The park on Cape Canaveral, Fla. showcases several pieces of equipment that were monumental to the development of Air Force Space Command. Here, 216 photos captured over a 90 minute period are layered over one another, making the star trails come to life.

The park on Cape Canaveral, Fla. showcases several pieces of equipment that were monumental to the development of Air Force Space Command. Here, 216 photos captured over a 90 minute period are layered over one another, making the star trails come to life. Tech. Sgt. David Salanitri / U.S. Air Force photo illustration

Air Force Recommends Space Command Move to Alabama

With one week left on the job, Secretary Barrett picked Huntsville. The decision, however, is not final.

U.S. Space Command should move from Colorado to Alabama, the Air Force secretary said on Wednesday, effectively announcing the winner of a hotly contested competition just one week before she is scheduled to resign with the rest of the Trump administration.

The decision to move the command from Peterson Air Force Base, in Colorado Springs, to Redstone Arsenal, an Army base in Huntsville, comes after intense lobbying from a number of states.

“Huntsville compared favorably across more of these factors than any other community, providing a large, qualified workforce, quality schools, superior infrastructure capacity, and low initial and recurring costs,” the Air Force said in a statement. “Additionally, Redstone Arsenal offered a facility to support the headquarters, at no cost, while the permanent facility is being constructed.”

The decision could be reversed by the incoming Biden administration. Huntsville is now the “preferred” site, based on a study conducted by Space Command, according to an Air Force official. Finalization is subject to an environmental impact study, which does not pose a serious obstacle. However, if the incoming administration were to initiate another study and conclude that political influence tilted the decision, this would set in motion a new round of studies and assessments, causing further delays in Space Command establishing its permanent headquarters, according to the official. 

Huntsville, known as Rocket City, has played a key role in U.S. spaceflight. The first-stage motors of the massive Saturn V rocket that carried astronauts to the moon were tested in the city, shattering windows. More recently, its large population of Defense Department works has given Huntsville a second nickname: “Pentagon South.” 

The Air Force said the Alabama city was chosen by Secretary Barbara Barrett, who is to resign next week in concert with President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration on Wednesday.

Space Command’s Brig. Gen. Shawn N. Bratton, deputy director of operations, said it was “wonderful” that the Defense Department had finally made a decision on where to put the headquarters. 

Space Command is currently based in Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, along with the National Space Defense Center. The city is also home to a number of key space activities such as the steering of the GPS constellation out of nearby Schriever Air Force Base. Bratton said those operations will continue out of Schriever. He said that the headquarters' migration to Huntsville, which would proceed over six years and is not yet final, would not interfere with key missions. He pointed to the fact that the 2019 Schriever Wargame, while organized out of the base, took place in Maxwell Air Force Base, in Alabama. 

Colorado Springs is also the headquarters of U.S. Northern Command and North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, charged with warning of incoming aircraft, missiles, or space vehicles, which uses satellites to detect incoming intercontinental ballistic missiles. 

Huntsville is the home of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency. It is also less than one hundred miles from the district of Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., one of the key proponents of the U.S. Space Force and the incoming ranking minority member of the House Armed Services Committee. 

"The decision reeks of being politically motivated (taking jobs from a state that voted for Biden and moving them to a state that voted for Trump)," said Todd Harrison, director of defense budget analysis and director of the Aerospace Security Project at CSIS, on Twitter. "I don't see how relocating the headquarters, building new facilities, and moving all of these people improves our national security or our space capabilities. This will be a colossal waste of money. I hope it is one of the first things the new Pentagon leadership will reexamine once they are in place."