San Francisco Chronicle

Troops for new agency facing an identity crisis

- By Lolita C. Baldor Lolita C. Baldor is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — About 1,000 Air National Guard troops who are assigned to space missions are mired in an identity crisis.

Torn between the Air Force, where they have historical­ly been assigned, and the military’s shiny new Space Force where they now work, their units have become orphans, according to commanders, as state and federal leaders wrangle over whether to create a Space National Guard.

For federal authoritie­s, the issue is mainly about the money. A Space Guard, they say, will create unneeded bureaucrac­y and cost up to $500 million a year. They argue it’s too high a price to slap a new name on a patch for an airman doing the same job at the same desk as a year ago.

But state Guard leaders say what’s at stake is more than than just uniform patches. They say the split has caused budgeting gaps, training delays and recruiting problems, and if unresolved will lead to bigger divisions, eroding units’ readiness in some of the nation’s critical space war fighting and nuclear command and control jobs.

The state leaders don’t buy the money argument. They say a Space Guard will be needed in only seven states and Guam, where the Air Guard members who support space missions already reside. The cost, they say, will be about $250,000, for new signs, tags and other administra­tive changes.

“When they removed all the space operators out of the Air Force, the Air Force no longer really does space,” said Air Guard Lt. Col. Jeremiah Hitchner, commander of the 109th Space Electromag­netic Warfare Squadron in Guam.

Hitchner was referring to the decision to shift activeduty Air Force troops doing space missions into the new Space Force. “They left us in the Air Force. So we were ... orphaned.”

Across the country, there are 1,008 Air National Guard citizen-airmen performing space jobs in Alaska, California, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, New York, Ohio and Guam.

Many of those Guard members work with America’s highly sensitive and technical military satellite communicat­ions and missile warning systems. They are responsibl­e for ensuring that those systems can survive and operate under all peace and wartime conditions.

The Space Force is not its own military department. Instead, it’s administer­ed by the Air Force secretary, is led by a four-star general and provides forces for U.S. Space Command, which oversees the military’s space operations.

 ?? Noah Berger / San Francisco Chronicle ?? A Space Force member salutes during a ceremony at Travis Air Force Base in Solano County last year for Air Force airmen transition­ing to the military’s newest agency (founded in 2018).
Noah Berger / San Francisco Chronicle A Space Force member salutes during a ceremony at Travis Air Force Base in Solano County last year for Air Force airmen transition­ing to the military’s newest agency (founded in 2018).

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