US planning to create 'Space Corps' as sixth branch of armed forces

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by qualiride

The House Armed Services Committee has voted to create a US "Space Corps", which would become a new branch of the armed forces and incorporate the current space missions of the US Air Force.

If the US Space Corps goes ahead, it would be the first new military service in the country since 1947.

The move has caused consternation as committee members of the panel say they were only recently informed, giving them little time to protest against the proposal.

Michael Turner, Republican senator of Ohio, said he first heard about the proposal last week, when it appeared before the subcommittee on strategic force.

“I chastised my staff and said, ‘How could I not know that this was happening?’ They said, ‘Well, they had a meeting about it and you missed it,’” Turner said. “A meeting is certainly not enough. Maybe we do need a space corps, but I think this bears more than just discussions in a subcommittee.

“We have not had Secretary Mattis come before us and tell us what this means. We have not heard from the secretary of the Air Force. There’s a whole lot of work we need to do before we go as far as creating a new service branch.”

Martha McSally, Republican senator for Arizona, was similarly caught off guard. “This is honestly the first time I’ve heard about a major reorganisation to our Air Force,” said the retired Air Force colonel.

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In response to the criticism, Mike Rogers and Jim Cooper, the top Republican and Democrat on the strategic forces subcommittee, said the dedicated space service had been mooted for years. “There’s been nothing shortsighted about this,” Rogers said according to a Federal News Radio report.

“We started working on it vigorously in September, and we’ve had countless meetings with a number of experts who have advised us as to how this should be construed. In fact, this idea for a space corps as one of the solutions to Air Force space came from the Rumsfeld Commission in 2001.

"GAO has done three studies on this, all of which tell us that you cannot maintain the current organisational construct of the Air Force and solve the acquisition problems and the operational problems that we have. The Air Force is like any other bureaucracy. They don’t want to change.”

Jim Cooper, the Democrat senator for Tennessee, argued the new space corps was important for US defence strategies. “We could wake up one morning and be blinded and deafened by adversary powers, because so many of our most precious assets are up in space.”

NVMOOK on July 1st, 2017 at 21:13 UTC »

I am currently a normal marine I'd volunteer in a instant to be a space marine

GTFErinyes on July 1st, 2017 at 20:56 UTC »

Just so people are clear, this is a proposal to create a Space Corps as a separate branch of the military, because currently the Army, Navy, and Air Force all have departments that deal with space operations.

This branch would fall under the Department of the Air Force, much like how the Marine Corps fall under the Department of the Navy.

And yes, it is a sixth branch of the armed forces: the Coast Guard, per Title 14 of the US Code, is still an armed service:

The Coast Guard, established January 28, 1915, shall be a military service and a branch of the armed forces of the United States at all times.

The Air Force currently opposes this whole plan because, as it is, they already control most of space operations. For instance, rockets already get launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base or Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and bases like Edwards Air Force Base already conduct/support a lot of space operations.

As another example, Air Force Space Command already manages, maintains, and upgrades GPS.

As thus, a Space Corps would effectively split them up and take away and consolidate space operations in a separate branch.

On the other hand, this WOULD allow a separate branch to focus solely on space and space technology, and it would likely attract a different kind of person to work in this field, so it has its benefits.

Plus, they can have cool uniforms and adopt naval ranks, or else they'd be blowing a real sweet opportunity here

jtfjtf on July 1st, 2017 at 20:38 UTC »

Creation of the space corps

Creation of the space corps marines

Deployment of the space corps marines to some middle eastern desert.