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While Trump's 'Space Force' Sits On The Launchpad, The Military Seeks A Home For Space Command

Staff Sgt. Eric Proctor of the 50th Security Forces Squadron is responsible for the security and protection of Air Force Space Command assets on Schriever Air Force Base in Colorado.
Krystal Ardrey
/
U.S. Air Force
Staff Sgt. Eric Proctor of the 50th Security Forces Squadron is responsible for the security and protection of Air Force Space Command assets on Schriever Air Force Base in Colorado.

While President Trump pushes Congress to create a new military branch called the Space Force, the Pentagon is about to choose a permanent home for its existing Space Command.

Lawmakers from Alabama and Texas to California and Colorado are jockeying to be chosen as the permanent home of U.S. Space Command.

Space Command was created at the height of the Cold War, when the U.S. government brought outer space-focused resources from all of the military branches together under centralized leadership. It was intended to meet advancements from the Soviet Union. But Space Command was disbanded as the military shifted focus to counter-terrorism after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

The Trump administration re-established U.S. Space Command with the 2018 National Defence Authorization Act and a presidential memo. The renewed Space Command is the center of all military efforts that involve space including strategy, doctrine, training and priorities.

Colorado Springs' Peterson Air Force Base was designated as its temporary home, but the Pentagon has not yet selected a permanent home. It may remain in Colorado Springs, which already has a substantial Air Force and military presence. 

An Air Force memo obtained by CNN shows Peterson and three other Colorado bases on the shortlist for the permanent headquarters, along with Redstone Arsenal in Alabama and Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.

As the Associated Press reported, "the host state can expect tens of millions of dollars in economic investment and bragging rights as one of the country's leading technological hot spots."

A possible sixth branch?

U.S. Space Command is not the same as the Space Force often touted by President Donald Trump.

Even though the Trump Administration ordered the establishment of Space Command, the President wants to take the new emphasis much further with the creation of a sixth branch of the military. The so-called Space Force would be housed under the Air Force in the same way the Marines exist within the Navy.

"My administration is reclaiming America's heritage as the world's greatest spacefaring nation," the President said during a press conference announcing the proposal. "When it comes to defending America, it is not enough to merely have an American presence in space, we must have American dominance in space."

When officials talk about preparing for space as a warfighting domain, they're not talking about the sci-fi trope of astronauts shooting laser guns. The space soldiers of today are more along the lines of desk-bound computer wizards. They largely use American satellites to assist on the ground military operations and thwart the increasing attempts from adversaries to jam those satellites.

When Will The Military Leap Into The Final Frontier?

Creating a separate Space Force would take an act of Congress. The last time the United States approved an individual military branch was in 1946 with the creation of the Air Force.

Top members of the military, including acting Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan, have spoken to the Senate Armed Services Committee in favor of the proposal.

"Taking a next step to create a Space Force will allow us to develop and maintain a singular focus on developing the people, the capabilities, the doctrine and the culture we'll need to develop our competitive advantage in space," said the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Joseph Dunford.

Dunford and others argue that space personnel who come up through different military branches with different training protocols would result in a slow and disaggregated approach. The hope is Space Force would streamline that.

Congressional skepticism has held up the plan.

Mount Holyoke College Visiting Lecturer Bryan Nakayama, who focuses on the relationship between technology and warfare, predicted that the creation of a new military branch would actually produce more bureaucracy, costs and infighting. Nakayama said the current Space Command strikes the right balance, adding more focus to the domain without as many visible turf battles.

Also, Nakayama argues that establishing a full-on Space Force could lead to an escalation in military space projects by China and Russia.

"The creation of a service department and the massive investments that would take would signal to other countries that they need to increase their involvement in space," Nakayama said.

There's also a matter of costs. The Brookings Institution cited an estimate that the re-establishment of Space Command would cost $800 million versus an estimated $1.5 to $2.7 billion in startup costs for Space Force.

This story was produced by the American Homefront Project, a public media collaboration that reports on American military life and veterans. Funding comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Copyright 2020 North Carolina Public Radio – WUNC. To see more, visit .

With over a decade of journalism experience, Dan joined Colorado Public Radio in 2018 as a regional reporter covering major news developments in Colorado Springs and surrounding areas. Previously in his career, he covered state government for Montana Public Radio as the capitol bureau chief. Additionally, Dan was a reporter for the Colorado public media collaborative, Inside Energy, and a freelance journalist whose work was featured on NPR’s Environment & Energy Collaborative.
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