Pentagon Orders 3,750 More Troops to Southwest Border, by Kristina Wong, 2/2/19.
The
Pentagon announced Sunday in a statement it is deploying approximately 3,750
more active duty troops to the southwest border to support the Customs and
Border Protection (CBP).
The
additional troops would raise the number of total active duty troops deployed
to the border to 4,350. That is down from a high of 5,900 active duty troops at
the border in November.
“The
Department of Defense will deploy approximately 3,750 additional U.S. forces to
provide the additional support to CBP at the southwest border that Acting
Secretary of Defense [Patrick] Shanahan approved Jan. 11,” the Pentagon said.
A
defense spokesperson said all of the 3,750 additional forces are active duty,
in addition to the 2,250 National Guard members at the border as part of the
separate Guardian Support mission.
The
Pentagon said the additional support would include a mobile surveillance
capability through the end of September 2019, and the putting up of
approximately 150 miles of concertina wire between ports of entry.
Some
of the additional units will be deployed for 90 days, the statement said.
“We
will continue to evaluate the force composition required to meet the mission to
protect and secure the southern border,” the statement said.
President
Trump initially ordered thousands of U.S. troops to the border in October,
ahead of the arrival of at least two migrant caravans heading to the U.S.,
including one that overran barriers from Guatemala into southern Mexico.
The
deployment also came just days before the midterm elections, prompting
Democrats to claim it was a political stunt.
Defense
and CBP officials at the time said they were concerned about the violent nature of the caravans, and that
the migrants could take buses and arrive at the southern U.S. border within
days — a factor that contributed to their decision to deploy active duty forces
versus National Guard troops, which would have taken longer to mobilize, and
with fewer resources.
The
official announcement on of additional troops to the border on Sunday came
after Shanahan said on Tuesday “several thousand” more troops would be needed
to execute the recently-approved surveillance and concertina-wire laying
missions at the border.
Shanahan’s
remark, which came at his first press conference as acting defense secretary,
irked House Democrats, who had convened a hearing with defense officials that
same day to grill them on a troop deployment they have called a political
stunt.
House
Armed Services Committee Chairman Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA) blasted the Pentagon
in a statement after the hearing:
The
number one thing that the House Armed Services Committee wants from the Defense
Department this Congress is transparency. We did not get full transparency
during this week’s hearing about DOD support to the southern border.
At
the hearing, defense officials defended the troop deployments to the border, arguing that the
Pentagon decided to deploy active duty troops versus National Guard forces, not
the White House.
Then-Defense
Secretary Jim Mattis on November 14 said the last four administrations have
also ordered active duty and National Guard forces to the border, but Democrats
have characterized the deployment of active duty forces to the border as
unusual.
He
said President Bill Clinton ordered National Guard and active duty forces to
the border from 1994 to 1995, to assist law enforcement. They manned observation
posts, moved cargo and vehicles to support law enforcement, and did cargo and
vehicle inspections and aircraft surveillance for narcotics.
He
said President George W. Bush ordered an operation called Operation Jumpstart
from 2006 to 2008, which involved about 6,000 National Guardsmen at the border.
And
he said President Barack Obama ordered Operation Phalanx from 2010 to 2017,
which involved around 1,200 National Guardsmen. “That was the longest period,
by the way, of U.S. military support for the border. It was during the previous
administration under President Obama,” Mattis said.
Trump
first ordered the National Guard to begin training at the border in April. The active duty deployment
came in November.
“This
was due to an unprecedented situation with multiple, large-scale caravans en
route to the Southwest border. You’ve seen this on the — on the news. One of
the caravans overran the border checkpoint between Guatemala and the Mexican
border and clashed with Mexican police,” Mattis said.
Source: Breitbart:
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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