A $400 million plane sounds like a steal. It is a steal only if someone else pays.
Trump unveiled the new Air Force One on Friday. It is a Boeing 747 gifted by Qatar.
The catch shows up in the fine print. Making it flight-ready could cost taxpayers over $1 billion.
A Gift With A Big Asterisk
The jet arrived early at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. Qatar handed it over last year.
That made it one of the largest foreign gifts ever. The U.S. government rarely takes anything this big.
Most gifts to the government are small. A jet of this size is almost unheard of.
The hard part comes next. The jet must become a secure flying command post.
That security work is heavy. Experts say it could run past $1 billion.
That bill would land on taxpayers, not Qatar. The gift covers the plane, not the upgrades.
So the savings may be smaller than they look.
Think of a free mansion you can't move into yet. First you spend a fortune rewiring it for safety.
The gift was a fight from the start. Trump said in May 2025 he'd be "stupid" to turn it down.
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A Bridge, Not The Final Answer
The plane is a stopgap. The Air Force calls it a "bridge" aircraft.
It fills in until Boeing builds two new jets. Those are now expected around 2027 to 2028.
The current jets are decades old. The new build has run years behind schedule.
The handoff also came early. The Air Force first set delivery for 2028, then moved it up.
The jet once served Qatar's head of state. Crews reworked it to put mission ahead of looks.
It still has to pass commissioning flights first. The Air Force calls those a "final exam."
The Air Force was proud of the speed. Its chief of staff said many thought it couldn't be done.
Trump showed off the new paint job. He swapped the classic light blue for red, white, and dark blue.
He praised the speed of the work. He said the rebuild took just 10 months and called it the "world's most luxurious plane."
Worth Noting
The gift drew criticism from both parties. The worry was security and ethics.
Critics asked if a foreign gift belongs on Air Force One. Supporters said the deal saved money and time.
The plane is a symbol and a stopgap. The real test starts on the tarmac.
Trump thanked Qatar's emir and praised Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The plane will headline a July 4 flyover for the country's 250th birthday.
For taxpayers, the question isn't the sticker price. It's the upgrade bill.
The plane itself was free, but the work to fly the president won't be.
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