Waikato Times

Pentagon sends troops home

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The nation’s capital is bracing for the largest protest yet since the death of George Floyd, expanding a massive fenced perimeter around the White House, even as the Pentagon sent home hundreds of active duty troops positioned outside the city. Over 10 days of protests, the security perimeter around the White House has increased, and yesterday extended to the far outskirts of a park complex known as the Ellipse near the National Mall with extensive fencing and barricades. That was in anticipati­on of a major event, according to the local police department. ‘‘We have a lot of public, open-source informatio­n to suggest that the event on this upcoming Saturday may be one of the largest that we’ve had in the city,’’ Peter Newsham, chief of police of the Metropolit­an Police Department of the District of Columbia, said. It was not immediatel­y clear which groups were organising the march, but #1MillionDC­Saturday was trending on Twitter in a call for 1 million people to march on the capital to protest police brutality against black Americans and the death of Floyd, a black man who died in Minneapoli­s police custody. The United States Park Police said that it was using ‘‘intelligen­ce to monitor upcoming events,’’ but would not preview its planning as doing so could ‘‘pose a hazard to the public and police.’’ Despite the anticipate­d event, about 700 members of an infantry battalion from Fort Bragg, N.C., were being sent home. The deployment of the 82nd Airborne Division’s Task Force 504, which was based just outside of Washington and did not enter the district at any time during the protests, had raised concerns that President Donald Trump would invoke the Insurrecti­on Act to allow those federal troops to police protesters who have been gathering nightly in downtown streets.

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