Mark Wilson, Hulton Archive, Getty Images
Air Force One takes off on a 2000 flight

Pentagon Defends New Air Force One After Trump Tweet

Dec. 8, 2016
DoD: “It sounds like a lot, but you have to remember: This is a system of systems, it’s multiple aircraft and it’s not all Boeing. This is a system that’s going to have many different companies providing the systems that go on it.”

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Defense Department defended the project to replace Air Force One a day after President-elect Donald Trump called the project’s costs “ridiculous.”

Boeing (IW 500/9) has received a $170 million contract to develop the scope and requirements of replacing the aging Air Force One, which is actually two planes — one for the president and a spare. On Tuesday, Trump said Boeing was spending $4 billion on the new plane and called for the order to be cancelled.

Converting a pair of 747-8 jumbo jets to state-of-the-art luxury command centers by 2024 had been estimated to cost $3 billion, and cost overruns and delays could bring the price tag up to Trump’s estimate.

But Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis underscored the complexities of the project and suggested it was not a simple bonanza for Boeing.

“It sounds like a lot, but you have to remember: This is a system of systems, it’s multiple aircraft and it’s not all Boeing,” Davis said. “This is a system that’s going to have many different companies providing the systems that go on it. And we simply don’t know the exact figure.”

Trump’s comments on the project briefly had pulled Boeing’s stock price lower but it has recovered amid a broader market rally. 

Aside from being a luxury command center for the president, Air Force One is packed with defensive capabilities, missile-evasion technologies and communications platforms.

“They have tremendous capabilities both in terms of communication, how they are hardened and their defenses and how they can employ onboard systems to defend themselves in all sorts of situations that we can think of,” Davis said. “We look forward to the opportunity to explain the specific requirements ... (and) the current estimate, and we are prepared to work with the new president and the new administration to further reduce costs.”

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2016

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