The most expensive gift in the history of aviation sat gleaming on the ramp in Turkey — and the President of the United States walked straight past it. On 8 July, barely a day after American bombs fell on Iran, Donald Trump boarded the old Air Force One, the powder-blue Boeing that has flown presidents since 1990, and left the brand-new Qatari-donated 747 behind.
The new jet was supposed to be the star of the trip. Instead it was packed off to a British air base as a photo op, while the 36-year-old original did the honours of carrying the Commander-in-Chief out of a war zone. For a man who has spent months calling the gift plane “truly magnificent,” it was a curious moment to suddenly rediscover the charm of the older model.
Trump insisted there was nothing to read into it. The timing, the missing missile defences and the fresh crater in Iran suggested otherwise.
Quick Facts
| Old jet | Boeing VC-25A — two built, presidential service since 1990 |
| New jet | Boeing VC-25B “bridge” aircraft — a converted Qatari 747-8 |
| What happened | Trump flew the VC-25A out of Turkey; the VC-25B was sent to RAF Mildenhall for troops to tour |
| Stated reason | “For old time’s sake” |
| The catch | The VC-25A carries missile-warning and countermeasures the rushed bridge jet reportedly lacks |
| Backdrop | Less than 24 hours after U.S. airstrikes on Iran, which borders Turkey |
A Very Public Snub
Here is the sequence, because the optics are the whole story. Trump wrapped up the NATO summit in Turkey, climbed aboard the legacy VC-25A, and flew the short leg to RAF Mildenhall in England. The shiny new VC-25B — the 747-8 that Qatar handed the United States and that Boeing hurriedly repainted red, white and blue — was flown to the same base so airmen could walk through it. Reports differed on which jet carried him across the Atlantic; the picture that stuck was the President choosing the old one on his way out of a crisis.
On Truth Social, Trump framed it as a gift to the troops rather than a security call.
It is a nice line. It also happens to be the version of events in which the President is not admitting that the most talked-about aircraft in the world may not yet be safe to fly him through contested skies.

What the Gift Jet Does Not Carry
The reason a 36-year-old jet outranks a nearly-new one comes down to the boxes you cannot see. The VC-25A was built from the outset as a flying fortress: missile-warning sensors, infrared countermeasures to spoof heat-seeking missiles, and hardening against the electromagnetic pulse of a nuclear blast. Converting a second-hand airliner into that in a hurry is not a paint job.
According to reporting by the Associated Press and NPR, the bridge aircraft was fielded fast precisely by leaving some of those deep modifications out for now. On an ordinary hop between friendly capitals, that is an acceptable trade. Flying out of a country that shares a border with Iran, hours after the U.S. had struck Iranian targets, it is the kind of trade a Secret Service detail notices.
Trump, asked directly whether security drove the switch, did not bite — he simply repeated that the new plane was going to Britain so, in his words, “the soldiers can see it, because it’s truly magnificent.” Everyone was, he added, very excited.
Old Faithful
There is a genuine affection buried in the stunt. The two VC-25As — tail numbers 28000 and 29000 — have carried every president since George H. W. Bush. They are slower, thirstier and older than almost anything else in the sky, and they are also among the most recognisable machines humanity has ever built. Trading them out was always going to be an emotional wrench, and for one leg out of Turkey the old girl got to prove she was still the safer bet.
The new jet will get there. The engineers will finish the classified fit, the countermeasures will go in, and the VC-25B will eventually earn the trust the VC-25A spent three decades building. Until then, the most expensive present in aviation history is learning an old lesson: magnificent is not the same as ready.
Trump talks to the press beside the new Air Force One at RAF Mildenhall, 8 July 2026.
Sources: Associated Press; NPR; Fox News; U.S. Air Force.




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