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DoD says military support for July 4th blowout only cost $1.2 million

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The Pentagon revealed Tuesday that the military support for President Donald Trump’s Fourth of July celebration cost only $1.2 million, but the revelation was short on details.

The president pulled out all the stops for his “A Salute to America” event on July 4, which featured stealth fighters and bombers flying over the nation’s capital and armored vehicles displayed on the National Mall. The event came together after the president failed to put on a massive military parade last year, when costs ballooned as high as $92 million and led Trump to cancel the event.

When Business Insider asked the Department of Defense last Wednesday about the cost of the event, a Pentagon spokesman said it probably would not have a cost estimate, something typically provided prior to the delivery of goods and services, until after the event.

Read more: The Pentagon says it probably won’t know how much Trump’s Fourth of July blowout will cost taxpayers until it’s over

Trump tweeted last Tuesday that his big celebratory blowout was about, among other things, showing off “the strongest and most advanced Military anywhere in the World.”

US Navy flight demonstration team the Blue Angels over the Lincoln Memorial during a Fourth of July celebration in Washington, DC, July 4, 2019.
U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Timothy Schumaker

During the big Fourth of July event, Army AH-64E Apache Guardian helicopters, a Marine Corps MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft, Navy F-35C Lightning II Joint Strike Fighters and F/A-18 Hornets, Air Force F-22 Raptors and a B-2 Spirit bomber, and a Coast Guard MH-60J/T Jayhawk helicopter, a MH-65 Dolphin helicopter, and HC-144 Ocean Sentry aircraft flew overhead.

The aerial display also included a V-25 aircraft that will serve as Air Force One when the president is on board and a VH-92 helicopter set to serve as the new Marine One when it carries the president. There was also a flyover by the Navy’s demonstration team, the Blue Angels.

On the ground were two M1A2 Abrams main battle tanks and two M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicles.

The equipment was brought in from across the country, with F-35Cs from California, a B-2 from Missouri, and armored vehicles from Georgia. While some assets flew in, others were brought by rail.

Observers note that the $1.2 million figure provided by the Pentagon seems low, especially considering that a B-2 bomber costs $150,000 an hour to fly, meaning that a round trip between Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri and Washington, DC could potentially cost as much as $900,000.

The Pentagon was unable to provide a detailed breakdown on the costs at this time, explaining that more details may be available Wednesday.

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