Sat, 20 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 20, 2026 · 07:15
USA News Updated Jun 20, 2026

Trump Unveils New Air Force One Bridge Aircraft, Calls It a "Flying White House"

President Donald Trump unveiled the new VC-25B Bridge aircraft at Joint Base Andrews, describing it as a symbol of American power. The modified Boeing 747 will serve as an interim presidential aircraft while the next-generation Air Force One is completed. Trump praised the military personnel and contractors for completing the conversion in roughly 10 months. The aircraft features advanced secure communications systems and a luxurious interior dubbed a "flying White House."

Trump unveils new Air Force One bridge aircraft

Washington, June 20

US President Donald Trump unveiled the US Air Force's new VC-25B Bridge aircraft, describing it as a symbol of American power and a long-awaited replacement for the ageing presidential fleet.

Speaking at Joint Base Andrews after touring the aircraft and addressing servicemembers, Trump said the modified Boeing 747 would serve as an interim presidential aircraft while the permanent next-generation Air Force One programme is completed.

"The other plane was about 35 years old and it was time," Trump said, noting that the existing aircraft had served multiple presidents. He added that the new aircraft was "virtually double the size" and represented the United States in a manner befitting its global standing.

The aircraft, called VC-25B Bridge, arrived at the Presidential Airlift Group this week and has begun a series of commissioning flights. The flights are designed to validate mission capability and complete the final protocols required before the aircraft can formally enter the presidential airlift fleet.

"The safety and security of the commander in chief is our highest priority," Air Force Secretary Troy Meink said in a statement announcing the aircraft's arrival.

Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Ken Wilsbach said the programme demonstrated that the service could deliver "a secure, reliable airborne command post on an accelerated timeline".

Trump praised the military personnel and contractors who completed the conversion in roughly 10 months.

"With the extraordinary devotion of many of you here today, this plane was transformed into a flying White House at a level of luxury that nobody's ever seen before," he said.

The President also thanked the Emir of Qatar for making the aircraft available after Washington sought a quicker solution while awaiting delivery of the long-delayed Boeing VC-25B programme.

"We were at a little bit of a log jam. We're waiting for the normal 747s," Trump said. "We'd like to use it for a little while because the planes are pretty old."

According to Air Force officials, the Bridge aircraft underwent extensive modifications focused on security, safety and mission communications. The service said the aircraft is equipped with advanced secure communications systems and was modified under a disciplined engineering process designed to meet the requirements of presidential travel.

Pool reporters granted a brief tour described a spacious interior with tan leather seating, conference facilities, extensive wood panelling and multiple communications systems. Air Force officials told reporters the aircraft also includes lay-flat seating and enhanced operational capabilities.

Trump highlighted the aircraft's range and communications equipment, saying it features "the highest level" of communications technology and "four or five different sets of double and triple communications".

He also announced that the aircraft is expected to lead a major military flyover during America's 250th anniversary celebrations and the July 4 commemorations next year.

"My return from the G7 Summit was the last planned trip aboard the VC-25A," Trump said, referring to the current presidential aircraft fleet. He suggested the older aircraft could eventually be placed in museums because of their historical significance.

The current VC-25A aircraft entered service during the administration of President George H.W. Bush and have carried every US president since then. The aircraft are among the most recognisable symbols of the American presidency and serve as airborne command centres capable of supporting the commander in chief during crises.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

All this spending on luxury interiors and "lay-flat seating" while millions of Americans struggle with healthcare costs. Typical Trump - always about the showmanship. India should avoid this path of extravagant VVIP spending. Our PM should fly commercial like Modi sometimes does. 😅

Amit V

Interesting that they had to thank the Emir of Qatar for making an aircraft available. Shows how even superpowers need to depend on Gulf nations sometimes. As an Indian, it reminds me how our diaspora in the Middle East plays a key role in our economy too. Geopolitical interdependence is real.

Sneha F

The "Bridge" concept is actually clever - buying time with an interim solution while the next-gen is developed. Something our Defence Ministry could learn from instead of getting stuck in endless procurement cycles. But Rs 5,000 crore for a plane? That's more than our entire space budget for some years! Still, security is paramount.

Kavya N

I find it ironic that the US celebrates luxury in presidential travel while lecturing developing nations about austerity. That said, the security upgrades make sense - we've seen how close calls can happen even with protected heads of state. India's VVIP fleet is ageing too; hope we're taking notes but not copying the extravagance.

Vinay O

Trump calling it a "flying White House" is so on-brand. But as an engineer, I'm impressed they completed modifications in 10 months. Meanwhile, our Tejas fighter jet took 30+ years. Different scales, I know, but the urgency they show for national projects is something India needs to inculcate. Jai Hind!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked