The Trump administration is accelerating deployment of a luxury Boeing 747-8 jet donated by Qatar for use as Air Force One, with the U.S. Air Force announcing the aircraft will be ready for presidential use this summer.
That could cut the projected timelines nearly in half and raises fresh concerns about the arrangement's ethical and political implications, wrote MS NOW columnist Steve Benen.

The shift represents a striking reversal in Trump's relationship with Qatar, which he publicly condemned in 2017 as a "funder of terrorism at a very high level," but when confronted about those comments last fall, Trump stated he "didn't really know them very well" at the time. Over the past year, however, his administration has dramatically deepened ties with the Gulf state through a series of controversial arrangements.
Beyond the Air Force One gift, the Trump administration's actions toward Qatar have included extending a NATO-like security guarantee in October, hosting a Qatari air force training facility at an Idaho air base, and storing Venezuelan oil sale revenues in a Qatari bank without full public explanation. Additionally, a Trump golf club and villa project is being developed in Qatar with investment from a Qatari government-owned company.
The modified 747 underwent a $400 million overhaul focused primarily on top-secret communications equipment enabling presidential command from the air. However, the aircraft retains luxury furnishings originally chosen for Qatari royalty — oversized leather seats, plush couches, and faux library bookcases — now bearing U.S. presidential seals. Arabic-language exit signs and Qatari artwork were removed.
Congressional members from both parties previously expressed concern that Trump would pressure the Air Force to complete security modifications prematurely. The New York Times reported last September that experts estimated the upgrade would require two years; the accelerated timeline now being announced suggests significant compression of that schedule.
Trump has stated he will not use the Qatari jet after leaving office but plans to feature it in his presidential library, but the arrangement continues drawing scrutiny regarding potential conflicts of interest and the appropriateness of accepting substantial gifts from foreign governments.

