
‘Gold standard': Plane spotters in Calgary hope for glimpse of Air Force 1 at G7
CALGARY - Airplane enthusiasts are setting up at the Calgary International Airport in hopes of seeing some exciting aircraft land for the start of the G7 leaders' summit in nearby Kananaskis, Alta.
Corbin Johnson wants to catch a glimpse of the plane carrying U.S. President Donald Trump.
'Air Force 1 is certainly the gold standard, but I think myself and everyone else is very excited to see all the other aircraft are coming,' Corbin Johnson said Saturday, as he checked out a viewing area of the airport.
The spot is also one of three designated demonstration zones that police have set up in Calgary, with another in Banff.
Prime Minister Mark Carney is hosting G7 leaders from the United States, France, the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan and Italy, who were expected to arrive Sunday for the start of the three-day summit in Kananaskis, southwest of Calgary in the Rocky Mountains. Some leaders of non-member countries, including Ukraine and India, are also set to attend.
Johnson, a camera around his neck, said he posts all his plane photos on Instagram.
'My love of airplanes, I would say started right here, where we're standing. My parents would take me here to plane spot and look at all the planes that would come through here,' he said.
'This is absolutely my number 1 hobby. It's something you can make as full time as you kind of want to.'
While Johnson and some other plane spotters were getting the lay of the land, several police vehicles drove through the parking lot.
A sign on the runway fence topped with barbed wire warns: 'No Drone Zone.' Air restrictions over the airport and Kananaskis Village went into effect Saturday morning.
Police said they have received indications that protesters are expected, and the demonstrations are to be broadcast on TVs set up for the leaders in Kananaskis.
RCMP Chief Supt. David Hall said he just wants the protests to be peaceful.
'We know it's important for people to have their message seen and heard by the world leaders, and it's for this reason we've established live feeds,' he said.
'We police behaviours and not beliefs. And so I'd just encourage everyone to look to conduct any demonstration activity over the next few days in a lawful, peaceful and safe manner.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 15, 2025.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
41 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Europe Struggles to Stay Relevant as US Hits Iran
Welcome to the Brussels Edition, Bloomberg's daily briefing on what matters most in the heart of the European Union. European foreign ministers gathering in Brussels today to discuss the febrile situation in the Middle East find themselves largely sidelined, watching events unfold with little power to influence the outcome. They used to be players in the on-again-off-again nuclear negotiations with Tehran, but have been marginalized under the Trump administration. They were not brought into the US president's thinking at the G-7 and their last-ditch efforts at diplomacy proved futile in Geneva last week. All that is left for European NATO allies with a stake in the Middle East is for to Trump decide to show up at the alliance's summit in The Hague tomorrow.


The Hill
7 hours ago
- The Hill
Johnson: US has ‘no beef with the Iranian people'
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said Sunday that the United States has 'no beef for the Iranian people' following Saturday's announcement by President Trump that the U.S. had bombed three Iranian nuclear sites. 'We have no beef with the Iranian people,' Johnson told anchor Maria Bartiromo on Fox Business Network's 'Sunday Morning Futures.' 'This is about a regime that wants to destroy and eliminate Israel and destroy the great Satan, America.' Trump announced late Saturday that U.S. bombers struck three nuclear sites in Iran: Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan. 'Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated. Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace,' he said in an address to the nation. The U.S. bombing in Iran followed a week of debate about whether the U.S. would step into a conflict that Israel had kicked off on June 13. 'We're not at war with the Iranian people. We support the Iranian people,' Johnson said Sunday. 'They don't like being under the dictatorial thumb of such a brutal regime.' On Sunday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that the U.S. had no military operation planned against Iran, but did not rule out future strikes if the country did not show a meaningful effort to make peace. 'We have other targets that we could hit, but we achieved our objective,' Rubio said on CBS News's 'Face the Nation.'
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Trump knocks ‘kooky' Carlson over Iran criticism
President Trump took a shot at pundit Tucker Carlson, a former Fox News host and one of his most reliable allies in the media, over the commentator's criticism of the president's posture toward Iran. 'Somebody please explain to kooky Tucker Carlson that IRAN CAN NEVER HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON,' Trump wrote on his Truth Social website Monday evening. Trump's attack on the longtime cable news host-turned-podcast and multimedia personality came just hours after reporters asked him about Carlson's urging that the U.S. stay out of a quickly escalating war between Israel and Iran. 'I don't know what Tucker Carlson is saying. Let him go get a television network and say it so that people listen,' the president said during a meeting with the British prime minister at the Group of Seven summit, an even he left early on Monday due to the ongoing crisis in the Middle East. Carlson was a leading host at Fox for years, hosting a prime-time show that was a favorite program of the president and many of his followers. After being fired by Fox in 2022, Carlson launched his own media company and digital show, hosting the president for his first episode and accompanying him along the 2024 campaign trail. Carlson remains a large supporter of much of Trump's agenda, but in recent days he has cautioned the president against allowing the U.S. to become involved in another war in the Middle East. The pundit last week said Trump was 'complicit' in Israel's all-out war with Iran and called out 'warmongers' whom he says were urging Trump to 'direct U.S. military involvement in a war.' Trump late Monday urged people to flee the city of Tehran as more Israeli military strikes are expected in the area in the coming days. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.