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Video: Selfridge Officials Await Decision on Uncertain Future of A-10s

Selfridge Air National Guard Base, one of the largest military installations in Michigan, has long played an important role in the security of the United States, but may lose 24 A-10 Warthog fighter jets under the current federal budget.

 
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Selfridge Air National Guard Base currently is home to all five branches of the military.
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Selfridge Air National Guard Base currently is home to all five branches of the military.

Selfridge Air National Guard Base has been protecting metro Detroit and the United States since the dawn of military aviation.

The base, which opened in 1917, has been the training ground for pilots in bi-planes, the Tuskegee Airmen to today's supersonic fighters. The men and women from the Harrison Township base have served in every war since World War I, and have been deployed in support of the current operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

While the base is now home to nearly 3,000 personnel and 3,000 part-time National Guard and Reserve personnel every branch of the military, along with Homeland Security and TACOM, the future of some of the Air National Guard aircraft is in question. 

The Air Force has proposed to remove 24 A-10 Warthog fighter planes from Selfridge, while adding four KC-135 refueling aircraft. While the proposal is currently being debated in Congress, Chesterfield Township Board members recently passed a resolution urging legislators to oppose personnel and equipment cuts to the Michigan Air National Guard in a resolution adopted unanimously during Monday night’s meeting.

Related Topics: Military and Selfridge Air National Guard Base

kidcat24

7:56 am on Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Do you know what that prime lake front land is worth. Think about it. I know a congresswomen that has a stake in it.

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Richard Wal

6:32 am on Thursday, May 10, 2012

The same congresswoman wanted to turn Selfridge into a commercial airport a few years back when the AF Reserve was kicked out of Michigan and relocated to Florida.

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Jeffery Berz

11:01 pm on Monday, May 14, 2012

They tried that back in the late 1980's as well.

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