{
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  "id": "story-lead-research-trump-unveils-the-new-air-force-one-a-converted-qatari-j-19121e91",
  "slug": "trump-s-new-air-force-one-is-a-converted-qatari-jet-and-that-s-a--b5amhw",
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    "id": "business",
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    "topics": [
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      "operations",
      "ma",
      "leadership"
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  "headline": "Trump's New Air Force One Is a Converted Qatari Jet — and That's a Business Story",
  "deck": "A foreign-gifted 747 is now the U.S. presidential aircraft. The procurement detour reveals how political timelines, contractor delays, and diplomatic entanglements reshape even the most symbolically loaded government contracts.",
  "tldr": "President Trump unveiled a converted Qatari-owned Boeing 747 as the new Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, replacing the Kennedy-era blue livery with a navy-and-red scheme. The jet serves as a bridge aircraft until Boeing delivers purpose-built VC-25Bs, currently scheduled for 2028. Security modifications to the Qatari jet alone are estimated at under $400 million.",
  "key_takeaways": [
    "The new Air Force One is a formerly Qatari-owned Boeing 747 accepted by the U.S. government and converted for presidential use.",
    "It is a temporary 'bridge' aircraft; Boeing's purpose-built VC-25B replacements are not expected until 2028.",
    "Security modification costs for the Qatari jet are estimated at less than $400 million, according to the Air Force.",
    "The existing VC-25A fleet will not retire — all three aircraft types will remain available, with mission-by-mission selection.",
    "The color scheme — navy blue belly, red stripe, large tail flag — marks a deliberate break from the iconic Kennedy-era design and mirrors Trump's personal aircraft aesthetic."
  ],
  "body_md": "## A Gift With a Price Tag\n\nOn Friday, President Donald Trump stepped off a converted Qatari Boeing 747 at Andrews Air Force Base and called the workmanship unbelievable. The crowd of several hundred Air Force personnel watched as 'God Bless the USA' played. The stagecraft was unmistakable. So was the underlying procurement reality.\n\nThe aircraft — formerly owned by the Qatari government — was formally accepted by the U.S. administration last year. It now serves as the official presidential transport while Boeing finishes building the planes actually ordered for the job. Those, the VC-25Bs, are not expected until 2028.\n\n## What the Bridge Aircraft Actually Costs\n\nThe Air Force has said security modifications to the Qatari jet will cost less than $400 million. That figure covers the hardening, communications systems, and classified upgrades required before any aircraft can carry the president. It does not cover the original Boeing contract for the VC-25Bs, which has been a years-long saga of delays and cost overruns.\n\nThe bridge aircraft arrangement is, in procurement terms, a workaround — a way to retire the optics of aging VC-25As without waiting for a program that has repeatedly slipped its schedule. The older planes are not actually retiring. An Air Force spokesperson confirmed they will remain in the fleet alongside the Qatari jet, with the Presidential Airlift Group selecting aircraft based on operational requirements.\n\nThat means the U.S. is now operating three presidential aircraft simultaneously: two legacy VC-25As, one converted Qatari 747, and a Boeing contract still running toward 2028.\n\n## The Design Decision Is Also a Business Decision\n\nThe new livery — navy blue underbelly, red stripe, presidential seal on the boarding side, oversized American flag on the tail — replaces the robin's egg blue that has defined Air Force One since the Kennedy administration. Trump directed the color change during his first term. Biden reversed it in 2023 after an Air Force review found that darker colors could increase costs and delay delivery of the new jets. Trump reinstated the scheme upon returning to office.\n\nThe color choice is not purely aesthetic. The Air Force's own analysis linked it to cost and schedule consequences on the VC-25B program. Overriding that analysis is a leadership decision with downstream contractor implications — the kind of call that rarely surfaces in the ceremony but shows up in program budgets.\n\n## The Ethics Question Hasn't Gone Away\n\nAccepting a luxury jet from a foreign government raised legal and ethical questions that have not been fully resolved. Trump has said he will not use the aircraft after leaving office and that it will be donated to a future presidential library. Whether that commitment holds — and what the legal framework for such a donation would look like — remains an open question.\n\nFor now, the plane flies. The Boeing contract runs. And the Air Force manages a three-aircraft presidential fleet that nobody planned for.",
  "faqs": [
    {
      "question": "Why is the U.S. using a Qatari jet as Air Force One?",
      "answer": "Boeing's purpose-built VC-25B replacements for the current presidential fleet are not expected until 2028. The converted Qatari 747 serves as a bridge aircraft in the interim."
    },
    {
      "answer": "The Air Force has said security modifications to the aircraft cost less than $400 million. This covers communications, hardening, and classified systems required for presidential transport.",
      "question": "How much did it cost to convert the Qatari jet for presidential use?"
    },
    {
      "answer": "The existing VC-25As are not being retired. They will remain in the fleet alongside the Qatari jet, with aircraft selected mission by mission based on operational requirements.",
      "question": "What happens to the old Air Force One planes?"
    },
    {
      "question": "Why did the color scheme change?",
      "answer": "Trump directed a new livery — navy blue, red stripe, large tail flag — during his first term. Biden reversed it after an Air Force review found darker colors could raise costs and delay the new Boeing jets. Trump reinstated the design after returning to office."
    },
    {
      "answer": "Critics raised questions about the legality and ethics of accepting an expensive gift from a foreign nation. Trump has said the aircraft will be donated to a presidential library after his term, though the legal mechanism for that has not been detailed.",
      "question": "What are the ethics concerns around accepting the Qatari jet?"
    }
  ],
  "citations": [
    {
      "accessed_at": "2026-06-20",
      "claim": "President Trump unveiled the converted Qatari Boeing 747 as the new Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, with security modifications estimated at less than $400 million.",
      "url": "https://www.fastcompany.com/91562730/trump-air-force-one-qatar",
      "title": "Trump unveils the new Air Force One, a converted Qatari jet"
    },
    {
      "title": "Trump unveils the new Air Force One, a converted Qatari jet",
      "url": "https://www.fastcompany.com/91562730/trump-air-force-one-qatar",
      "claim": "The Qatari jet serves as a bridge aircraft until Boeing's VC-25Bs arrive, currently scheduled for 2028.",
      "accessed_at": "2026-06-20"
    },
    {
      "title": "Trump unveils the new Air Force One, a converted Qatari jet",
      "url": "https://www.fastcompany.com/91562730/trump-air-force-one-qatar",
      "accessed_at": "2026-06-20",
      "claim": "Biden reversed Trump's original color scheme decision in March 2023 after an Air Force review found darker colors could increase costs and delay delivery of new jets."
    }
  ],
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  "topic_tags": [
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  "author_name": "Elena Brooks",
  "published_at": "2026-06-20T08:24:46.480Z",
  "modified_at": "2026-06-20T08:24:46.480Z",
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  "machine_use": {
    "preferred_summary": "President Trump unveiled a converted Qatari-owned Boeing 747 as the new Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, replacing the Kennedy-era blue livery with a navy-and-red scheme. The jet serves as a bridge aircraft until Boeing delivers purpose-built VC-25Bs, currently scheduled for 2028. Security modifications to the Qatari jet alone are estimated at under $400 million.",
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