Trump likely to give U.S. troops
authority to protect immigration agents
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[November 20, 2018]
By Idrees Ali and Lizbeth Diaz
WASHINGTON/TIJUANA, Mexico (Reuters) -
President Donald Trump is likely to give U.S. troops authority to
protect immigration agents stationed along the U.S. border with Mexico
if they come under threat from migrants seeking to cross into the United
States, a U.S. official said on Monday.
Ahead of U.S. congressional elections earlier this month, Trump
denounced the approach of a caravan of migrants as an "invasion" that
threatened American national security, and he sent thousands of U.S.
troops to the border to help secure it.
Currently, the troops do not have authority to protect U.S. Customs and
Border Patrol personnel. The new authority could be announced on
Tuesday, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
U.S. officials briefly closed the busiest border crossing from Mexico
early on Monday to add concrete barricades and razor wire amid concerns
some of the thousands of Central American migrants at the border could
try to rush the crossing.
Northbound lanes at the San Ysidro crossing from Tijuana to San Diego,
California, were temporarily closed "to position additional port
hardening materials," a U.S. CBP spokesperson said.
A Department of Homeland Security official, who requested anonymity,
told reporters on a conference call that U.S. officials had heard
reports some migrants were intending to run through border crossings
into California.
The closing was rare for the station, which is one of the busiest border
crossings in the world with tens of thousands Mexicans heading every day
into the United States to work or study.
"Today was a lost day of work. I already called my boss to tell her that
everything was closed and I did not know what time I would be able to
get in," said Maria Gomez, a Mexican woman who crosses the border every
day for work. "I cannot believe this is happening."
Trump had remained mostly silent about the caravan since the Nov. 6
vote, but on Monday he posted a photo on Twitter showing a fence that
runs from the beach in Tijuana into the ocean now covered with razor
wire.
Critics charged that his talk of a migrant "invasion" was an effort to
rouse his political base ahead of the elections.
Officials have stressed that the 5,900 active-duty U.S. troops on the
border are not there in a law enforcement capacity and that there are no
plans for them to interact with migrants.
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U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Special Response Team (SRT)
officers are seen through concertina wire at the San Ysidro Port of
Entry after the land border crossing was temporarily closed to
traffic in Tijuana, Mexico November 19, 2018. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
Instead, their mission is to lend support to the CBP, and they have
been stringing up concertina wire and erecting temporary housing.
The commander of the mission told Reuters last week that the number
of troops may have peaked, and he would soon look at whether to
begin sending forces home or shifting some to new border positions.
About 6,000 Central Americans have reached the border cities of
Tijuana and Mexicali, according to local officials. More bands of
migrants are making their way toward Tijuana, with around 10,000
expected.
Hundreds of local residents on Sunday massed at a monument in a
wealthy neighborhood of Tijuana to protest the arrival of the
migrants, with some carrying signs that said "Mexico first" and "No
more migrants."
Last month, thousands of Central American migrants began a long
journey from Honduras through Mexico toward the United States to
seek asylum.
Other bands of mostly Salvadorans followed, with a small group
setting off on Sunday from San Salvador.
(Additional reporting by Yeganeh Torbati in Washington; Editing by
Dan Grebler and Cynthia Osterman)
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