After summer of protests, U.S. National Guard puts troops on standby for
coming months: officials
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[October 06, 2020]
By Idrees Ali
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After a summer of
civil unrest over racial injustice in the United States, the National
Guard has put hundreds of military police on standby specifically to
help law enforcement deal with any potential violence in the coming
months, three U.S. military officials have told Reuters.
Officials said the units, consisting of about 600 military police
stationed in Arizona and Alabama, were a response to the lessons learned
during the violent upheaval after a Black man, George Floyd, died in
late May when a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck.
While the units were not specifically created to address potential
violence around the Nov. 3 elections, their existence highlights how the
military could help deal with unrest around the vote without deploying
active duty troops to cities - a key tenet for Pentagon leadership.
A senior National Guard official, speaking on the condition of
anonymity, said the military police "Rapid Response Units" had been
established in the past month and could deploy to any part of the
country within 24 hours if requested by a governor.
"We're in very unique times right now in our country, we've seen several
instances of where civil disturbances escalated very quickly to riots,
extensive property damage," the official said. The units would be on
standby until at least the end of the year, the official said.
In the campaign, tensions have risen over Republican President Donald
Trump's calls for his supporters to act as ad-hoc poll watchers .
Democrats and nonpartisan election experts have denounced that as an
oblique call for illegal voter intimidation.
The National Guard was thrust into the spotlight in June when more than
40,000 troops were deployed to help deal with protests, including in
Washington, where thousands marched outside the White House.
In June, Defense Secretary Mark Esper publicly voiced his opposition to
invoking the Insurrection Act to deploy active duty forces, in remarks
to reporters that did not go over well with Trump and his top aides.
After the June protests in Washington, Reuters reported that Trump had
told his advisers at one point he wanted 10,000 troops to deploy to the
capital.
The incident showed how close Trump may have come to fulfilling his
threat to deploy active duty troops in U.S. cities, despite opposition
from Pentagon leadership.
The National Guard realized troops needed to have quicker access to
equipment and personnel and have better planning, officials said.
"We've shown that the National Guard is the optimal choice to support
civil authorities ... to me it's just a natural selection for us to
utilize the National Guard," the senior Guard official said.
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A member of the National Guard guards the section of a downtown,
after a grand jury voted to indict one of three white police
officers for wanton endangerment in the death of Breonna Taylor, who
was shot dead by police in her apartment, in Louisville, Kentucky,
U.S. September 23, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
National Guard troops do deploy to foreign wars, but are also
considered better suited than active duty troops to deal with
domestic emergencies such as hurricanes and protests because members
tend to be from the communities they serve and have broader
authority to assist law enforcement.
Trump's bid to militarize the U.S. response to the protests
triggered a rare outpouring of condemnation from former U.S.
military officials, including Trump's first defense secretary, Jim
Mattis, and retired four-star generals who normally try to steer
clear of politics.
Trump has increasingly intervened in lower-level military affairs
ahead of the election. Just hours before testing positive for the
novel coronavirus on Thursday, Trump said on Twitter that a military
decision to make the Navy SEAL ethos gender-neutral was "ridiculous"
and vowed to overturn it.
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has also invoked the
military in the campaign. He said in June that he worries Trump will
try to "steal" the election but he is confident soldiers would
escort Trump from the White House if he loses and does not recognize
the result.
The top U.S. general, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark
Milley, told lawmakers in August that he did not foresee the
military playing a role in the election process or resolving
disputes that may arise.
Milley's comments were largely a reiteration of the military’s
apolitical position but coincided with questions about what would
happen if election results were disputed.
Trump has asserted without evidence that a surge in mail-in voting
during the coronavirus pandemic will lead to massive fraud and has
refused to say whether he would accept official election results if
he lost.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali; Editing by Mary Milliken and Grant McCool)
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