The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Trump: 2,000-4,000 troops needed for border security

- By Anita Snow and Catherine Lucey

PHOENIX » President Donald Trump said Thursday that he wants to send between 2,000 and 4,000 National Guard members to the U.S.-Mexico border to help federal officials fight illegal immigratio­n and drug traffickin­g, but it wasn’t clear who would be called up or if they would even be allowed to carry guns.

Trump’s comments to reporters on Air Force One were his first estimate on guard levels he believes are needed for border protection. It is lower than the 6,400 National Guard members that former President George Bush sent to the border between 2006 and 2008.

Trump said his administra­tion is looking into the cost of sending the troops to the border and added “we’ll probably keep them or a large portion of them until the wall is built.”

Earlier Thursday, Ronald Vitiello, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s acting deputy commission­er, cautioned against a rushed deployment.

“We are going to do it as quickly as we can do it safely,” Vitiello told Fox News Channel.

He said that guard members would be placed in jobs that do not require law enforcemen­t work, an apparent reference to undertakin­g patrols and making arrests.

The Republican governors of Arizona, New Mexico and Texas have backed the deployment but it was unclear Thursday how Democratic California Gov. Jerry Brown would respond to Trump’s call.

Brown’s office repeatedly referred requests for comment to the California National Guard, which said the state first must be informed where money for the deployment would come from, how long it would last and clearly define the operation’s objectives.

In Washington, Marine Lt. Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie told reporters at the Pentagon that it has not yet been determined how many, if any, of the troops in the border security operation

will be armed.

Trump ordered the deployment because “we are at a crisis point” with illegal immigratio­n, Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen of the Department of Homeland Security said.

“We’d like to stop it before the numbers get even bigger,” she said.

Nielsen said guard members would provide support to border officials, “help look at the technology, the surveillan­ce, in some cases we’ll ask for some fleet mechanics” and free up agents trained in law enforcemen­t for other duties.

Arrests along the U.S. border with Mexico jumped to 50,308 in March, a 37 percent increase from February, and more than triple the same period last year. Border arrests rose 10 of the last 11 months after falling in April 2017 to the lowest since the Department of Homeland Security was created in 2003.

Republican Mayor Dee Margo of El Paso, Texas, told NPR’s Morning Edition Thursday he was not convinced extra forces are needed for his border city, which he called “the safest” in the United States.

“We already have a fence that was establishe­d during the Bush administra­tion

that runs through the city,” he said.

Instead of more troops, Margo said “what I would love to see is a better understand­ing of what truly goes on the border.”

In Mexico, the country’s politician­s condemned Trump’s deployment decision and Mexico’s Senate passed a resolution Wednesday calling for the suspension of cooperatio­n on illegal immigratio­n and drug traffickin­g in retaliatio­n.

In 1997, camouflage­clad 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 border.

That shooting sparked anger in the region and ended the President Bill Clinton-era military presence along the internatio­nal line.

After Sept. 11, Bush sent unarmed National Guard units to the border to support federal agents.

The troops that Bush sent improved lighting at border crossings, extended existing fencing along the internatio­nal boundary, built roads, monitored remote cameras, operated communicat­ions equipment

and sat in mobile observatio­n towers watching for people sneaking into the U.S.

Their presence was especially felt in Palomas, Mexico, a smuggling hub south of the village of Columbus, New Mexico, where the increased presence and equipment was credited with easing illegal northbound immigrant travel.

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

Those troops worked on intelligen­ce, surveillan­ce and reconnaiss­ance support, analysis and training, and support efforts to block drug traffickin­g.

They temporaril­y supplement­ed Border Patrol agents until Homeland Security could recruit and train additional officers and agents to work on the border. While some were armed for their own selfdefens­e, they were not authorized to make arrests.

During the last two border deployment­s, the guard’s supporting role was criticized by some people who thought they should be more involved in enforcemen­t.

There are now more than 20,000 Border Patrol agents along the U.S.-Mexico boundary and Trump wants to add 5,000 more to the force’s currently funded level of about 21,000.

Guard members sent to the border to help don’t always come from border states. Some of the first sent under Bush’s twoyear deployment were from Utah.

Democratic Gov. Kate Brown of Oregon said she would not send troops if asked because she is “deeply troubled by Trump’s plan to militarize our border.” And Republican Gov. Phil Scott said he “would not be eager” to send troops because so many other states are closer to the border with Mexico.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a Republican, said he would be willing to send National Guard members to the border “who are experience­d and who have done that before.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Staff Sgt. Kevin Black, 36, of Kenmore, N.Y., of the New York National Guard, keeps an eye on a group of suspected illegal immigrants near the Arizona-Mexico border in Sasabe, Ariz. National guard contingent­s in U.S. states that border Mexico say they...
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Staff Sgt. Kevin Black, 36, of Kenmore, N.Y., of the New York National Guard, keeps an eye on a group of suspected illegal immigrants near the Arizona-Mexico border in Sasabe, Ariz. National guard contingent­s in U.S. states that border Mexico say they...
 ?? BRIAN SKOLOFF — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? This file photo made with a drone shows the U.S. Mexico border fence as it cuts through Nogales. National guard contingent­s in U.S. states that border Mexico say they are waiting for guidance from Washington to determine what they will do following...
BRIAN SKOLOFF — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE This file photo made with a drone shows the U.S. Mexico border fence as it cuts through Nogales. National guard contingent­s in U.S. states that border Mexico say they are waiting for guidance from Washington to determine what they will do following...

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