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- <text id=90TT0122>
- <title>
- Jan. 15, 1990: The Presidency
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 15, 1990 Antarctica
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 31
- THE PRESIDENCY
- A $650 Million Flying Palace
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Hugh Sidey
- </p>
- <p> George Bush's two new airplanes were first dreamed of in the
- 1960s and finally ordered in July 1986. They sit this winter
- like beached green whales on the frozen plains outside Wichita,
- two years overdue, $385 million over budget and gathering
- controversy like tumbleweed.
- </p>
- <p> This future Air Force One is already being called a "flying
- Taj Mahal." The two Boeing 747-200Bs are included in the
- contract of $265 million, a cost now swollen to nearly $650
- million, with Boeing and its shareholders stuck for the loss.
- Throw in an additional $50 million for the new hangar already
- constructed at Andrews Air Force Base and about $100 million
- for service and maintenance units. One way or another, Americans
- are spending the better part of a billion dollars to get their
- President airborne, and then it will cost around $6,000 an hour
- to keep him aloft. That is more than the gross national product
- of Greenland.
- </p>
- <p> The word from the White House is that Bush is irritated
- about being handed such an item of conspicuous consumption
- while he skimps on funds for Eastern Europe, education and the
- drug war. The behemoth jet towers six stories and may have
- crossed the line of common political sense. It will dwarf an
- airport rally in Omaha, and does not exactly fit the
- Jeffersonian image of a citizen Executive going modestly among
- his people. The designers had an inkling of something being out
- of proportion and put an exit door in the plane's belly so a
- President would not look like the Angel Gabriel descending from
- the clouds as he negotiated 26 ft. of stairs. But that will
- hardly mask the bird's mass.
- </p>
- <p> Bush never wanted a new plane. Ronald Reagan never asked for
- one either. This was a classic case of creation by consortium:
- a dozen or so offices and agencies doing their jobs as best
- they know how. Nobody looked up and saw that their individual
- efforts had created a monster.
- </p>
- <p> The old 707 has about 1,350,000 miles on it, is too noisy
- for today's airports, and spare parts are becoming scarce. The
- Air Force began in 1983 to urge its replacement; not being
- politicians, the generals naturally were inclined to make the
- President's plane the safest, roomiest and best. This 747 will
- combine more self-sufficiency, range (7,140 miles), comfort and
- convenience than any other airplane ever built. It will contain
- all the latest communications gear, antimissile devices,
- nuclear-proofing and self-sustaining maintenance machinery that
- the Secret Service and White House staff wanted. Everybody from
- the stewards to the pilots was consulted, even the reporters
- who cover the President. They asked for the moon and got it.
- Boeing and Congress never blinked. The planes will be the most
- expensive transport aircraft ever produced.
- </p>
- <p> Delivery of the first plane is expected Sept. 30, the second
- nine months later. What marvelous machines they will be. The
- presidential suite up front will have twin beds, a shower-tub,
- electric window curtains. Refrigerator-freezers will hold
- provisions to feed the 23 crew and 70 passengers for about a
- week. The plane could function that long on the ground or be
- refueled in the air should the land be scorched or otherwise
- inhospitable--a Strangelovian concept the Air Force will not
- abandon.
- </p>
- <p> When Air Force One finally flies, it will have six
- lavatories, not counting the President's own. There will be two
- galleys, 85 telephones, a six-channel stereo, a 6-cu.-ft. safe
- for secrets and a television system that will pipe in eight
- channels at once and enable the President to scan waiting
- crowds before he emerges. The plane will include four
- computers, two copying machines, conference rooms, crew bunks,
- sleeper chairs, a pressroom with TV monitors, and secure phone
- lines that can rouse Dan, Peter and Tom from any place on the
- earth and 45,000 ft. up.
- </p>
- <p> This jet will be ready for tragedy. The ceiling of the
- President's bedroom will be designed for two intravenous
- hookups. A working annex can be converted to a minihospital
- with tie-down hardware for a casket. One of the doors on the
- main cabin level will be sized for the turning radius of a
- coffin.
- </p>
- <p> These special requirements created their own delay. The jet
- has 57 antennas for its huge array of electronic gear. Normal
- is 17. The plane's 238 miles of wire is more than twice that
- in a commercial version. The big delivery delay occurred when
- Boeing engineers in Wichita, after installing most of the
- wiring, were worried about electromagnetic interference in such
- a thicket. They pulled 20% of the wiring out, went on overtime
- and rerouted the cables. With all the fancy equipment on board,
- the Federal Aviation Administration imposed special safety
- requirements that added to the burden. And almost everybody
- else with an interest in the plane--Secret Service, National
- Security Agency, Signal Corps, White House advance teams, First
- Lady's office--did some fiddling with the layout.
- </p>
- <p> At this point one cannot help wondering if the Government
- could not have pulled a couple of Boeing 767s off the line at
- about $75 million a copy ($25 million less than a 747), fixed
- them up a bit (a 767 has 75% more capacity than the old 707)
- and had the President airborne in plenty of comfort and safety
- (the Air Force refused to look at any plane with only two
- motors). Or maybe they should have considered Delta--ready
- when you are.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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