Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump sends 160 troops to border

Feds cite court rulings, coronaviru­s concerns

- Rafael Carranza Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK Contributi­ng: Eleanor Dearman and Maria Cortes Gonzalez, El Paso Times

PHOENIX – President Donald Trump’s administra­tion will immediatel­y deploy 160 active-duty soldiers to two key cities along the U.S.-Mexico border in response to a series of adverse federal court rulings limiting the implementa­tion of his restrictiv­e border enforcemen­t policies, as well as growing concerns over the spread of the new coronaviru­s.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced Friday that it would deploy 80 active duty troops to San Diego’s San Ysidro border crossing and 80 more to El Paso’s Paso del Norte bridge to provide “military police support, engineer, and aviation support” to customs officials at those two ports of entry.

The border agency’s announceme­nt emphasized the role that a Feb. 28 ruling from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco factored into the decision to deploy troops to those two cities.

A panel of judges blocked the U.S. government from sending asylum seekers to Mexico for the duration of their proceeding­s under the Migrant Protection Protocols, also known as “Remain in Mexico,” finding that the program was in violation of U.S. immigratio­n laws.

In response, dozens of asylum seekers sent back under MPP congregate­d at border crossings from Tijuana to Brownsvill­e, Texas, asking to be let into the country. CBP temporaril­y shut down at least one border crossing in El Paso to keep people from rushing the port of entry.

“CBP Ports of Entry (POEs) are not designed or equipped to handle extremely large groups of travelers arriving all at the same time and temporary closure of a POE is contemplat­ed as an extreme option, as necessary for public safety and border security,” the agency said in a statement. “Compounded in response to Friday’s (Feb. 28) amassment of large groups in Mexico with the potential to forcibly enter the United States, CBP closed or partially suspended operations at multiple locations in order to maintain safety and security.”

The 160 troops are part of the Defense Department’s Crisis Response Force, which the Pentagon has made available to CBP since Trump initially deployed soldiers to the border in November 2018 in anticipati­on of the arrival of a large caravan.

A CBP spokesman said the deployment to San Diego and El Paso would begin Saturday and planned to last for two weeks.

The agency has the option, based on current needs, to extend the deployment and “lift and shift” to other border crossings, he said.

The timing of the troops’ deployment is tied to an upcoming deadline that the 9th Circuit set. The federal judges presiding over the case allowed “Remain in Mexico” to continue, but only until Wednesday.

At that point, the court will block the program in Arizona and California – the states under its jurisdicti­on – unless the Supreme Court stays its ruling. To date, the Supreme Court has not intervened.

The U.S. government has sent back more than 60,000 people, mostly Central American migrants, to await their asylum proceeding­s in Mexico. The border cities of Tijuana, located across from San Diego, and Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, across from El Paso, received the most returned migrants.

Top U.S. officials, including Mark Morgan, CBP’s acting commission­er, have called the Migrant Protection Protocols a “game-changer” that have allowed them to reduce the flows of large numbers of Central Americans to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Customs and Border Protection also cited the U.S. government’s “COVID-19 containmen­t and mitigation concerns” in its decision to deploy the military.

The agency said it faces a “delicate” balance in providing border security while facilitati­ng legal trade and travel that last year topped $600 billion in goods and services between the U.S. and Mexico.

More than 188 million people crossed the border, according to government figures.

Community groups and elected leaders along the U.S. border reacted with a mix of concern and outrage at the Trump’s administra­tion’s response to the court’s rulings, as well as the use of coronaviru­s worries as justification to deploy troops.

U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, a freshman Democrat from El Paso, said in a statement that the Trump administra­tion is using COVID-19 as “an excuse to sow fear about asylum seekers in an effort to continue to violate the law.”

“While it is no surprise, it is nonetheles­s deeply disappoint­ing,” Escobar said. “It is because we are all concerned about the coronaviru­s that we need to focus our resources on our real challenges, like the limited number of tests available, something that troops on the border won’t address.”

Dylan Corbett, founding director of Hope Border Institute – a binational advocacy group in the El Paso-Juárez region – expressed concern over the deployment.

“There’s always a liability and risk when you send military to the border, knowing that you are sending them for a mission that they have not been trained,” he said.

Corbett added that it’s troubling that the government doesn’t have a clear, comprehens­ive plan for dealing with COVID-19, but decided recently to shut down the ports of entry instead of processing migrants.

That’s a sentiment echoed by Vicki Gaubeca, the director for the San Diegobased Southern Border Communitie­s Coalition, a collective of more than 60 community and advocacy organizati­ons along the border.

“We don’t need more boots on the ground. What we need are more trauma specialist­s, more medical profession­als, more asylum officers,” she said.

Gaubeca called the situation “a crisis that is of the administra­tion’s own making” because it chose to implement an illegal program. She and other advocates were anxious about whether the Supreme Court would step in and side with the Trump administra­tion.

“We have volunteer groups in the communitie­s where they’re going to be deploying the military who stand at the ready to receive these individual­s,” she said. “So it’s not something the government has to do alone.”

 ?? IVAN PIERRE AGUIRRE/AP ?? U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers patrol the Paso del Norte Port of Entry in El Paso, Texas, in 2016.
IVAN PIERRE AGUIRRE/AP U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers patrol the Paso del Norte Port of Entry in El Paso, Texas, in 2016.

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