A military aide carries the Football up the stairs of Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base on April 7, 2010.

As President Donald Trump departs Saudi Arabia to continue on his first foreign trip, which also takes him to Isreal, Italy, and Brussels, the “nuclear football” will follow him.

According to Business Insider, the so-called nuclear football is a black leather briefcase that contains top-secret items capable of allowing the US president to authorise a nuclear strike, while away from fixed command centres, such as the Situation Room.

It is generally regarded as the most protected briefcase in the world.

Officially referred to as the “president’s emergency satchel,” the unsophisticated-looking portable football is hand-carried by one of five military aides and is always within reach of the commander in chief, just in case.

According to Bill Gulley, a former director of the White House Military Office, the ubiquitous football does not contain a doomsday red-button keypad, but rather four items.

The items include, a 75-page black book of retaliatory nuclear-strike options printed in black and red ink, another black book with a list of classified sites to shelter the president, a manila folder containing 10 pages of instructions on how to operate the Emergency Broadcast System and an index card with authentication codes.

Sometimes an antenna can be seen poking out of the briefcase, which suggests that there may be communications equipment inside.

The nickname “football” comes from “dropkick,” a code name given to a secret nuclear-war plan, according to former US Secretary of Defence, Robert McNamara.

Initiating a dropkick would require one of these footballs, according to Smithsonian Magazine.

The military aides selected to carry the briefcase are trained to administer the president for a nuclear attack in minutes.

“You’re always kind of on edge,” recalls then Air Force Major Robert Patterson, who toted the football for President Bill Clinton.

“I opened it up constantly just to refresh myself, to always be aware of what was in it, all the potential decisions the president could possibly make,” Patterson told The Associated Press.

The ubiquitous football is always in the same airplane, helicopter, car, and elevator alongside the president. When the president is at home, the football is stored in a secure location inside the White House, the AP reported.

According to Patterson, some aides chased after Clinton while he jogged around the White House compound – all the while lugging the 45-pound briefcase.

The football first appeared during the Kennedy administration, shortly after the Cuban missile crisis in 1962.

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