States deploy about 2,500 National Guard troops to U.S.-Mexico border
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[October 05, 2022]
By Christian Wade / The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – Nearly two dozen
states are sending National Guard troops to the U.S.-Mexico border to
help federal immigration officials grapple with an unprecedented surge
of undocumented migrants.
The deployments, which were requested by the U.S. Department of Defense,
call for up to 2,500 National Guard members from Republican-led states
like Kentucky, South Carolina and Arkansas, as well as Democratic-led
states such as Rhode Island and Illinois.
The troops were requested by DOD to assist U.S. Border Patrol in dealing
with a surge of illegal trafficking of people, weapons and drugs into
the country. The troops will work only in support missions, a Defense
Department spokesman said, and are prohibited under federal law from
detaining undocumented migrants or others caught crossing into the
United States illegally.
Other states sending troops include Arizona, Georgia, Indiana,
Minnesota, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and the U.S.
territory of Puerto Rico, DOD officials said.
Several other states – Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Oregon, Utah and Washington – will be providing National Guard aviation
support for border operations, according to the department. The U.S.
Virgin Islands has also committed National Guard troops to the mission,
which is being overseen by the U.S. Northern Command.
For the Biden administration, the deployments are similar to those used
by former President Donald Trump to deal with a surge of illegal
immgration during his presidency.
In 2018, Trump deployed National Guard troops from several states to
support U.S. Customs and Border Protection along the southern border. In
a presidential memorandum, the Republican cited a "drastic surge of
illegal activity on the southern border" threatening national security.
Unlike Trump, Biden doesn't appear to have issued any statements on the
deployments, leaving it up to states to make announcements about
commitments of National Guard troops.
In New Hampshire, Republican Gov. Chris Sununu said more than 160
National Guard soldiers from the 941st Military Police Battalion and
237th Military Police Company will be dispatched for a one-year mission
to conduct surveillance and support other U.S. troops on the ground
along a 250-mile section of the southern border.
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Sununu said the troops – which were deployed to the border in 2020 and
2021 under similar orders – are needed to deal with "the ongoing
humanitarian crisis along our southern border."
The U.S. Border Patrol has apprehended migrants at the U.S.-Mexico
border more than 1.8 million times since October, breaking previous
records, according to the agency. The Center Square, through its
sources, reported in August the number of illegal entries is nearly 5
million since Biden began to occupy the White House in January 2020.
Roughly half of those immigrants were expelled under Title 42, a federal
public health order that has been in place since the beginning of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Hundreds of thousands more migrants have been allowed to seek asylum and
other protections in the United States, according to immigration
officials.
Republican governors in Texas and Arizona have criticized the Biden
administration's response to the surge.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott declared a state of disaster last year in
response to the higher volume of unlawful border crossings at the
Southwest border, and has directed state and local police to ramp up
arrests of unauthorized immigrants. Abbott has also deployed thousands
of National Guard troops along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Groups that support tougher immigration restrictions say the deployment
of the National Guard troops will help overburdened federal agenies deal
with the surge of illegal immigration.
"It will definitely be helpful to have more boots on the ground there,
because the border patrol is absolutely overwhelmed," said Jessica
Vaughn, director of policy studies at the Washington D.C.-based Center
for Immigration Studies. "One of the biggest security problems is that
federal officials are so distracted dealing with migrants that the
border is totally unguarded."
Vaughn said the Biden administration's response to the "historic" surge
of migrants has been "totally inadequate" and border states are bearing
the brunt of the illegal crossings.
"It's clear from the Biden administration's response that they are not
interested in stopping the influx of illegal immigrants," she said.
"They have many tools at their disposal that they could be using to put
a stop to the illegal crossings, but they have not done that."s is solely responsible for this content. |