumably for Biden’s two German shepherds, along with some wool blankets, mugs and a fountain pen set.

That summer, then-Afghanista­n President Mohammed Ashraf Ghani gave Biden a silk carpet worth $9,600, while his wife gave Jill Biden another silk carpet worth $19,200. Within weeks, Ghani would flee the country after the Taliban overtook Kabul following the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanista­n.

In September 2021, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy gave Biden a U.S. flag, whose estimated value of $700 paled in comparison to that of the writing set Putin had gifted Biden a few months before. One year later, Zelenskyy — now presiding over a country at war — would return to Washington, presenting Biden with a medal on behalf of a Ukrainian military commander who had asked him to give it to “a very brave president.” A visibly moved Biden said it was “undeserved, but much appreciate­d.”

In modern times, a president might receive 15,000 gifts a year, according to the National Archives.

Most gifts end up transferre­d to the National Archives or to the General Services Administra­tion, unless the recipient pays fair market value to keep the gift. Some are officially displayed. A few of the gifts listed in the 2021 report were “destroyed.”

 ?? DEMETRIUS FREEMAN THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy gifts President Joe Biden with a medal on Dec. 21.
DEMETRIUS FREEMAN THE WASHINGTON POST Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy gifts President Joe Biden with a medal on Dec. 21.

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