MilitaryPolicy

SPACECOM Kicks Off Alabama Move with New Task Force

US Space Force Gen. Whiting. Image: US Space Force/SPACECOM/NATO Space Centre of Excellence Conference
US Space Force Gen. Whiting. Image: US Space Force/SPACECOM/NATO Space Centre of Excellence Conference

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met with US Space Command Commander Gen. Stephen Whiting last week to talk about how to fast-track the relocation of Space Command HQ from Colorado to Alabama.

Space Command created Task Force Voyager to manage the logistics of uprooting over 1,000 staff from Colorado and reestablishing SPACECOM capabilities at the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, AL.

In his meeting with Hegseth, Whiting confirmed that SPACECOM would “identify efficiencies in relocating the headquarters per the president’s direction in an expedient manner,” according to a DoD statement.

History lesson: SPACECOM’s relocation is the result of a years-long tug-of-war between the Biden and Trump administrations. In January 2021, the Air Force recommended the move, only for President Joe Biden to nix the idea two years later. President Donald Trump then revived the idea in his second term, announcing in September that the move would go ahead as he originally planned.

With Task Force Voyager, and the recent meeting between Hegseth and Whiting, it appears the relocation is moving ahead—despite protests from Colorado officials, who filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration accusing the president of initiating the relocation to punish Colorado for its mail-in voting system. (Trump said Colorado’s mail-in voting “played a big factor” at a press conference concerning SPACECOM’s relocation.)

Timing is everything: Even if this lawsuit goes away, the relocation won’t happen overnight. In October, Redstone Arsenal Deputy Garrison Commander Martin Traylor said it could take as long as two years to move staff into a temporary facility, while the construction of a permanent HQ could take five to seven years to complete.

The State of Alabama has pledged hundreds of millions of dollars to make the relocation possible: $425M to secure the headquarters, including $10M for temporary office space and $385M for infrastructure and transportation upgrades.

Related Stories
MilitaryStartups

Exclusive: Fortastra Lands $8M Seed to Develop Orbital Defense Sats

Military capabilities on orbit are ramping up, but aside from a handful of explosive anti-satellite demos in recent decades, the rising tension has yet to get physical.  

MilitaryPolaris

NDAA on Golden Dome, Acquisition, Nat Sec Launch

House and Senate negotiators unveiled the compromise fiscal 2026 National Defense Authorization Bill on Monday, which would codify President Donald Trump’s Golden Dome missile defense program into law.

Policy

China Could Beat the US to the Moon, Experts Warn

Yesterday, four space industry and China experts appeared before the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology’s Subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics testifying that if the US doesn’t step up, it risks ceding space superiority to China. That risk, according to witnesses, comes on all fronts—from the Moon and planetary science, to PNT systems and LEO security.

EuropeMilitaryPolicy

ESA Keeps the Door Open for More Defense Funding 

ESA plans to keep subscriptions for a new defense initiative open for the next year, which usually finalizes funding at the close of each three-year ministerial meeting.