PETRA, Jordan--After four days of difficult Middle East diplomacy, President Obama headed home Saturday after playing tourist at the elaborate ruins of Petra, an ancient city carved from sheer rock faces of surrounding mountains.
The remains of monasteries, burial tombs and baths from the Nabatean civilization more than 2,000 years ago are the pride of Jordan, Obama's final stop in the region. The archaeological park attracts half a million visitors a year, and Obama, dressed in khaki slacks and a Navy windbreaker, seemed as awestruck as any other tourist.
Emerging from a narrow gorge into a bright, sunlit opening known as the plaza, he marveled at the facade of the Treasury, the masterpiece of the city, with giant red-stone columns and urns sculpted from a cliff.
PHOTOS: Obama's Middle East trip
"This is pretty spectacular," he said, craning his neck to peer at the rock faces towering above him.
"It's amazing," he said, as the cameras clicked. "Spectacular."
During his first term, Obama's foreign trips were marked by a breakneck pace, leaving little time for tourist stops. This trip to Israel, the Palestinian territories and Jordan included stops at several cultural, historic and religious sites.
On Friday, a blinding sandstorm forced him to take his motorcade, not a helicopter, to Bethlehem to visit the Church of the Nativity, which is built over a cave that marks the birthplace of Jesus.