- Text
Rumsfeld Defends Base Closings
World leaders attend the family photo session during the G-8 Summit at Camp David, Md., Saturday, May 19, 2012. From left are European Commission President Jose' Manuel Barroso, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, French President Francois Hollande, U.S. President Barack Obama, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, British Prime Minster David Cameron, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy. (AP Photo/Philippe Wojazer, Pool) (PHILIPPE WOJAZER)
"Those changes are more necessary, not less, during" wartime, Rumsfeld said as a nine-member congressionally chartered commission opened hearings into the base-closing plan that will go to President Bush this fall and then to Congress.
In past base closure rounds, the commission has gone along with about 85 percent of what the Pentagon recommended.
The current panel sounded receptive to what Rumsfeld had proposed, with some misgivings about the changes targeting National Guard and reserve units — a distressing omen to affected communities counting on the commission to spare their facility.
Once the commission sends its plan to the president, it must be accepted or rejected in its entirety by both President Bush and Congress.
As CBS News Correspondent Bob Fuss reports, Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, said it makes sense to move to bigger bases and sometimes combine the branches of the Military into one base.
The proposal calls for closing Cape Cod's Otis Air National Guard Base, a hub in the nation's anti-terror network which launched fighters during the Sept. 11 attacks, along with an Army Reserve training center in Devens, Mass., and a smaller Army Reserve facility at Westover and a Navy shipyard in Boston.
However, proposed changes to the state's other bases mean that in the end, Massachusetts would gain 491 military and civilian jobs, with the biggest gains at Hanscom Air Force Base in Bedford.
"The department is in need of change and adjustment," Rumsfeld told the base-closing commission. "The current arrangement, designed for the Cold War, must give way to new demands of the war against extremism and other evolving challenges in the world."
Remarks and pointed questions by members of the panel underscored the difficulties ahead for what commission chairman Anthony Principi called an "arduous task and assessment."
"If your proposals are accepted, they will have profound effects on the communities and people who bring them to life," Principi, a former Veterans Affairs secretary, said.
Former Utah Rep. James V. Hansen, a Republican, told Rumsfeld he was certain this would be the last round of closures in the face of swelling political opposition.
"I'm convinced this is your last bite of the apple," Hansen said, saying the plan would bring "a lot of pain for a lot of people."
"Certainly, it's the last bite of the apple during my watch," Rumsfeld answered. But, citing the always-changing needs of the military, the defense secretary added: "I would think it may happen again."
- 1
- 2
- Next Page »
-
Kevin Hechtkopf Kevin Hechtkopf is CBSNews.com's politics editor.
Follow on Twitter »
- Romney camp fixes "Amercia" iPhone app gaffe
- Longtime incumbent Rep. Reyes loses in Texas
- Obama "misspoke" on Nazi death camps in Poland
- Obama camp opens new attack against Romney
- Florida Dems push back against voter purge
- Romney takes a gamble and embraces Donald Trump
- At fundraiser, Romney praises but disagrees with Trump
- Planned Parenthood rolls out anti-Romney campaign
- Obama congratulates Romney on GOP primary win
- Poland urges "explicit reaction" on death camp gaffe
- Why Wisconsin's recall election matters
- Obama honors Medal of Freedom recipients
- Romney clinches GOP presidential nomination
- In Texas, GOP Senate race heads to a runoff
- Debt has increased more under Obama than Bush
- Edwards judge sends alternate jurors home






