WASHINGTON â Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has accepted a luxury Boeing 747 jet from Qatar for President Donald Trump to use as Air Force One, the Pentagon said Wednesday, despite ongoing questions about the ethics and legality of taking the expensive gift from a foreign nation.
The Defense Department will âwork to ensure proper security measuresâ on the plane to make it safe for use by the president, Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said. He added that the plane was accepted âin accordance with all federal rules and regulations.â
Trump defended the gift, which came up during his recent Middle East trip, as a way to save tax dollars.
âWhy should our military, and therefore our taxpayers, be forced to pay hundreds of millions of Dollars when they can get it for FREE,â Trump posted on his social media site during the trip.
A 13-year-old private Boeing aircraft that President Donald Trump toured on Saturday to check out new hardware and technology features, and highlight the aircraft maker's delay in delivering updated versions of the Air Force One presidential aircraft, takes off from Palm Beach International Airport, Feb. 16, in West Palm Beach, Fla.
Others, however, said Trump's acceptance of an aircraft that was called a âpalace in the skyâ is a violation of the Constitutionâs prohibition on foreign gifts. Democrats were united in outrage, and even some of the Republican presidentâs GOP allies in Congress expressed concerns.
âThis unprecedented action is a stain on the office of the presidency and cannot go unanswered,â said Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer of New York. âUntil Americans get transparency on this shady deal, which apparently includes a corrupt plot for Donald Trump to keep the plane at his library after leaving office, Iâll continue to hold all Department of Justice political nominees.â
Schumer introduced legislation that would prohibit any foreign aircraft from being used as Air Force One and forbid use of taxpayer money to modify or restore the aircraft. On Wednesday, Republican Sen. Roger Marshall of Kansas objected when Schumer asked for a vote, thus blocking it. He did not offer an explanation for his objection.
Critics also noted the need to retrofit the plane to meet security requirements, which would be costly and take time.
âFar from saving money, this unconstitutional action will not only cost our nation its dignity, but it will force taxpayers to waste over $1 billion in taxpayer dollars to overhaul this particular aircraft when we currently have not one, but two fully operational and fully capable Air Force One aircraft,â said Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill.
She said during a hearing Tuesday that it is a âdangerous course of actionâ for the U.S. to accept the aircraft from the Qatari ruling family.
Air Force Secretary Troy Meink told senators that Hegseth ordered the service to start planning how to update the jet to meet needed standards and acknowledged that the plane will require âsignificantâ modifications.
The Air Force, in a statement, said it is preparing to award a contract to modify a Boeing 747 aircraft, but that any details are classified.
Trump was asked about the move Wednesday while he was meeting in the Oval Office with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. âThey are giving the United States Air Force a jet,â Trump said, bristling at being questioned about the gift by a reporter.
Trump said it was given ânot to me, to the United States Air Force, so they could help us outâ and noted that âBoeingâs a little bit late, unfortunately.â
Ramaphosa, who was sitting next to Trump and has been working to repair his relationship with the president, said, âIâm sorry I donât have a plane to give you.â
âIf your country was offering the United States Air Force a plane, I would take it,â Trump said.
Trump has presented no national security imperative for a swift upgrade rather than waiting for Boeing to finish new Air Force One jets that have been in the works for years.
He has tried to tamp down some of the opposition by saying he wouldnât fly around in the aircraft when his term ends. Instead, he said, the plane would be donated to a future presidential library, similar to how the Boeing 707 used by President Ronald Reagan was decommissioned and put on display as a museum piece.



