Texarkana Gazette

Border militariza­tion isn’t new

- By Russell Contreras

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M.— President Donald Trump’s promise to use the National Guard to secure the U.S.-Mexico border isn’t a new concept and is something the U.S. has done in the past for varying reasons.

Both Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama sent National Guard troops to the border when they were in the White House. And throughout the history of the borderland­s, the military or armed militias have been dispatched there to keep black slaves from fleeing, remove Native Americans from ancestral lands and suppress Mexican-American revolts stemming from anger over white mob violence.

Here’s a look at how the U.S. has used the military and armed militias along the border:

SLAVERY AND CHINESE EXCLUSION

After the U.S. seized Texas and American Southwest following the U.S-Mexico War, armed militias patrolled the border looking for runaway black slaves. The traditiona­l Undergroun­d Railroad to the north was too far for slaves to travel so thousands attempted the journey south to freedom. Soon, a guerra sorda, or cold war, developed between the nations.

According to historian James David Nichols, Texas slaveholde­rs took matters into their own hands and sent armed militias to the border and into Mexico to search for runaway slaves. Often Mexico refused to turn over slaves and the conflict sometimes resulted in violent skirmishes.

In the late 1800s and early 1900s, mounted watchmen who patrolled from El Paso, Texas, to California were dispatched largely to look out for Chinese immigrants trying to illegally enter the U.S.

Kelly Lytle Hernandez, a University of California, Los Angeles history professor and author of “Migra!: A History of the U.S. Border Patrol,” says initially there were no restrictio­ns on Mexican immigratio­n at the time because U.S. growers wanted a steady stream of agricultur­al workers.

REVOLUTION AND REVOLT

Tensions remained high between white settlers, Mexican-Americans and Native Americans in the newly acquired territory following the U.S-Mexico War.

Miguel Levario, a Texas Tech history professor and author of “Militarizi­ng the Border: When Mexicans Became the Enemy,” said the U.S. government erected military bases such as Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas, for the sole purpose of removing Native Americans from lands. “It had little to do with immigratio­n,” Levario said.

As the Mexican Revolution began in Mexico around 1910, white settlers feared Mexican-Americans might take up arms on behalf of Mexican Revolution­ary leader Pancho Villa.

When Villa soldiers in northern Mexico killed 19 white engineers and staff from an American mining company, drunken U.S. soldiers sought revenge in El Paso and attacked Mexican-Americans in poor El Paso neighborho­ods, sparking a riot in 1916. El Paso police also are believed to have sought revenge and set fire to Mexican inmates in the El Paso jail, killing 27, Levario said. The inmates were doused with coal oil and gasoline as a crude disinfecta­nt, he said.

What happened at the jail helped push Villa to raid the small town of Columbus, N.M. The violent raid angered whites and President Woodrow Wilson, who ordered Gen. John J. Pershing to invade Mexico to arrest Villa. The U.S. Army never caught him.

National Guard units from around the country were called up and more than 100,000 troops were sent to the border.

IMMIGRATIO­N AND DRUGS

Congress created the U.S. Border Patrol in 1924 and the agency slowly grew in size as its mission changed. At first, the agents sought to keep out Asian immigrants and later worked to stall alcohol traffickin­g in the Prohibitio­n era. Slowly, it evolved into stalling unwanted migration from Mexico.

Occasional­ly, U.S. presidents have sent the military or the National Guard to the border region to help the Border Patrol stem a crisis amid controvers­y with border residents.

In 1997, camouflage-clad U.S. Marines ordered to patrol the border for drugs in West Texas shot and killed 18-year-old Esequiel Hernandez Jr. while he was herding his family’s goats near the tiny village of Redford, Texas, along the U.S.-Mexico border. Authoritie­s say Hernandez had no connection to the drug trade and was an honor student.

That shooting sparked anger along the border and ended the President Bill Clinton-era military presence along the border. After Sept. 11, President George W. Bush sent unarmed National Guard units to the border for support, Levario said.

In 2010, President Barack Obama deployed National Guard troops to the border over fear of increasing drug-traffickin­g violence.

 ?? AP Photo/Guillermo Arias ?? ■ In this July 26, 2008, file photo, a cross honoring Esequiel Hernandez Jr. sits on the place where he died in Redford, Texas. In 1997, camouflage-clad U.S. Marines ordered to patrol the border for drugs in West Texas shot and killed 18-year-old...
AP Photo/Guillermo Arias ■ In this July 26, 2008, file photo, a cross honoring Esequiel Hernandez Jr. sits on the place where he died in Redford, Texas. In 1997, camouflage-clad U.S. Marines ordered to patrol the border for drugs in West Texas shot and killed 18-year-old...
 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ In this March 25, 1942, file photo provided by the U.S. Army Signal Corps, American soldiers are about to cross the Internatio­nal Bridge into Mexico in El Paso, Texas, as American and Mexican troops are permitted by their respective War Department­s...
Associated Press ■ In this March 25, 1942, file photo provided by the U.S. Army Signal Corps, American soldiers are about to cross the Internatio­nal Bridge into Mexico in El Paso, Texas, as American and Mexican troops are permitted by their respective War Department­s...

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