That denial doesn't mean much to opponents of expansion, who have read Army planning studies about the value of conducting joint-force maneuvers if Pinon Canyon can be expanded. Louden was reacting to news last year that the Air Force intends to conduct low-level, special-operations flight training over Southern Colorado - a new initiative the Army insists has nothing to do with its 238,000-acre Pinon Canyon training area. "It seems like if the Pentagon can't get what it wants one way, they just come at you from a different angle. "It feels like a steamroller," newly elected Las Animas County Commissioner Mack Louden told The Pueblo Chieftain in November. If you listen to the voices on both sides in the five-year battle over the Army's effort to expand the Pinon Canyon Maneuver Site - you hear fatigue.
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