John Kerry's US Air Force Jet Breaks Down Again In Vienna, Forcing Him
To Fly Commercial
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry boards
his airplane at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on Oct. 11, 2014.
Reuters/Carolyn Kaster
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry
was forced to take a commercial flight back to the U.S. from Vienna after his
U.S. Air Force jet broke down -- for the fourth time this year, Agence
France-Press, or AFP, reported. Kerry was in Vienna for talks on Iran's nuclear
program.
Kerry and 40 of his staff from the State Department, and
accompanying journalists, were checking out of their hotel rooms when they heard
the news that the Boeing 757 was in need of unspecified repairs. Kerry has so
far recorded about 566,000 miles on the jet by travelling to 55 countries since
he took office in February 2013.
Kerry has so far spent nearly 250 days
on the road, while his predecessor, Hillary Clinton, flew a million miles,
travelling to 112 countries, in the four years that she was Secretary of State,
AFP reported.
The plane had last broken down in August at Hawaii's Hickam
Air Force Base due to electrical problems, the New York Times had reported at
the time.
In March, there was a technical problem with the plane when
Kerry was in London. The problem was hastily fixed while his team was anxiously
searching for flights back home, AFP reported. In January, a transponder was
flown from the U.S. to Switzerland, where Kerry was attending talks with
international leaders on the Syrian conflict.
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