Colorado Could Lose U.S. Space Command. Trump Is Expected to Move It to Alabama.
The
flag of the U.S. Space Command is unfurled at the White House in a presentation
with President Donald J. Trump, the incoming Commander of U.S. Space Command,
Air Force General John W. Raymond, Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of
Defense Dr. Mark T. Esper, and Air Force Command Chief Master Sergeant Roger
Towberman, Washington, D.C., August 29, 2019. (DoD photo by Lisa Ferdinando)
Posted: November 13, 2024 --- Military.com | By Thomas
Novelly
Published November
12, 2024,at 4:23pm ET
President-elect Trump is likely to overturn a decision to permanently place U.S. Space Command (1 of 11 Unified Combatant Commands – see "Resources” above) in Colorado and move it to Alabama -- where Trump wanted it -- during his 1st week in office, the House Armed Services Committee chairman said. On July 31, 2023, President Joe Biden's administration announced that Space Command would keep its headquarters at Peterson Space Force Base in Colorado -- reversing Trump's announcement in 2021, which would have moved it to Huntsville.
U.S.
House Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., told a Mobile, Alabama, radio
station on Monday that Trump had vowed to reverse the decision
on the campaign trail and said the president-elect will make good on that
promise in short order. "I think you'll see in the 1st week
that he's in office; he'll sign an executive order reversing Biden's
directive," Rogers said.
"And
we will start construction next year in Huntsville." Trump's original
decision to place Space Command in Alabama was made in the waning days of his 1st term and immediately sparked backlash from Colorado lawmakers, who requested a
Government Accountability Office (GAO) report as well as a Department of
Defense (DoD) Inspector General probe.
In
May 2022, the Inspector General probe said that, while the selection process
was marred by shoddy recordkeeping, the decision to choose Huntsville
was reasonable. And in June 2022, the GAO found that Space Command's move from
Colorado to Alabama was driven by an unorganized and unclear process that
raised concerns about "significant shortfalls in its transparency and
credibility," as well as the "appearance of bias".
Once President Biden announced that Space Command would be based in Colorado Springs -- it had been housed at Peterson Space Force Base in the State -- Rogers quickly pushed back by calling for new GAO and DoD Inspector General investigations. Rogers said that those probes should be finished in the coming months. "I have every confidence that those investigations, when they're finished probably in December or January, are going to say there was no reason for it not to go to Huntsville, and would have reversed the president's decision anyway," Rogers said.
U.S.
Senator Michael Bennet, D-Colo., vowed to fight for Space Command to remain in
his State. "Colorado is the rightful home for U.S. Space Command,"
Bennet wrote. "Our State's space and military assets are critical to
America's national security, and Colorado is the best place for our service
members and their families to train, live, work and retire."
The battle over Space Command's HQ decision left military
families and service members in limbo. Military.com reported that the issue of abortion,
following the Supreme Court decision in 2022 overturning Roe v. Wade, was a major concern among Colorado lawmakers who feared that service members'
reproductive rights would be limited by moving from Colorado, where abortion
access is unrestricted, to Alabama, where it is illegal with limited
exceptions.
Todd Harrison, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who focuses on space policy, told Military.com that Trump reversing the decision is "near certain," because Republicans are likely on the brink of controlling both the U.S. House and the U.S. Senate. "It's going to require military construction appropriations and the authorization from Congress, but with Republicans in control of both chambers, and we're talking about moving a headquarters from a blue State to a red State, it seems pretty likely that's going to happen," senior fellow Harrison said.
There have been fights in Congress related to the military's space operations, including the ongoing argument over whether to create a Space National Guard -- a position that Trump supports and one that the outgoing Biden administration opposed. Harrison added that it's possible, if Democrats regain control of both chambers of Congress in 2 years, they could halt the Space Command construction, although it won't be easy to justify.
"I think it's a foregone conclusion that it's going to start," he said of the construction. "In 2 years, it is entirely possible that we could see both the House and the Senate flip to Democratic control, in which case they could, in theory, put the brakes on the move and stop construction. It becomes more and more difficult and more wasteful to do that, the faster the construction is able to move forward."
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