Trump confirms he ‘single-handedly’ picked Alabama for Space Command

Former President Donald Trump on Friday told a radio show he “single-handedly” picked Alabama as the new home for U.S. Space Command, confirming a January Gazette report and drawing fire from Colorado politicians and generals worried that the move could disrupt America’s defense of military satellites.

Speaking to “Rick and Bubba,” an Alabama-based syndicated talk show, Trump said he alone chose to uproot the command from Colorado Springs and move it to Huntsville, Ala.

“I single-handedly said ‘let’s go to Alabama,'” Trump said, contradicting Pentagon statements that Huntsville was picked by a nonpartisan process that weighed Colorado Springs and other suitors for the command independently.

In the radio interview, Trump conflated the command – which oversees military missions in space for all armed services – with the new Space Force, a separate armed service for satellite troops.

The interview came ahead of an appearance by Trump Saturday night at an Alabama campaign-style rally that was expected to draw thousands of supporters.

Trump’s Jan. 13 decision to move the command, which was re-established in Colorado Springs in 2019, remains under investigation by the Pentagon’s Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office. Anonymous military sources told The Gazette of Trump’s role in the decision as soon as it was announced.

Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers said Trump’s Friday radio interview should be enough to prompt a re-examination of the decision.

“We have maintained throughout the process that the permanent basing decision for U.S. Space Command was not made on merit. The admission by former President Trump that he ‘single-handedly’ directed the move to Huntsville, Alabama, supports our position,” Suthers said in an email. “Our local governments and our Congressional delegation will continue to press our case in Congress and at the White House to re-examine and ultimately overturn the move in the best interest of our nation.”

U.S. Space Command was recreated by the Trump administration to address rising threats from Russia and China to U.S. spacecraft. An earlier version of the command had been headquartered at recently renamed Peterson Space Force Base until the command was shuttered amid post-Cold War belt-tightening in 2002.

Colorado Springs was picked as the initial home for the new version of the command because it contains the bulk of the military’s space troops along with units that control most of the military’s satellites and a center that brings together experts from the military, intelligence agencies and allies to set strategy that would be used if a war hits orbit.

An earlier Air Force decision will keep the command in Colorado Springs until at least 2026. Congress hasn’t allocated money for the move and the Pentagon has not issued contracts that would be necessary to relocate Space Command.

In a recent paper, retired Air Force Gen. Ed Eberhart and retired Army Lt. Gen. Ed Anderson – the former top space officers of their respective services – said uprooting the fledgling command would disrupt its mission to protect U.S. satellites, potentially wasting years of progress along with billions of dollars.

“U.S. Space Command was re-established due to the criticality of its mission,” the generals wrote. “Making a location decision without fully evaluating cost and time to achieve full mission capability has resulted in a decision that makes America vulnerable.”

Reggie Ash, who heads military programs for the Colorado Springs Chamber & EDC, said Friday’s declaration by Trump confirmed a key argument local leaders have used in a bid to overturn the Alabama decision.

“As we’ve said all along, Space Command’s basing decision needs to be determined by merit, not politics,” Ash said. “Now that the former president is confirming what we’ve been saying all along, we again urge President Biden to overturn that decision now. Keeping Space Command in Colorado Springs avoids disrupting operations and interfering with their critical national security mission. Staying in Colorado Springs is the most cost effective, least risky, and overall best choice for the mission.”

Alabama had been angling for the command for years, with Alabama U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers being one of the first lawmakers to push for its creation.

The Alabama decision came after a process to pick a permanent home for the command was stopped and restarted by the Pentagon several times.

The Alabama announcement came one week after a Trump rally in Washington decrying the results of the 2020 election preceded a riot that spilled into the U.S. Capitol where lawmakers were certifying the election result.

At the Jan. 6 rally, Trump’s speech was preceded by remarks from Huntsville’s Republican U.S. Rep. Mo Brooks.

U.S. Space Command leader Gen. John “Jay” Raymond and Senior Enlisted Adviser Chief Master Sgt. Roger Towberman present President Donald Trump with the Space Force flag in May 2020 in the Oval Office.
courtesy of U.S. Space Force
Air Force One lands at the Colorado Springs Airport with then-President Donald Trump while Air Force Two sits on the tarmac at Peterson Air Force Base in February 2020.The Pentagon rated Peterson Air Force base at the bottom of the pack in its access to air transport and ability to handle distinguished visitors in a document justifying its decision to award U.S. Space Command to Alabama. In this image, both planes were at Peterson while Trump and Vice President Mike Pence campaigned in the Pikes Peak region.
CHRISTIAN MURDOCK, THE GAZETTE
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