Houston Chronicle

Trump asks for military tanks on Mall as part of his extra July Fourth address

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has asked the Pentagon to marshal a broadening array of military hardware, including tanks and fighter jets, to showcase his planned Fourth of July address to the nation — dramatical­ly escalating the gathering’s cost and sparking concerns about the potentiall­y damaging impact on the Mall and other infrastruc­ture.

Trump, who had already ordered up a flyover by military aircraft including Air Force One and the Navy’s Blue Angels, has pressed to expand his “Salute to America” event further with an F-35 stealth fighter and the involvemen­t of Marine Helicopter Squadron One, which flies the presidenti­al helicopter, according to government officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak frankly. He also pushed to bring military tanks to the site of his planned speech at the Lincoln Memorial, prompting National Park Service officials to warn that such a deployment could damage the site, these individual­s said.

Trump told reporters late Monday that “we’re going to have some tanks stationed outside,” following a report about the emerging plans by the Washington Post. He cast the spectacle as part of a Fourth of July “like no other. It’ll be special.”

But the use of such massive military hardware for Thursday’s celebratio­n sparked sharp criticism from District of Columbia officials, Democratic lawmakers and advocates of the Park Service, who noted the agency already faces an $11 billion maintenanc­e backlog.

The event also will freeze air traffic to and from Reagan National Airport for more than two hours Thursday, from 6:15 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. for the flyover of military jets and again from 9 p.m. to 9:45 p.m. to accommodat­e an extended fireworks show. In past years, flights at National have not been affected by the fireworks, but the launch point moved this year to accommodat­e Trump’s speech.

The Defense Department has not released any estimates for how much the celebratio­n could cost. But the use of numerous aircraft could drive it well into the millions of dollars when counting fuel and maintenanc­e.

The F-35 costs about $30,000 per hour to fly, according to Pentagon estimates. Each Blue Angel jet costs at least $10,000 per hour to operate, and the cost of flying an Air Force One jet is more than $140,000 per hour.

The cost of a military parade Trump had planned for last year was about $92 million, including $50 million in Defense Department costs, defense officials said at the time. The parade was scuttled after the potential costs became public.

At least 300 service members are slated to participat­e Thursday, primarily from military bands and drill teams, but that number could rise as additional military aircraft and other flourishes are added to the event.

Other details of the July 4 celebratio­n remain up in the air with just days to go. White House officials plan to give out tickets for attendees to sit in a VIP section and watch Trump’s speech but did not develop a distributi­on system before much of the staff left for Asia last week, according to two administra­tion officials. Officials also are still working on other key crowd management details, such as how to get attendees through magnetomet­ers in an orderly fashion.

Traditiona­lly, major gatherings on the Mall, including inaugurati­on festivitie­s and a jubilee commemorat­ing the start of the new millennium, have featured a designated event producer. But in this case, the producer is the president himself.

Trump has demonstrat­ed an unusual level of interest in this year’s Independen­ce Day observance, according to three senior administra­tion officials. He has received regular briefings about it from Interior Secretary David Bernhardt and has weighed in on how the pyrotechni­cs should be launched, how the military should be honored and more, according to people briefed on the discussion­s.

As a result, the administra­tion has organized a far more ambitious celebratio­n than was originally planned, at a yet-to-be specified additional cost to taxpayers. Two major fireworks firms have donated a pyrotechni­c show valued at $750,000, for example, but the Park Service will have to pay employees overtime to clean up the remnants of that display.

“It’s irresponsi­ble to ask the National Park Service to absorb the costs of an additional and political event when there are so many unmet needs in the parks,” Coalition to Protect America’s National Parks Chair Phil Francis, whose group represents current, former and retired Park Service employees and volunteers, said in an email.

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