Times Colonist

Troops at Mexico border could reach 15,000: Trump

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WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump said Wednesday that the number of military troops deployed to the U.S.-Mexican border could go as high as 15,000 as he draws a hard line on immigratio­n in the lead-up to the midterm elections.

With his eyes squarely on next Tuesday’s contests, Trump has rushed a series of immigratio­n declaratio­ns, promises and actions as he tries to mobilize supporters to retain Republican control of Congress. His own Republican campaign in 2016 concentrat­ed on border fears, and that’s his focus in the final week of the midterm fight.

“As far as the caravan is concerned, our military is out,” Trump said.

“We have about 5,800. We’ll go up to anywhere between 10,000 and 15,000 military personnel on top of Border Patrol, ICE and everybody else at the border.”

Trump rejected the idea he was “fearmonger­ing” or using the issue for political purposes, but his escalating rhetoric in the waning days of the campaign season call into question the denial.

Trump has railed against illegal immigratio­n, including several caravans of migrants from Central America slowly moving toward the U.S. border. The caravan is still nearly 1,600 kilometres from the border.

He has also promised to end socalled catch-and-release policies by erecting tent cities to hold those crossing illegally. And this week he is asserting he could act by executive order to unilateral­ly end birthright citizenshi­p for the children of non-U.S. citizens.

Trump’s comments on Wednesday appeared to catch the Pentagon off guard.

The Pentagon on Monday directed 5,239 active-duty troops to deploy to the border to assist Customs and Border Protection agents in Texas, Arizona and California. That is in addition to 2,092 National Guard troops who have been along the border for several months on a separate, but related, mission.

On Tuesday, Air Force Gen. Terrence O’Shaughness­y, commander of U.S. Northern Command, which is supervisin­g the new troop operation, disputed a news report that the active-duty total could reach 14,000.

“I honestly don’t even know where that came from.,” he said. “That is not in line with what we’ve been planning.”

O’Shaughness­y said the 5,239 number will increase, but he would not say by how much or when. Other officials have said that 2,000 to 3,000 additional activeduty troops are on standby for possible deployment to the border.

A deployment of 15,000 would bring the military commitment on the border to roughly the same level as in war-torn Afghanista­n.

Trump on Wednesday did not back down from his controvers­ial proposal to upend the very concept of American citizenshi­p. In a morning tweet, he said the right to citizenshi­p for babies born to noncitizen­s on American soil “will be ended one way or the other.”

He also claimed that what he terms “so-called Birthright Citizenshi­p” is “not covered by the 14th Amendment.”

However, the text of the amendment’s opening Citizenshi­p Cause is this: “All persons born or naturalize­d in the United States and subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” The citizenshi­p proposal would inevitably spark a long-shot legal battle over whether the president can alter the long-accepted understand­ing that the 14th Amendment grants citizenshi­p to any child born on U.S. soil, regardless of his parents’ immigratio­n status.

Speaker of the House Paul Ryan asserted Tuesday that “obviously” Trump could not upend that policy by executive order, drawing a tweeted rebuke from Trump. He said Wednesday that Ryan “should be focusing on holding the Majority rather than giving his opinions on Birthright Citizenshi­p, something he knows nothing about!”

The president had been expected to announce new actions at the border on Tuesday, but that was scrapped so he could travel instead to Pittsburgh, where 11 people were massacred in a synagogue during Sabbath services.

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