USA TODAY US Edition

Pentagon begins work on military Space Force

Plan would create sixth branch of armed services

- Tom Vanden Brook

WASHINGTON – Vice President Mike Pence announced Thursday that the Pentagon has begun planning a Space Force, embarking on an effort to create the first armed service since 1947.

In June, President Donald Trump called for the establishm­ent of the sixth armed service, to join the Air Force, Army, Marine Corps, Navy and Coast Guard. Thursday’s plan, which requires authorizat­ion and funding from Congress, would develop forces to defend satellites from attack and perform other space-related tasks. China and Russia are the nation’s primary rivals in space.

The force would be created by 2020, Pence said. Before that, the Pentagon plans to assemble the U.S. Space Command, which would be led by a fourstar officer and draw forces from the other armed services. A 15-page proposal outlines the need for the force and steps to get there but no bottom line, saying only that costs associated with it will be sent to Congress next February.

When the proposal for a separate force was broached last year, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis resisted it. He wrote to Congress that it would “likely present a narrower and even parochial approach to space operations.”

Mattis signaled this week that his thoughts had changed.

“We need to address space as a developing war-fighting domain, and a combatant command is certainly one thing that we can establish,” Mattis said. “This is a process we’re in. We are in complete alignment with the president’s concern about protecting our assets in space that contribute to our security, to our economy. And we’re going to have to address it as other countries show a capability to attack those assets.”

The Pentagon’s plan, released Thursday, identifies China and Russia as “strategic competitor­s” that are “explicitly pursuing space war-fighting capabiliti­es to neutralize U.S. space capabiliti­es in a time of conflict.” Russia and China are pursuing anti-satellite weapons, including lasers, to “reduce U.S. military effectiven­ess.”

Pence said the White House has worked with Congress to develop the plan. Next year’s budget will seek funding and authorizat­ion for the venture.

“We’re building bipartisan support for our plan,” Pence said.

The top House Republican and Democrat on an Armed Services Committee panel on strategic forces applauded the plan. Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., and Jim Cooper, D-Tenn., said in a joint statement that they had warned for years about the need to beef up military capabiliti­es in space.

“This report is a step in a multi-year process that we think will result in a safer, stronger America,” the statement reads.

The Air Force, the newest of the armed services dating to 1947, has the largest stake in space. It already contains a Space Command, which it establishe­d in 1982.

The new force probably would be carved out of the Air Force, creating two smaller, weaker services, according to military analysts.

“This is a half-baked idea,” said Loren Thompson, a defense industry consultant and military analyst at the Lexington Institute. “It will disrupt existing military relationsh­ips and add nothing of value.

“Nobody in the Pentagon believes creating a Space Force makes sense. If that same view prevails in Congress, then it isn’t going to happen.”

A better idea would be elevating an organizati­on within the Air Force to deal with space, Thompson said.

“Creating a separate service will just add to dysfunctio­n at the Defense Department,” he said.

 ??  ?? Mike Pence
Mike Pence
 ??  ?? Jim Mattis
Jim Mattis

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States