Chattanooga Times Free Press

SPACE DEFENSE REVAMP MAKES SOME SENSE

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WASHINGTON — President Trump has hurled so many thunderbol­ts recently that people may have missed the one that could have the greatest long-term impact on America’s national security — his directive to the Pentagon last week to start creating a new military service that he dubbed the “space force.”

It’s certainly a Trumpian idea: big and bold, with a Hollywood glitz factor; highly disruptive of the status quo; and lacking in any detailed planning about implementa­tion. But many experts say the idea of revamping space defense makes some sense, though they caution that it requires a serious public debate about how to get maximum benefit at minimum cost.

The Pentagon fears that launching a separate space contingent would set off one of the epic turf wars that have been a regular feature of U.S. military history. Those rivalries often follow the advent of new technologi­es. The Air Force emerged from the cocoon of a jealous Army only after World War II. When missile technology advanced in the 1950s, the Army argued that it was a form of artillery that should be controlled by its ballistic specialist­s, while the Air Force insisted it was part of the aeronautic­al domain. The Air Force had assumed space was its responsibi­lity, until last week.

“This will mean nonstop bureaucrat­ic arm-wrestling for the next five years,” warns John Hamre, a former deputy defense secretary who heads the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. While recognizin­g the infighting that’s ahead, Hamre, like many other Pentagon veterans, believes that some changes could enhance space-warfare capabiliti­es that have been badly botched by the Air Force.

“We have squandered our advantage in space; the Air Force went for a decade with no defense systems for satellites, after the military threat to them was clear,” argues Rep. Jim Cooper, D-Tenn., who joined Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., last year in a bipartisan House move to create a semi-autonomous space “corps” within the Air Force, much as the Marines are part of the Navy.

The Pentagon helped shoot down the “corps” idea a year ago.

But Trump continued to push his pet space project. One advocate was Vice President Mike Pence, chairman of the National Space Council and a rocket enthusiast who’s said to have brought his family to Florida to watch NASA launches. Another was Newt Gingrich, the peripateti­c former House speaker who, like Trump, enjoys promoting flashy, controvers­ial ideas.

“If Trump can break through the bureaucrac­y, all this will happen within a decade,” even by 2020, Gingrich predicted in a phone interview Tuesday.

The Air Force had been hoping that this proposal would go away. When I traveled last month to a space conference in Colorado Springs with Air Force Chief of Staff David Goldfein and Secretary Heather Wilson, they dismissed any suggestion that their service’s control of space defense might be challenged. After so many months in denial, the Air Force is now “largely out of the loop” in planning, but “it’s going to happen without them,” says Todd Harrison, director of aerospace studies at CSIS.

Pentagon officials say they understand that the commander in chief has spoken, and that they’re now thinking about how best to implement the space force directive. Two feasibilit­y studies, mandated by Congress, are due later this year.

A space revolution is underway, quite apart from Trump’s edicts. Private companies are pioneering new launch technologi­es that are driving down costs; Russia and China are developing exotic space weapons that could cripple America in any future conflict. It’s a good moment to think about reshaping space defense — creatively but carefully.

 ??  ?? David Ignatius
David Ignatius

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