Beaufort Marine Corps Air Station South Carolina's
military bases have room to grow instead of being potential shutdown
targets in the Pentagon's 2005 round of closures, Gov. Mark Sanford
said Tuesday.
"Frankly, we could add some things to these bases in South
Carolina," Sanford said after a tour of this base, home to nine
F/A-18 Marine Corps and Navy fighter jet squadrons -- about 108
aircraft -- and some 12,800 military and civilian residents.
The closeness of high-tech bombing ranges in Georgia and training
ranges off shore, for example, are vital to helping pilots here hone
their combat skills, Sanford said. Units from the base deployed
recently to Afghanistan and Iraq and showed they were well prepared,
he said.
"It is very, very important to showcase the unique role each one
of these bases plays in the nation's national security," Sanford
said.
While it's good to cite the economic importance the military
plays in the local economy, it might be more persuasive to point out
that South Carolina's bases suffer few of the constraints impinging
on military sites in more congested areas of the country, Sanford
and state lawmakers said.
"Every Marine Corps and Navy mission can be practiced here --
that is vital to the nation's security," said House Rep. Catherine
Ceips, R-Beaufort, who accompanied Sanford on his tour.
Several retired senior military officers who are members of the
Governor's Military Base Advisory Committee also took part in the
briefings.
"We look upon this realignment process as a chance to bring
things into Charleston," said Tom Mikolajcik, a retired Air Force
general on the panel. Mikolajcik said part of the Pentagon's mandate
is not only to close unnecessary bases, but also to "realign" the
military, which could result in some bases gaining units.
Panel members said the governor will be visiting other military
sites in the coming months as they prepare their arguments against
closures.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld must submit his list of
recommended closings and realignments by May 16, 2005. The
commission is supposed to give its decisions to the president by
Sept. 8, 2005.
The General Assembly has appropriated $200,000 in state funds to
help protect military installations. The cities of Beaufort,
Columbia and Sumter, as well as Charleston County, will receive
$50,000 each to fund studies and other efforts to protect local
bases.