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Trump to launch Space Command this week as Pence promotes space efforts

President Donald Trump will order in the coming days the establishment of a new military space command, a move that comes as Vice President Mike Pence plans two high-profile visits related to the US space program, three US officials tell CNN.

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By
Ryan Browne
and
Elizabeth Landers, CNN
(CNN) — President Donald Trump will order in the coming days the establishment of a new military space command, a move that comes as Vice President Mike Pence plans two high-profile visits related to the US space program, three US officials tell CNN.

Pence will visit Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral on Tuesday, and is expected to visit the Pentagon this week, in part to discuss Trump's sought-after Space Force.

The new Space Command will be only the 11th combined combatant command, joining the ranks of Central Command, which oversees military operations in the Middle East, and Special Operations Command, which oversees elite troops known as Special Operations Forces.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment.

Under the Air Force

Pence said during a previous Pentagon visit that the creation of Space Command would be a step aimed at helping the military launch Trump's sought after Space Force, the first new military service since the 1940s. Unlike creating a new service, the creation of the command does not require an act of Congress.

Pence had announced during a December 12 visit to NASA that he will head to "The World's Premier Gateway to Space" at Cape Canaveral to watch a satellite launch by SpaceX, the space transportation services company founded by Elon Musk.

Officials told CNN that the Pentagon is nearing completion of a draft proposal for a Space Force that would sit under the Air Force, but have many of the trappings of a separate service, resembling the US Marine Corps' relationship to the Department of the Navy.

Such an arrangement would need the backing of Congress, something hardly assured, given the Democrats' take over the House after the 2018 midterms.

Skepticism

Many senior Democratic lawmakers have expressed skepticism about the new service.

"I am opposed to President Trump's proposal for a 'Space Force,'" Representative Adam Smith, the senior Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, said in in a statement in September. "I am concerned that his proposal would create additional costly military bureaucracy at a time when we have limited resources for defense and critical domestic priorities."

The Air Force previously estimated that the Space Force could cost $13 billion in its first five years, though Deputy Secretary of Defense Pat Shanahan has argued that the price tag would be significantly lower, potentially falling under $5 billion.

The vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Paul Selva, told reporters in August that there are approximately 18,000 US military and civilian personnel in the Department of Defense who are involved in space operations, helping to oversee some 140 satellites. Officials say that not all of these personnel will be part of the new Space Command.

A Pentagon report released in August said the new command will "improve and evolve space warfighting," focusing on doctrine, tactics, techniques and procedures, making it akin to Special Operations Command, which provides a similar function for US Special Operations Forces, such as US Navy SEALs and Army Special Forces.

"This new command structure for the physical domain of space, led by a four-star flag officer, will establish unified command and control for our Space Force operations, ensure integration across the military, and develop the space warfighting doctrine, tactics, techniques, and procedures of the future," Pence said during a previous visit to the Pentagon in August.

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