In this June 18, 2018 photo, President Donald Trump holds up the space policy directive that he signed during a National Space Council meeting in the East Room of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, file)

In this June 18, 2018 photo, President Donald Trump holds up the space policy directive that he signed during a National Space Council meeting in the East Room of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, file)

Trump OKs plan to create Space Force under Air Force control

It would be under Air Force control in a fashion similar to how the Marines are under the Navy.

By Dan Lamothe / The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed a policy directive Tuesday that laid out a framework for the Space Force he has long sought, but fell short of the vision he initially laid out for a new service that is “separate but equal” with the Air Force.

The directive would place the Space Force under the control of the Air Force Department in similar fashion to how the Navy Department oversees the Marine Corps, and marks a partial win for senior Air Force officials. They have argued that creating a separate military department — as Trump stated he wants — would create unnecessary Pentagon bureaucracy.

The plan, which requires congressional approval, would mark the first time that the U.S. government has established a new military branch since the passage of the National Security Act of 1947 created the Air Force in the wake of World War II. The administration could still press for a full Space Force Department in the future, but it remains unclear if or when that will happen.

Trump signed the new policy Tuesday afternoon in the Oval Office while flanked by acting defense secretary Patrick Shanahan, Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson and other senior officials.

The move appears to mark a rhetorical and political compromise: While the Trump administration will continue to call the new service the Space Force, it will more closely resemble a previous proposal on Capitol Hill for a smaller Space Corps that does not have a new, separate service secretary appointed by the president. Like the Marine Corps, it will be led by a four-star general who takes a new seat among the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Pentagon’s top officers.

Gen. David L. Goldfein, the chief of staff of the Air Force, said Tuesday morning that U.S. officials examined options ranging from the creation of a full space department that would have had its own service secretary to something akin to the Medical Corps, a part of the U.S. Army comprising medical professionals in uniform.

“We wanted a robust debate, as you would imagine, on where was the right place to land that aligns with the president’s direction, and what’s going to roll out today is a service within the Department of the Air Force,” Goldfein said during a public appearance at the Brookings Institution in Washington.

Shanahan was expected to sign a memo directing Wilson to establish a team to finalize details about the Pentagon’s space plan, Defense One reported last week, citing a draft memo. The Pentagon also will create a Space Force undersecretary who reports to Wilson and a four-star vice chief of staff, who reports to the Space Force service chief, the report said.

Trump also will create a new position: chief of U.S. Space Command. The four-star officer’s position was created by the president in an order in December, and will oversee the U.S. military’s operations in space, which are presently focused primarily on communications, surveillance and defending American satellites from threats posed both by the elements and adversaries like Russia and China.

Goldfein said Tuesday that he sees the creation of the Space Command commander as the most important step. It will allow the services to prepare troops for the Space Command chief to use, he said, drawing a comparison to the way the services prepare troops to be deployed under the control of U.S. Special Operations Command.

“I think the fact that we’re having a national debate on space is really healthy. Really healthy,” Goldfein said. “… We’re the best in the world at space, and our adversaries know it, and they’ve been studying us and investing in ways to take away that capability in crisis or conflict. That, to me, is the problem statement, and we as a nation cannot let that happen.”

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