Trump
takes first flight on Qatar-gifted Air Force One amid criticism
The US
president flies to North Dakota on first trip aboard Qatar-gifted 747-8, as
critics raise corruption concerns
Marina
Dunbar
Wed 1 Jul
2026 18.18 CEST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jul/01/trump-qatar-air-force-one-first-flight
Donald
Trump traveled to North Dakota on Wednesday for the first trip onboard the new
Air Force One, a luxury Boeing 747-8 aircraft gifted by the Qatari government.
The US
president introduced the $400m aircraft last month as the replacement for the
military-grade 747-2 that has transported US presidents for more than three
decades. The gifted Boeing 747-8 is expected to remain in service until the air
force receives a new fleet of Boeing presidential aircraft in the next two
years.
The
emergence of the controversial gift last year sparked a firestorm of bipartisan
criticism of Trump, and intensified conflict of interest fears. The White House
has repeatedly pushed back against allegations of corruption, and insisted such
donations were in full compliance with the law.
Before
departing from Joint Base Andrews on Wednesday, Trump celebrated the occasion,
saying: “This will be the first flight of what I think is maybe the greatest
commercial plane ever built.”
“I’m
excited about the first flight. Nobody’s ever seen anything like it,” Trump
declared. “They just completed it, they made it appropriate for a president –
that means the security and all the different bells and whistles they put on –
very complex stuff. But it’s really quite something.”
Trump
told reporters: “Frankly, we couldn’t build a plane like this because we
wouldn’t be willing to spend the kind of money necessary. They spent top
dollars.”
The
Boeing 747-8 was originally built in the US.
When the
Boeing 747-8 was first selected in 2015 to become the next generation Air Force
One, then US air force secretary, Deborah Lee James, described it as “the only
aircraft manufactured in the United States” that “meets the necessary
capabilities established to execute the presidential support mission”.
Trump
also claimed the aircraft required taxpayers to spend “very little” on upgrades
“relative to what it would cost if we did it a different way”. He described it
as “a gift from a country that’s treated us very well”.
The
conversion of the Qatari Boeing 747 was estimated to cost $1bn. It is intended
to serve as a temporary “bridge” aircraft until two delayed presidential Boeing
jets are delivered in 2027 and 2028. The projected cost of those two specially
built aircrafts has increased from $3.7bn to $5bn.
According
to the air force, the aircraft upgrades focused on operational readiness rather
than appearance, resulting in the plane’s interior layout “minimally changed”.
White
House communications director, Steven Cheung, posted photos on X showing the
cabin, including large conference tables and leather seating.
The
donated Qatari jet, which Qatar had previously been unable to sell, has drawn
widespread criticism.
Opponents
argued that the expense of converting the aircraft could take funding away from
Sentinel, the intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) modernization program
that is already several years behind schedule. Democrats have criticized the
gift as being the “definition of corruption”.
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