Air Force Makes It Official: Selfridge Won’t Host F-35 Training Center

March 15, 2023

Mar. 15—Washington ― The U.S. Air Force on Wednesday made final its decision to base its international training center for the F-35 fighter aircraft in Arkansas instead of Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Macomb County, officials said.

In 2021, Selfridge had been designated as the Air Force's tentative backup site for the training center pending an environmental impact study. But an Air Force spokeswoman confirmed Wednesday that Ebbing Air National Guard Base at Fort Smith in Arkansas had been selected as the location to establish an F-35 Lightning II training center for Foreign Military Sales participants.

"Ebbing ANGB was selected to host this mission based on factors related to mission, infrastructure capacity, community support, environmental considerations and cost," the Air Force spokeswoman said.

The decision comes after Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and other Michigan officials had lobbied the Pentagon in recent months to change its mind and choose the Selfridge base in Harrison Township for the center instead of its top choice, the Arkansas base.

The training center would house up to 36 aircraft (24 F-35s and a dozen F-16s) while the service trains international student pilots and support personnel from Singapore and other nations.

The Air Force previously had said it selected Ebbing in Arkansas because the base previously housed F-16 aircraft and can accommodate the new mission with minimal renovation or new construction.

The Michigan congressional delegation and Macomb County elected officials have been actively pursuing a new fighter mission for Selfridge in a bid to ensure its long-term future as the Air Force intends to retire the aging A-10 Warthog platform ― the backbone of Selfridge's mission ― in the next decade, if not sooner.

In an effort to sway the military, Whitmer had pledged to Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall III nearly $100 million in state tax dollars to upgrade the facilities and infrastructure like the runway at Selfridge if the Air Force replaces the A-10 there with a "future" fighter mission.

In February, Whitmer and Major General Paul D. Rogers, the adjutant general of the Michigan National Guard, had pressed Biden administration officials on a follow-on platform for Selfridge during a visit to Washington.

The Michigan delegation for years had lobbied the Air Force to base a squadron of F-35s at Selfridge, as it would help ensure that the base would stay open long term and remain part of the community, where it supports an estimated 5,000 jobs and makes an estimated $850 million in economic impact statewide, according to state figures.

The delegation last month wrote to Kendall about Selfridge, urging him to replace the A-10 squadron there with a long-term fighter mission. The letter was led by freshman U.S. Rep. John James, R- Farmington Hills, and Democratic U.S. Sens. Debbie Stabenow of Lansing and Gary Peters of Bloomfield Township.

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Wednesday applauded the Air Force's decision in a joint statement with U.S. Sens. John Boozman and Tom Cotton and U.S. Steve Womack, saying it would bring jobs and economic prosperity to the state.

"Today's Record of Decision makes clear and cements Arkansas' important role in training, equipping, and supplying our friends across the globe" Sanders said in a statement. "I look forward to welcoming the new U.S. Air Force personnel who will be moving to our state and am excited for all our international partners to discover the meaning of Arkansas hospitality."

Boozman called the development a "gamechanger" for Fort Smith and the state.

"The Arkansas Congressional Delegation has worked tirelessly along with state and community leaders to demonstrate to the Air Force what we all knew — Fort Smith is the best location for this mission," Boozman said.

It's unclear what's next for Selfridge. The Air Force has for years tried to retire the A-10, which was designed in the 1970s, arguing it wouldn't survive a high-end war against adversaries like Russia and China. The A-10s' mission is close-air support, or providing firepower from the air to target hostile forces in close proximity to friendly troops.

Congress since 2014 repeatedly blocked the Pentagon from divesting the A-10 fleet, arguing they were ideally suited for the theaters in Iraq and Afghanistan.

But last year lawmakers for the first time let the service move forward with retiring 21 A-10s based in Indiana, which are to be replaced with F-16s. The Air Force on Monday proposed a budget that looks to retire 44 more A-10s.

[email protected]

___

(c)2023 The Detroit News

Visit The Detroit News at www.detnews.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.