WASHINGTON Military communities from California to Maine that thought they had been spared after the Pentagon's spring reorganization are learning they may not be safe after all.
The base-closing commission charged with reviewing Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld's proposal voted Tuesday to add a handful of military facilities in eight states and the nation's capital to the list of bases he wants to shut down or shrink. Those actions were sure to ignite a new round of lobbying by communities whose military facilities are now being targeted.
Mindful of the anxiety such communities typically feel, commission Chairman Anthony Principi said adding a base to the list "does not necessarily mean that the base will be realigned or closed" but will allow the panel to further analyze those bases' usefulness by visiting sites, collecting data and holding hearings.
Some in Congress had feared the panel would simply sign off on Rumsfeld's plan without looking at options.
But the votes showed the independent commission's willingness to diverge at least somewhat from the plan Rumsfeld submitted in May, when he proposed closing or reducing forces at 62 major domestic bases and hundreds of smaller installations from coast to coast.
"This commission knows what it is talking about and is not a rubber stamp. We are an independent check on the power of the secretary to close and realign military bases," Principi said after the vote.
By adding bases to the list, the commission gave itself more flexibility to change what the Pentagon proposed as it considers shifting pieces of the mammoth domestic base network to better suit today's defense needs.
Commissioners will make final decisions next month about which bases to propose for closing or reductions, with President Bush and Congress making a binding decision in the fall.
Under the commission's actions Tuesday, the Navy Broadway Complex in San Diego and the Naval Air Station in Brunswick, Maine, are now on the list of installations to be closed. The Naval Master Jet Base at the Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia and Pope Air Force Base in North Carolina could see even more force reductions than the Pentagon proposed or could be shut down.
Even small facilities were not immune. With an eye on possibly merging administrative, education and medical services, the commission voted to include several small installations in Colorado, Ohio, Indiana, California, Virginia and Washington, D.C., for consideration. The Galena Airport Forward Operating Location in Alaska is also now on the list for either closure or downsizing.
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