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US creates Pentagon Space Force

Operations Chief John Raymond and Donald Trump at the signing ceremony for The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020
Operations Chief John Raymond and Donald Trump at the signing ceremony for The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020

US President Donald Trump has signed legislation to create a full-fledged Pentagon force for combat in outer space - the first new military service in seven decades.

Capping an ambitious order Mr Trump issued in June 2018, the US Space Force officially came into being when Mr Trump signed the annual military budget, the $738bn (€666bn) National Defense Authorization Act. 

The legislation will create the Department of Defense's sixth force, a coequal of the five existing forces -- the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard.

"Our reliance on space-based capabilities has grown dramatically, and today outer space has evolved into a war-fighting domain of its own," said Secretary of Defense Mark Esper.

"Maintaining American dominance in that domain is now the mission of the United States Space Force."

At the signing of the law yesterday Mr Trump said there is "going to be a lot of things happening in space, because space is the world's newest warfighting domain".

The new organisation builds on the US Space Command, already operating under the Air Force since it was created in August.

And, like the Marines, which operate within the umbrella of the Navy, the Space Force will be under the Air Force.

The Space Command will focus on war fighting - akin to the Pentagon's regional commands like CentCom - while the Space Force will encompass broader missions like training, procurement, long-term planning and other functions.

The Space Force will be comprised of about 16,000 Air Force and civilian personnel, some already taking part in the Space Command, according to Air Force Secretary Barbara Barrett.

It will have its own uniform, shoulder patches and even, eventually, its own song, just like the other branches.

"The US Space Force will protect America's national interests by its singular focus on space. The United States has the best space acumen in the world," Ms Barrett said.

A staff of 16,000 would make it much smaller than the other forces, but Barrett said the technology-centric nature of the work requires fewer people.

"It's a different sort of portfolio than what we might be thinking of when we generally think about warfighting machines," she said.

Leading the Space Force will be Air Force General Jay Raymond, who currently runs SpaceCom.

"With the establishment of the United States Space Force, we're elevating space commensurate with its importance to our national security and the security of our allies and our partners," said General Raymond.