How did Tito respond to the American president when he told him that he did not smoke at the White House

In 1971, Josip Broz Tito, president of Yugoslavia's Socialist Socialist Republic had gone to the White House for a working meeting with then American President Richard Nixon. During this meeting, Tito reportedly pulled out a cigarette, and the helmet was starting with the American president, reminding him that he was at the [...] House.
During this meeting Tito reportedly pulled out a cigarette and the helmet was lighting the American president's intervention, reminding him that in the White House, cigarettes are banned, while Tito commended him and continued with him.
Mr. Tito, we don't smoke here at the White House. We are prohibited by law.
- Be like you! - to Tito's answer and keeps smoking in peace...
Josip Broz Tito was a Yugoslav politician and Secretary General of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, Prime Minister and President from 1945 to 1980. In 1934, he returned home and became a member of the Yugoslav Communist Party's political Bureau. Like Marshall Tito took place in World War II, communist partisans fought against German Nazis and Italian fascists, and against the Ustaše Croatian fascists, and Serbian monarchists Centics. After the war, he became the first prime minister in 1945-53, and finally President of State (1953-80) to his death. He has followed a policy of the Soviet Union, an independent policy and has been in the country since the 1950s, as one of the main leaders of the non-line movement of the United States. /gazetamtro












