Day: October 16, 2025
NICOLAS TUCAT/AFP via Getty Images
- Pete Hegseth’s transatlantic flight diverted to the UK due to a cracked windshield.
- The Boeing C-32A, sometimes used as Air Force Two, is still on the ground.
- It’s the third time this year a top government official’s flight has diverted.
A government plane carrying Pete Hegseth U-turned over the Atlantic Ocean and diverted to a British military base after its windshield cracked.
The Secretary of Defense was returning to the US from Brussels on Wednesday, where he had met with other NATO defense ministers.
However, 1 hour and 20 minutes into the flight, the Boeing C-32A turned around over the Atlantic. It was about 80 miles off the Irish coast when it changed course, per data from Flightradar24.
It then flew about two hours to RAF Mildenhall, a Royal Air Force base about 20 miles from Cambridge that is now primarily used by the US Air Force.
Sean Parnell, a Pentagon spokesperson, said the plane “made an unscheduled landing … due to a crack in the aircraft windshield.”
“The plane landed based on standard procedures and everyone onboard, including Secretary Hegseth, is safe,” he added.
“All good. Thank God,” Hegseth said in an X post. “Continue mission!”
The C-32A is a military variant of the Boeing 757, and is used to fly top members of government. It has operated as both Air Force Two, flying the vice president, and Air Force One if the usual VC-25A used by the president, is deemed too large.
A C-17 Globemaster, a military transport aircraft, was accompanying Hegseth’s flight. Flight-tracking data shows it also diverted to Mildenhall but departed two and a half hours later. It landed at Joint Base Andrews shortly before midnight.
Meanwhile, the plane with the cracked windshield, registered as 98-0002, appears to still be at Mildenhall.
It first entered service 27 years ago. The age of the government jets has prompted work on a new Air Force One — but Boeing is running years behind schedule and billions over budget.
Austin DeSisto/NurPhoto via Getty Images
This is the third time this year that a senior member of the government’s flight has been diverted.
In February, Secretary of State Marco Rubio was on board a different C-32 heading to Germany. About an hour and a half after takeoff, it returned to the US after its windshield also cracked.
And at the end of President Donald Trump’s state visit to the UK last month, a helicopter was taking him from the Prime Minister’s country house to London Stansted Airport, where Air Force One was parked.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said a “minor hydraulic issue” forced Marine One to divert to London Luton Airport. Another helicopter carried Trump the remaining 25 miles, and he was only delayed about 20 minutes.
ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images
- Companies such as Nike, Starbucks, Meta, Microsoft, and UPS have trimmed staff this year.
- In some cases, artificial intelligence is reshaping workforces.
- See the list of companies letting workers go in 2025.
The list of companies laying off employees this year is growing.
Layoffs and other workforce reductions have continued in 2025, following two years of significant job cuts in tech, media, finance, manufacturing, retail, and energy.
While the reasons for slimming staff vary, the cost-cutting measures are coming amid technological change. A World Economic Forum survey found that some 41% of companies worldwide expect to reduce their workforces over the next five years because of the rise of artificial intelligence.
Companies such as Oracle, CNN, Dropbox, and Block have previously announced job cuts related to AI. Though Amazon has not announced job cuts this year, CEO Andy Jassy told employees in June that the company will need “fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today” in the coming years as it expands its use of generative AI and agents.
Meanwhile, tech jobs in big data, fintech, and AI are expected to double by 2030, according to the WEF.
Here are the companies with job cuts planned or already underway in 2025 so far, in alphabetical order.