When US President Donald Trump departed for Beijing on Tuesday, Air Force One made a refueling stop in Anchorage — a move that quickly drew attention online.
Trump’s son, Eric Trump, posted on X: “Quick Refuel – Alaska”
New York Post Correpondent Emily Goodin reported from Anchorage that Jensen Huang boarded Air Force One during the stop to join the China delegation.
Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk later confirmed on X that he and Huang were the only business leaders aboard the presidential aircraft itself.
The Alaska stop, however, was not unusual. It was primarily driven by the operational limits and safety requirements of the current presidential aircraft fleet.
Range limits
The current Air Force One aircraft are heavily modified Boeing VC-25A jets, based on the aging Boeing 747-200 platform first introduced in the early 1990s.
Although the aircraft are capable of extremely long flights, the journey from Washington D.C. to Beijing is exceptionally demanding — roughly 6,500 t0 7,000 nautical miles.
That distance pushes the aircraft close to its practical operating range once several critical factors are included:
- Heavy communications and security equipment
- Additional personnel and cargo
- Defensive systems
- Adverse jet stream winds over the Pacific
- Fuel reserves required for emergencies
In aviation, “maximum range” figures are theoretical. Real-world presidential missions are planned far more conservatively.

