San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)
Inspector general probes Trump relocation of Space Command
DENVER — The Department of Defense’s inspector general announced the Trump administration’s lastminute decision to relocate U.S. Space Command from Colorado to Alabama is under review.
The decision on Jan. 13, one week before Trump left office, blindsided Colorado officials and raised questions of political retaliation.
Trump had hinted at a Colorado Springs rally in 2020 that the command would stay at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs. But the man with whom Trump held that rally, Republican Sen. Cory Gardner, lost his reelection bid in November, and Colorado, unlike Alabama, voted decisively against Trump.
The Air Force’s lastminute relocation of command headquarters to Huntsville, Ala. — home of the U.S. Army’s Redstone Arsenal — blindsided Colorado officials of both parties, who have urged the Biden administration to reconsider the decision.
On Friday, the inspector general’s office announced it was investigating whether the relocation complied with Air Force and Pentagon policy and was based on proper evaluations of competing locations.
Colorado officials of both parties applauded the move. “It is imperative that we thoroughly review what I believe will prove to be a fundamentally flawed process that focused on beancounting rather than American space dominance,” said Rep. Doug Lamborn, a Republican whose district includes Space Command.
The state’s two Democratic senators, Michael Bennet and John Hickenlooper, also hailed the probe. “Moving Space Command will disrupt the mission while risking our national security and economic vitality,” the senators said in a joint statement. “Politics have no role to play in our national security. We fully support the investigation.”
Among other duties, the Space Command enables satellitebased navigation and troop communication and provides warnings of missile launches. Also based at Peterson are the North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, and the U.S. Northern Command.
The Space Command differs from the U.S. Space Force, begun in December 2019 as a new military branch. The Space Command is not an individual military service but a central command for military-wide space operations.