The King and Queen have arrived in Washington DC to begin their State visit to America.
Charles and Camilla touched down at Joint Base Andrews at around 2.30pm local time [7.30pm UK time] in the British Government GBNI aeroplane, known colloquially as the ‘baby Voyager’.
The 77-year-old sovereign has been charged by the British Government to put the sparkle back into the so-called ‘special relationship’, although diplomats insist it’s a term they haven’t used for 25 years, preferring to use the more mailable ‘enduring’.
Their Majesties touched down to embark on a four-day trip, ostensibly designed to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
They will spend four days in the US, beginning with a tea with President Trump and the First Lady at the White House today.
Their visit will include a day in New York and a day in rural Virginia, as well as the formalities of a White House dinner and the King’s speech to Congress.
The trip comes amid a security scandal, after a gunman attempted to target President Trump at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner on Saturday night, necessitating small modifications to the King and Queen’s visit.
Queen Camilla sported a new pink Dior coat dress especially for the occasion along with, movingly, a Union Flag/Stars and Stripes brooch presented to Queen Elizabeth by the Mayor of New York in October 1957.
King Charles III and Queen Camilla are greeted by US Protocol Chief Monica Crowley as they arrive at Joint Base Andrews
King Charles and Queen Camilla disembark their plane as they arrive on day one of their State Visit
The 77-year-old sovereign has been charged by the British Government to put the sparkle back into the so-called ‘special relationship’
Set with rubies, emeralds and diamonds, it was gifted during the monarch’s own first State Visit to the United States as Queen at a civic lunch by Mayor Robert F. Wagner on behalf of the City of New York.
That State Visit, at the height of the Cold War, was designed to re-enforce the ties of friendship between the United States and Great Britain (echoing the highly significant visit undertaken by her parents, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, in 1939 in the lead up to the Second World War).
As the plane pulled up in front of waiting dignitaries, steps were wheeled over to it and a red carpet rolled out, literally, at the bottom.
A military honour guard, made up of the US Army, Navy and Airforce lined the carpet, with a military band behind them.
As they walked down the steps, the King made remarks to the Queen, who held on to the handle of the steps as she walked in high heels.
The King and Queen were met on the tarmac by Ambassador Monica Crowley, Chief of Protocol for the US.
Two children presented posies: Isla, the daughter of British embassy staff who is celebrating her ninth birthday today, and eight-year-old Sam, whose father is serving as a Royal Navy Commander in the British Defence Staff in the UK.
The royal visitors were welcomed by Sir Christian Turner, the new British Ambassador, his wife Lady Turner, and senior members of the embassy team.
As they made their way down the line up, the King and Queen shook hands and made smiling small talk.
King Charles III shakes hands with US Chief of Protocol Monica Crowley as Queen Camilla deplanes at Joint Base Andrews
King Charles shakes hands with members of Trump’s team on arrival
King Charles III and Queen Camilla are greeted by US Protocol Chief Monica Crowley as they arrive at Joint Base Andrews
Queen Camilla sported a new pink Dior coat dress especially for the occasion along with, movingly, a Union Flag/Stars and Stripes brooch
At the end of the red carpet, the King and Queen stood still for the UK and US national anthems.
They then climbed into a waiting car, the sixth in a convoy of 29 vehicles which included a fire engine, ambulance and police car.
Given recent events, this week’s trip by King Charles will be considered a rousing success if it even half-way reminds President Donald Trump that there is more that unites our two countries than divides us: ‘Project Paper Over The Cracks’.
Despite the drama of Saturday’s apparent assassination attempt on President Trump and his most senior officials, which prompted a frantic security review of the entire visit before Buckingham Palace declared it would still be going ahead, the American leader has made clear his personal determination it goes off without a hitch.
British ambassador Sir Christian says he is ‘very confident that all appropriate security measures are in place’ with just a few tweaks to one or two engagements in light of events.
The security cordon that has been thrown round the King and Queen, however, is one of the highest ever known.
King Charles walks through the honour guard to a waiting car
King Charles III and Queen Camilla receive posies from the children of British military families based in the United States
Their Majesties touched down at Joint Base Andrews at around 2.30pm local time [7.30pm UK time], around half an hour earlier than planned, having flown over on the GBNI ‘Baby Voyager’, the smaller of the governmental planes
As the royals’ plane touched down in glorious sunshine at Joint Base Andrews on the outskirts of the capital city, the King and Queen were received by the Chief of Protocol of the United States, Ambassador Monica Crowley
The King just before he gets into a car at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland
The couple wait as they listen to the national anthem being played before driving off
In interviews over the weekend President Trump variously described ‘my friend’ King Charles as a ‘brave’ man, the best representative of his country and someone he was actually delighted to welcome with open arms.
Given his clear contempt for British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and vocal criticism of his refusal to support his war in Iran, it’s admittedly not the highest of bars.
But senior diplomatic sources told the Mail that the Trump administration was ‘more Anglophile’ at its heart than many in recent history, and the President (and, particularly, the First Lady, Melania Trump) are keen to return the hospitality they have received on their multiple visits to the United Kingdom.
As the royals’ plane touched down in glorious sunshine at Joint Base Andrews on the outskirts of the capital city, the King and Queen were received by the Chief of Protocol of the United States, Ambassador Ms Crowley, and His Majesty’s Ambassador to the United States, Sir Christian, who was parachuted in February after the Peter Mandelson debacle that continues to haunt Sir Keir’s premiership.
Although he has only been in charge for barely two months, the career diplomat is considered a smooth operator and a safe pair of hands, not least because he sat on the Royal Visits Committee at the Foreign Office for eight years and actually knows one end of a royal tour from another.
Their Majesties received posies from children of British military families based in the US, as well as being greeted by diplomatic, federal and state representatives, including senior members of the British Embassy in Washington and representatives of the United States Government.
They proceeded through an ‘honour cordon’ by US military personnel, with the United States military band playing the national anthems of both counties, before heading off in their convoy for the White House.
King Charles, accompanied by his wife, Queen Camilla, touched down in Washington today
American flag and the Royal Standard can be seen outside of the window of King Charles’s plane as it arrives in the US
Greeters stand on the tarmac after King Charles III and Queen Camilla’s plane landed at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland
An honour guard approaches after King Charles and Queen Camilla’s plane landed
Ambassador of the United Kingdom to the United States Sir Christian Turner (C) waits for King Charles III and Queen Camilla to arrive
A plane carrying King Charles III and Queen Camila arrives on the runway on day one of their State Visit to the United States
Members of a US Military honour guard rehearses ahead of the arrival of King Charles III and Queen Camilla
There they will be personally greeted on the iconic South Portico – the neoclassical two-story structure with his grand double staircase, over looking the South Lawn – by the President and First Lady.
With the full military and ceremonial honours being saved for tomorrow- the second of no less than five meetings between the two heads of state over the four-day State Visit, an indication of how much this means to governments on both sides of the Atlantic – this was more of a homely welcome.
Their Majesties, together with their hosts, will visit the new ‘White House beehives’ – which will no doubt fascinate the the British visitors, who are both keen apiarists and have sold their own homegrown honey for charity over the years.
Formally established in 2009, the bee-keeping programme supports the pollination of nearby gardens while serving as an ‘enduring feature’ of the White House grounds.
And while King Charles has erected three very distinctive beehives in the shapes of classic structures at his Highgrove home in Gloucestershire – given to him as a 70th birthday present by royal food supplier Fortnum & Mason – America, naturally, does it bigger.
Their two new bee colonies are housed in hives in the very shapes of the White House itself.
Afterwards the two couples will retire inside for a quintessentially English cup of tea and a chat, with the serious bi-lateral talks saved for Tuesday.
Buckingham Palace and the British Embassy are taking no chances however – and nothing was recorded by the television cameras.
Indeed, it is a feature of the entire visit that any personal interaction between the King and President, other than a couple of staged photocalls, are taking place with no one but their closest advisors to hear.
Later in the day, the King and Queen plan to join their ambassador for a garden party in the grounds of his official residence – which hosted its first royal garden party for King George VI in June 1939 – along with 650 guests.
No expense has been spared with four kinds of sandwiches showcasing the best of British – Scottish salmon with lemon butter, roast beef and horseradish, egg mayonnaise and pickled cucumber
Sandwiches being prepares for King Charles and Queen Camilla’s tea with President Trump
No expense has been spared with four kinds of sandwiches showcasing the best of British – Scottish salmon with lemon butter, roast beef and horseradish, egg mayonnaise and pickled cucumber – along with home-baked scones, clotted cream and strawberry jam.
Staff were busy today prepping 3,000 individual sandwiches, with the on-message beef, notably, coming from one of the first tariff free shipments that have arrived as part of the new UK-US economic prosperity agreement. It has been frozen for ‘peak freshness’ so that it could be enjoyed today.
Guests represented the wide-ranging and historic connections between the United States and the UK in everything from politics to science and sustainability and charities tackling domestic abuse, as well as community organisations and the creative industries.
Charles and Camilla were also set to view a special 250th anniversary time capsule, twinned with another placed under the statue of George Washington in London last year, containing a proclamation from His Majesty, essays written by local school children and a commemorative coin placed inside by the couple themselves.
It will be placed under the Washington Monument on the capital city’s National Mall later this year, with strict instructions for it only to be opened on the quincentennial anniversary of the Declaration of Independence in another 250 years time.
And who knows how special the relationship will be by then.



