Air Force One-Point-Three
After a quarter-century of service, the aging presidential airplanes are being replaced by a pair of state-of-the-art Boeing 747-8s.
The presidential planes are renowned for the tech specs of their interior cabins, which allow a globe-trotting commander-in-chief to run the country, and even manage a war, virtually the same way he would in the White House. But their fuselages are hardly state-of-the-art.
The Air Force announced this week that it had picked the next model for its flying fortress: a Boeing 747-8 with a tail the height of a six-story building and which,according to the company's "fun facts," can carry more than $5 billion in solid gold bars from Fort Knox. (Heaven forbid the need arises...) It'll be the first complete upgrade for Air Force One since the current planes arrived in 1990 and 1991.
"I’m surprised they haven’t replaced it before now," said John Haigh Sr., a former chief steward of Air Force One who was aboard the plane that now shuttles President Obama when it first carried President George H. W. Bush in 1990. As many trivia buffs know, Air Force One is a military call number given to any aircraft carrying the sitting commander-in-chief. There are actually two identical presidential planes, and when the president takes an overnight trip, the back-up aircraft is always within a 30-minute trip away "in case there's a problem with the primary airplane," Haigh said.
Boeing boasts that it's "cleaner, quieter, and emits less greenhouse gas" than any other 747. In reality, though, the years-long hunt for a new Air Force One wasn't much of a competition. The military needs a four-engine aircraft that meets its size and weight, electrical power production, and safety requirements. After conducting market research, officials concluded the only other option was the Airbus 380, which is made in France. Due to the highly classified decisions that go into designing the presidential plane, it has to be manufactured domestically. That's not to mention the PR disaster that would follow the outsourcing of Air Force One. As Haigh put it: "We need the president's plane to be made here."
The government already endured a procurement controversy during the development of a much larger fleet of new Marine One helicopters. The Obama administration canceled its original contract after the price tag ballooned to more than $13 billion, and the cheaper choppers now won't arrive until 2020 or later. The $1.65 billion budget for the next Air Force One is expected to grow, but significant delays may be a bigger concern than a cost overrun. After 25 years of service and millions of miles in the sky, the president's current planes are old enough as it is.
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