Los Angeles Times

Harsh border rhetoric revisited

As border crossings rise, he rails against ‘really bad’ people entering the country.

- By Noah Bierman, Joseph Tanfani and David S. Cloud noah.bierman@latimes.com joseph.tanfani@latimes.com david.cloud@latimes.com Times staff writers Brian Bennett in Washington and Kate Linthicum and Cecilia Sanchez in Mexico City contribute­d to this repor

President Trump cites a recent rise in illegal crossings as he revives his vitriol against immigrants.

WASHINGTON — President Trump reached back to some of his most visceral campaign rhetoric against illegal immigratio­n Thursday as his administra­tion released new figures showing a surge in March in the number of people caught crossing the border unlawfully.

The new numbers come as Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen tries to make the case that National Guard troops along the southwest border are needed to contain a crisis, even as longer-term figures show that the number of illegal border crossings remains at the lowest levels since the early 1970s.

The plan to use National Guard units was arranged hastily after Trump — who has been frustrated with his inability to get Congress or Mexico to pay for a border wall — said publicly this week that he wanted to use the military to patrol the border until the wall is built.

Immigrant advocates and many Democrats have argued that the emergency is being manufactur­ed to stoke Trump’s political base and demonize immigrants.

Trump told reporters Thursday on Air Force One that he would send 2,000 to 4,000 troops — a figure higher than the 1,200 deployed by President Obama in 2010 and lower than the 6,000 deployed by President George W. Bush in 2006.

Trump doesn’t fully control the numbers, however: Guard units are controlled by governors, and none of the four border-state governors has formally committed to specific deployment­s, in part because the federal government has not yet committed to pay the cost.

At the Pentagon, officials briefing reporters struggled to say what the Guard troops would do or whether they would be armed.

“We’re going to coordinate” with Homeland Security officials and the governors, said Dana White, the Pentagon’s chief spokespers­on. “They will provide us with the requiremen­ts, and then, from that, we’ll determine how many, and what’s the mission, and how many we’ll deploy.”

“Once we know the requiremen­ts, this department will move very quickly,” added Marine Lt. Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr., director of the military’s Joint Staff. “We haven’t been given a timeline.”

Asked whether the troops would carry weapons, McKenzie said, “Our advice is always that soldiers are able to defend themselves, and they have the right of self-defense. However, we’re going to be guided by the dialogue that’s going on now between DHS and the governors, and then we’ll work that here internally.”

Nielsen told Mexican authoritie­s that the National Guard troops would not be armed or participat­e in immigratio­n or customs duties, according to a Mexican Foreign Ministry statement released late Wednesday.

Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto planned to deliver a televised speech to an outraged nation Thursday night calling for national unity in the face of “offensive and unfounded statements concerning Mexicans.”

“We will not allow negative rhetoric to define our actions,” he said in remarks released ahead of time. “We will only act in the best interest of Mexicans.”

Peña Nieto was not the only chief executive expressing frustratio­n. Trump went on an extended tangent about immigratio­n at a roundtable in West Virginia that was meant to showcase the Republican tax cut. He railed against illegal border crossers, complained again that California’s “sanctuary city” laws were protecting a lot of “really bad” people, said that Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf should have been prosecuted for giving public warnings before immigratio­n raids this year, and claimed inaccurate­ly that other countries were stocking the visa lottery system with undesirabl­e immigrants.

Trump also highlighte­d a well-documented problem — migrant women raped while traveling north toward the U.S. border — and seemed to suggest that it proved the accusation he made at the start of his presidenti­al campaign that Mexico was sending rapists across the border into the U.S.

“Women are raped at levels that nobody’s ever seen before,” Trump said Thursday.

He added that MS-13 gang members on New York’s Long Island were using knives instead of guns to terrorize people “because it’s much more painful, where they cut people up … young girls walking home and their parents never see them again. They’re cut up.”

“This is the kind of stuff and crap that we’re allowing in our country,” he said.

One clue about what may have sparked Trump’s recent rhetorical flurry over immigratio­n came as the Border Patrol announced the latest figures on arrests of people illegally crossing the border. Officials arrested 37,393 people in March, a 37% increase from February and more than double the number from March of last year, according to statistics released Thursday by the Department of Homeland Security.

The numbers remain quite low by historical standards, and border crossings typically rise in the spring. But the increase marked a reversal of the sharp downward trend in illegal crossings that took hold after Trump’s election. The fact that illegal crossings fell last year had been a proud boast for the administra­tion. Overall, illegal border crossings for the last several have been at the lowest levels since the early 1970s.

Nonetheles­s, administra­tion officials said the sharp increase from February was cause for concern.

“The crisis at our southwest border is real,” said Nielsen, repeating the pitch to change immigratio­n laws, fund a border wall and “gain operationa­l control of the border.”

In recent years, most immigrants illegally crossing the border with Mexico were from violence-wracked Central American countries. They include many families and children who often surrender themselves at the border and are, by law, released from detention while they pursue asylum claims.

In his West Virginia remarks, Trump repeated his claim that almost none of the people released from detention showed up for their court hearings. In fact, a large majority of them appear on schedule, according to government figures.

Last month, border agents detained 8,882 asylum seekers in families and 4,171 unaccompan­ied minors — far more than in March 2017, when families and children together accounted for 2,167 apprehensi­ons. Overall, the increase from the previous month was the greatest since 2011.

Because so many asylum seekers surrender voluntaril­y, it’s not clear how deploying National Guard troops will change the situation.

At the Pentagon, White emphasized that the Guard would be in a support role, assisting the Customs and Border Patrol. Planners are looking at sending units that can help with aviation, engineerin­g, surveillan­ce, communicat­ions, vehicle maintenanc­e and logistics support, she added.

Officials provided no estimate for when troops will begin flowing to the border.

Although the Guard units will be mobilized by border state authoritie­s, it appears the cost will be paid out of the federal budget. But White said where the money will come from had not been decided.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? A BORDER PATROL agent surveys the border from Jacumba Hot Springs, Calif., last month, when crossings increased dramatical­ly compared with March 2017.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times A BORDER PATROL agent surveys the border from Jacumba Hot Springs, Calif., last month, when crossings increased dramatical­ly compared with March 2017.

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