WASHINGTON — The chief of the National Guard Bureau, Gen. Daniel Hokanson, is in discussions with Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall to examine potential options concerning the future of approximately 1,000 members of the Air National Guard who support Space Force operations in seven states.
Hokanson told reporters Feb. 8 that these options will inform the next round of congressional debate over whether the Space Force should have its own force of part-time troops to back up the new service, akin to the structure of the Air and Army National Guard.
The 2024 defense authorization bill directs Hokanson and Kendall to submit a study to congressional committees in March laying out options.
The Biden administration opposes the establishment of a Space National Guard due to the cost, instead offering to shift those Guard space units into the active-duty Space Force. Guard advocates on Capitol Hill made several unsuccessful attempts in recent years to get Congress to pass legislation to establish a Space National Guard, hence the new study to examine all options yet again.
“I’ve been very clear in my congressional testimony when asked for my best military advice, I believe the establishment of a Space National Guard is the best use of our folks that have been doing this mission in many cases for over 25 years,” Hokanson said at a Pentagon news conference.
In the study due in March, Hokanson and Kendall have to look at the pros and cons of transferring all space functions of the National Guard to the Space Force. They have to analyze three potential paths: Maintaining the current model under the Air National Guard, transferring National Guard space functions to the Space Force, and establishing a new National Guard component of the Space Force.
Senate bill reintroduced
Proponents of the Space National Guard will make another push in the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act.
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and a bipartisan group…
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