The Oklahoman

Border wall funding threatens military constructi­on projects

- By Anna Bauman

WASHINGTON— Constructi­on on facilities worth a combined $178 million at Altus and Tinker Air Force bases that would provide training and maintenanc­e for a much-heralded new aircraft could be threatened if President Donald Trump redirects these funds as part of his national emergency declaratio­n.

Up to $3.6 billion of U.S. Department of Defense military constructi­on projects could be reallocate­d to build a border wall under Trump's national emergency, according to the White House, a tactic Sen. Jim Inhofe has said he opposes.

Inhofe said last week he does not support the use of Department of Defense dollars to fund the wall, although he said Trump was “left with no choice” but to declare the emergency to ensure stronger border security.

“I want to make sure this declaratio­n has minimal, if any, impact on our military and reimburse all the necessary accounts affected by the decision,” Inhofe, R-Tulsa, said in a statement released Friday.

Trump declared a national emergency late last week to secure additional resources for a border wall after the House and Senate agreed to pass a bill that included $1.4 billion for a partial barrier, but not a wall, at the U.S.-Mexico border. Trump originally wanted $5.7 billion for the wall.

A group of 16 states filed a lawsuit against Trump on Monday arguing he does not have the power to redirect funds since Congress controls the government's spending.

“The national emergency declaratio­n will rob critical military constructi­on projects of funding, threatenin­g national security to prop up a political vanity project,” said Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y ., House Appropriat­ions Committee chairwoman, in a statement Friday.

Three of Oklahoma's four vulnerable military constructi­on projects are underway at Altus and Tinker Air Force bases, according to informatio­n compiled by the House Appropriat­ions Committee.

These projects include $12 million for a KC-46A simulator facility at Altus, $ 81 million for a Tinker KC -46 A depot maintenanc­e hangar and $85 million for a Tinker KC-46A depot fuel maintenanc­e hangar, according to the budget.

The U.S. Army ammunition depot at McAlester, Oklahoma, also has $7 million allocated for constructi­on of a bulk diesel system replacemen­t.

The KC-46A is a new aerial refueling aircraft that has garnered much attention in recent weeks.

Prominent Oklahoma leaders, including Inhofe, Gov. Kevin Stitt, Sen. James Lankford, R- Oklahoma City, and Rep. Frank Lucas, R-Cheyenne, celebrated the delivery of the second KC-46A in the country to the Altus Air Force Base on Feb. 8, touting the economic benefits and quality j obs it will bring to the state.

“This is more than just the start of a new mission for Altus and Tinker — it clearly demonstrat­es that Oklahoma is home to the future of the Air Force,” Inhofe said at the ceremony.

The aircraft will be maintained at Tinker Air Force Base at the 158-acre, 14-dock campus now under constructi­on. The project is expected to reach completion in December, according to a Tinker press release, with the first plane expected for maintenanc­e in June 2020.

Rep. Kendra Horn, who serves on the House Armed Services Committee, said she thinks the emergency declaratio­n is concerning not only because it is a constituti­onal violation, but because of the funding sources the administra­tion plans to divert.

“Pulling funds from the Department of Defense does not make us safer,” Horn, D-Oklahoma City, said. “Pulling from our military housing does not make us safer. In fact, it makes us more vulnerable.”

 ?? [JIM BECKEL/THE OKLAHOMAN] ?? Constructi­on is underway of the maintenanc­e facility at Tinker Air Force Base that will support the Air Force's new tanker, the Boeing KC-46 Pegasus.
[JIM BECKEL/THE OKLAHOMAN] Constructi­on is underway of the maintenanc­e facility at Tinker Air Force Base that will support the Air Force's new tanker, the Boeing KC-46 Pegasus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States