Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

3 states heed Texas’ call for troops

Virginia, W. Virginia, S. Carolina will add to border forces

- SARAH RANKIN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by of The Associated Press reporters John Raby, Jeffrey Collins, James Pollard and Rebecca Santana.

RICHMOND, Va. — The governors of Virginia, West Virginia and South Carolina on Wednesday joined a growing list of Republican leaders sending their state National Guard soldiers or other state law enforcemen­t officers to the U.S. border with Mexico.

Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who is considered a possible presidenti­al aspirant, announced an executive order directing the deployment of 100 Virginia National Guard soldiers and 21 support personnel. South Carolina’s Henry McMaster and West Virginia’s Jim Justice announced their deployment­s shortly thereafter, also in response to a request from Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.

The announceme­nts bring to at least eight the number of Republican-led states deploying soldiers or offering other assistance in the weeks since Abbott appealed for help.

“The ongoing border crisis facing our nation has turned every state into a border state,” Youngkin said in a statement. “As leadership solutions at the federal level fall short, states are answering the call to secure our southern border, reduce the flow of fentanyl, combat human traffickin­g and address the humanitari­an crisis.”

President Joe Biden announced in early May plans to send 1,500 active-duty troops to the border, in addition to the 2,500 National Guard members already there. Those military personnel were tasked with data entry, warehouse support and other administra­tive duties so that U.S. Customs and Border Protection can focus on fieldwork, the White House said.

But the Virginia deployment and others from Republican-led states have specifical­ly been in support of Texas’ Operation Lone Star, which is separate from the active duty and National Guard troops working with Customs and Border Protection.

Abbott launched Lone Star in 2021, saying that the Biden administra­tion was essentiall­y welcoming illegal immigratio­n. Critics have questioned the effectiven­ess of the multi-billion dollar operation. Some arrests, including for low-level amounts of marijuana during traffic stops, appeared to have little to do with border security, and some Texas National Guard troops initially complained of low morale, late paychecks and having little to do.

Abbott’s request this month came through the Emergency Management Assistance Compact, which facilitate­s state-level mutual aid nationwide. Youngkin and McMaster also joined other governors in Austin last week to discuss border policies.

McMaster’s news release said South Carolina’s mission is “in the planning phase,” with a goal of deployment by July 1. Justice said he had approved the deployment of as many as 50 West Virginia National Guard soldiers and airmen for 30 days.

Youngkin’s order said the Virginia troops will answer to a military commander during a 30-day deployment, not any local civilian authoritie­s. The operating cost of the mission is $3.1 million, spokeswoma­n Macaulay Porter said in an email.

Youngkin, a former private equity executive who is barred under Virginia law from seeking a second consecutiv­e term, is frequently mentioned as a possible 2024 presidenti­al contender. He said earlier this month that he had no plans to launch such a bid this year.

Presidenti­al candidate and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is among the other governors who have announced plans to deploy Guard troops and other officers since Abbott’s request was made. Mississipp­i, Iowa, Tennessee, and Nebraska have also volunteere­d aid, and other GOP-led states have made similar deployment­s in recent years, part of the party’s criticism of Biden’s performanc­e on the border.

The Department of Homeland Security did not immediatel­y respond Wednesday to a request for comment on the states’ deployment­s.

In Virginia, while some Republican­s praised Youngkin’s decision, the state’s Democrats characteri­zed the move as absurd, disingenuo­us or politicall­y motivated.

“Youngkin for President has officially jumped the shark — our VA National Guard troops shouldn’t be used to further presidenti­al ambitions much less fight a MAGA culture war in Texas of all places — Never thought I would see my state so compromise­d,” tweeted state Sen. Scott Surovell.

 ?? (AP /Steve Helber) ?? Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin speaks prior to signing the budget at a ceremony at a grocery store last year in June in Richmond, Va.
(AP /Steve Helber) Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin speaks prior to signing the budget at a ceremony at a grocery store last year in June in Richmond, Va.

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