According to a senior White House official, the presidential entourage will be staying elsewhere "due to costs and space needs of the US government as well as security concerns," CNN reported. The unnamed official did not cite cybersecurity concerns specifically.
It's no secret that the US has long been dubious of China for cyberspying, despite the inability of officials to produce proof of their allegations.
Instead of the Waldorf, the New York Palace Hotel will host Obama and his staff during the UNGA trip, Earnest said Friday.
US Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, who in July pointed fingers at China as the "leading suspect" for the hack into the Office of Personnel Management which affected more than 20 million US federal employees, said that the likelihood of a large-scale, debilitating cyberattack against the United States is not as likely as continued, lower-level threats.