Business Standard

US buys Boeing 747s once set for Russia for Air Force One

- ANTHONY CAPACCIO & RICK CLOUGH

The U.S. Air Force reached a deal with Boeing Co. for two 747 jets to serve as Air Force One, taking advantage of an unusual limited-time discount on planes once bound for Russia.

“We got a really good deal,” Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson said Friday in an interview. “I’m pleased with that.” The service said the jets, which will require extensive work to serve as planes for the president, are scheduled to be operationa­l in 2024.

The pact sets the stage for a modernised Air Force One program after President Donald Trump criticised its cost, threatened to cancel the order and later boasted of negotiatin­g with Boeing to reduce the expense. The U.S. planemaker has had the two jumbo jets in storage since they rolled off the assembly line in 2015 for Transaero Airlines, a Russian carrier that never signed for them before dissolving later that year.

The Air Force didn’t disclose the discount price for the two planes, which Boeing considered sensitive competitiv­e informatio­n.

“Boeing has said they do not want us to release that because they sell these things commercial­ly,” Wilson said in the interview. “The whole programme cost will be known, but the actual price of individual airframes” won’t be, she said. That nondisclos­ure “was part of the condition for the sale,” and “I can live with that.”

Shifting funds

Congressio­nal defence committees approved plans to shift $195 million in previously approved defence funds for the current year to speed action on the planes, congressio­nal aides said this week. Boeing offered favourable pricing if a contract was awarded by this month, according to a government funding request. The model carries a list price of $386.8 million.

Darlene Costello, the principal deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisitio­n, called the award for the 747s “a significan­t step towards ensuring an overall affordable program. As we move forward we will continue to seek and implement cost savings opportunit­ies,” she said in a statement.

Pricey and complex modificati­ons will be required to turn the planes into the flying fortresses that ferry U.S. presidents around the world. The most recent Air Force estimate is that the Air Force One program will cost $3.51 billion from the current fiscal year through fiscal 2022, mostly for research and developmen­t, according to Bloomberg Government analyst Robert Levinson.

The Air Force expects the planes to have the range to fly between continents and provide work and sleeping quarters for the president and first family. They also have to be equipped with highly advanced, secure communicat­ions and classified defence capabiliti­es.

The White House Military Office is working with the Air Force to define the aircraft’s requiremen­ts. As presidente­lect, Trump tweeted that the “costs are out of control” for the new planes and wrote, “Cancel order.” BLOOMBERG

 ?? REUTERS ?? Former US President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, walk to board a Boeing 747 that serves as Air Force One
REUTERS Former US President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, walk to board a Boeing 747 that serves as Air Force One

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