The Asian Age

US moves military to stop migrants

Step part of Trump’s effort to slow illegal crossings in run- up to Nov. polls

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Washington, Oct 29: Defence secretary Jim Mattis approved a request to send troops and military assistance to the USMexico border — part of President Donald Trump’s effort to slow illegal crossings in the run- up to key elections.

A Pentagon statement said the support would come in the form of logistical and engineerin­g assistance, including the constructi­on of “temporary barriers, barricades and fencing.”

The Pentagon did not provide details on how many troops would be sent, but US officials on Thursday told AFP that about 800 service members would be deployed to the frontier.

“After receiving a request for assistance from the Secretary of Homeland Security, the Secretary of Defense has approved providing mission- enhancing capabiliti­es to Department of Homeland Security, US Customs and Border Protection along the Southwest Border,” the Pentagon statement read.

The troops would augment the 2,100 or so National Guardsmen who were deployed in April to support border operations, and could come from multiple military bases around the US.

Other help would include aviation support to ferry border agents around and medical to teams to “triage, treat and prepare for commercial transport of patients,” the statement read.

The military beef- up of the border comes as thousands of Central American migrants are crossing Mexico toward the United States in a slow- moving caravan.

The issue has become a rallying cry for Trump, who has taken a hard line on illegal immigratio­n and has repeatedly kept the story in the headlines in the run up to America’s midterm congressio­nal elections that could see the Democrats regain some degree of power.

 ?? — AFP ?? Aerial view of Honduran migrants heading in a caravan to the US as they leave Arriaga on their way to San Pedro Tapanatepe­c, in southern Mexico on Saturday.
— AFP Aerial view of Honduran migrants heading in a caravan to the US as they leave Arriaga on their way to San Pedro Tapanatepe­c, in southern Mexico on Saturday.

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