First Air Force, based at Florida's Tyndall Air Force Base, has been selected as the air component of U.S. Space Command. Photo by Solomon Cook/U.S. Air Force
March 11 (UPI) -- The Air Force announced Thursday that it has named First Air Force as the future air component to U.S. Space Command.
"The U.S. Air Force is a critical contributor to the U.S. Space Command mission as evidenced by their support to Human Space Flight," said U.S. Army Gen. James Dickinson, USSPACECOM commander, in the Air Force's announcement.
"We welcome First Air Force to our joint team," Dickinson said.
First Air Force is a numbered air force of United States Air Force Air Combat Command and is headquartered at Florida's Tyndall Air Force Base.
The organization is responsible for aerospace control and air defense of the continental United States, U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico -- and will now exercise command and control over Air Force forces supporting U.S. Space Command.
"First Air Force was the natural choice to serve as Air Force component to U.S. Space Command," said Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Q. Brown, Jr.
"In this new role, First Air Force will be better able to identify and address gaps and seams when integrating spacepower into the support of the homeland defense mission. This will also inform efforts to better fuse space operations into air operations centers around the globe," Brown said.
The new air component is expected to achieve initial operating capability by the end of calendar year 2021, the Air Force said.
"It's an honor for this command to be named as the Air Force's component command to U.S. Space Command," said Lt. Gen. Kirk Pierce, First Air Force commander.
"We have a staff of seasoned professionals with decades of proven success in protecting the air domain in defense of the homeland. We look forward to supporting USSPACECOM in their efforts to defend against threats to the space domain," Pierce said.
U.S. Space Command was stood up in the summer of 2019 -- a few months before Congress created Space Force at the urging of then-President Donald Trump.
Space Command is actually the resurrection of an organization that existed between 1985 and 2002, with the mission of protecting U.S. interests in space.