Captain says U.S. military does not view
Central American migrants as 'enemies'
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[November 16, 2018]
By Alan Devall and Mike Blake
SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - A captain with the
U.S. forces deployed in San Diego to fortify the southern border said he
does not view the migrants from a Central American caravan amassing in
Mexico as "enemies" after President Donald Trump described them as an
"invasion."
"I don't consider them a military enemy, nor does the United States
military doing this job. They're simply migrants in a caravan moving
towards the United States to seek a better way of life and asylum," Army
Captain Guster Cunningham III told Reuters on Thursday.
"The military is not classifying them as the enemy in any way, shape or
form," said Cunningham, who is the spokesman for the Special Purpose
Marine Ground- Air Taskforce 7.
Trump's politically charged decision to send troops to the border with
Mexico came ahead of U.S. congressional elections last week. He was
seeking to strengthen border security as part of a crackdown on illegal
immigration.
The number of U.S. troops at the border with Mexico may have peaked at
about 5,800, the U.S. commander of the mission told Reuters, noting he
would start looking next week at whether to begin sending forces home or
perhaps shifting some to new border positions.
The Pentagon says there are no plans for U.S. forces to interact with
migrants and that they had been carrying out support tasks for U.S.
Customs and Border (CBP), such as stringing up concertina wire and
building temporary housing for themselves and CBP personnel.
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U.S. Marines deploy concertina wire at the U.S. Mexico border in
preparation for the arrival of a caravan of migrants at the San
Ysidro border crossing in San Diego, California, U.S. November 15,
2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake
"As far as us being confronted with migrants, the possibility still
remains zero because that's not our job. Our job again is to fortify
the fence and enable CBP to do their enforcement job," Cunningham
said.
Up to 1,000 migrants linked to the caravans have arrived in the
Mexican border city of Tijuana in recent days, with a similar number
expected to arrive in the next few days. Thousands more could then
arrive in border towns as the bulk of the caravans arrive.
Many of the migrants in the caravans, which include women and
children, say they are fleeing gang violence and poverty. However.
Trump suggested, without providing proof, the caravans could be
hiding extremists.
(Writing by Anthony Esposito; Editing by Paul Tait)
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