The Borneo Post

Trump’s Space Force collides with skeptical Congress

-

WASHINGTON: The Space Force that President Donald Trump wants to launch ran headlong on Thursday into skeptical lawmakers who questioned the need for a stand- alone military wing.

Trump has insisted that a separate branch of military is needed to focus on protecting satellites, tackling vulnerabil­ities in space, and asserting US dominance in orbit.

Under a Pentagon proposal, the Space Force would be establishe­d as its own branch of the military but would fall under the Air Force, similar to how the Navy oversees the Marine Corps.

“Both China and Russia have weaponized space with the intent to hold American capabiliti­es at risk,” Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan told the Senate Armed Services Committee, whose endorsemen­t he sought for the new force.

Not since the Air Force was stood up in 1947 has the Pentagon created a new military branch. A Space Force would join the Army, Navy and Marines as well as the Air Force.

“The bottom line is the next major conflict may be won or lost in space,” Shanahan told the committee.

But lawmakers were less than clear on why setting up the force solely for space- related matters made sense.

“I don’t understand how putting a new box in an organisati­onal chart is going to help us to respond to the new challenge that we face. I’m genuinely undecided, although as you can tell, I’m skeptical,” said independen­t Maine Senator Angus King.

Republican Tom Cotton of Arkansas wondered about the need for a new military service, as opposed to placing space matters in an existing one.

“Can you explain why we need to put all space assets, space forces into a separate service as opposed to a combatant command?” he asked.

The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Joseph Dunford, recalled that a space force was first suggested two years ago and then dismissed. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia