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Obama
will be spending this week on vacation at Camp David – this photo is
from a previous Camp David vacation, where he is seen engaging in a
water gun ...
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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is foregoing his usual round of weekend golf at a Washington suburban military base. Instead, he and his family are choosing what is for them a rare woodland getaway: a weekend at the presidential mountaintop retreat of Camp David.
The family was leaving Friday for the isolated and heavily guarded
hideaway in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains. The White House said the
family weekend had already been planned and that he would return to the
White House on Sunday.
The escape from the White House caps a fierce week of foreign policy
eruptions, highlighted by a downed commercial jet liner over Ukraine and
Israel's ground offensive into Gaza, as well as maneuvers over how to
address a surge of Central American migrants at the U.S. border.
Camp David is an unusual destination for Obama. His last visit was
Aug. 3-4 of 2013, almost a year ago, when he celebrated his 52nd
birthday.
The trip will be his 33rd visit to Camp David, according to CBS News
White House reporter Mark Knoller, the unofficial but meticulous
chronicler of presidential outings. Obama went to Camp David only three
times in 2013.
About 1,800 feet above sea level and about 70 miles from the White
House, the camp occupies at least 125 acres, is protected by Marines
and, though nestled in the Catoctin Mountains, it is part of the Navy's
budget. A short drive from the town of Thurmont in northern Maryland,
the compound is not marked by road signs and is ringed by imposing
security fences.
On the grounds, presidents and their guests can enjoy an abbreviated
game of golf, play tennis, bowl, swim in the heated pool, even shoot
skeet.
Obama hosted the leaders of the Group of Eight industrial nations at
Camp David in 2012. It was the largest gathering of foreign leaders ever
to assemble there.
Camp David has been a weekend presidential refuge since 1942, when
Franklin D. Roosevelt decided he wanted to flee Washington's muggy
summers and still stay close to the capital during wartime. Roosevelt
named it "Shangri-la," the fictional valley in James Hilton's 1933 novel
"Lost Horizon."
President Dwight D. Eisenhower renamed the retreat after his grandson
David. It also retains its official pedestrian name: Naval Support
Facility Thurmont.
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