The Oklahoman

Migrants won’t see armed soldiers along US border

- BY JULIE WATSON

SAN DIEGO — As thousands of migrants in a caravan of Central American asylum-seekers converge on the doorstep of the United States, what they won’t find are armed American soldiers standing guard.

Instead they will see cranes installing towering panels of metal bars and troops wrapping concertina wire around barriers while military helicopter­s fly overhead, carrying border patrol agents to and from locations along the U.S.-Mexico border.

That’s because U.S. military troops are prohibited from carrying out law enforcemen­t duties.

What’s more, the bulk of the troops are in Texas — hundreds of miles away from the caravan that started arriving this week in Tijuana on Mexico’s border with California after walking and hitching rides for the past month.

Still, for many migrants the barriers and barbed wire were an imposing show of force.

Angel Ulloa stood on Tijuana’s beach where a wall of metal bars more than 20 feet high cut across the sand and plunged into the Pacific. He watched as crews on the U.S. side placed coils of barbed wire on top.

A border patrol agent wearing camouflage and armed with an assault rifle — part of a tactical unit deployed when there is a heightened threat — walked in the sand below where the men worked. A small border patrol boat hovered offshore.

“It’s too much security to confront humble people who just want to work,” said Ulloa, a 23-year-old electricia­n from Choloma, Honduras, who joined the caravan to try to make his first trip to the U.S.

Now, he and his two friends were rethinking their plans. They tried to apply for a job at a WalMart in Tijuana but were told they need a Mexican work permit. So they were considerin­g seeking asylum in Mexico but were unsure of giving up their dream of earning dollars.

“We’re still checking things out,” he said.

On Friday, people walking through one of the world’s busiest border crossings into Mexico passed by a pair of Marines on a 20-foot lift installing razor wire above a turnstile.

Nearby Army Sgt. Eric Ziegler stood guard with another soldier. Both were military police officers assigned to protecting the Marines as they work.

The 24-year-old soldier from Pittsburgh spent nine months in Afghanista­n. “”It’s very different over there, obviously. It’s a lot more dangerous,” Ziegler said.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Members of a U.S Army engineerin­g brigade place concertina wire around an encampment for troops, Department of Defense and U.S. Customs and Border Protection personnel, Nov. 4 near the U.S.-Mexico Internatio­nal bridge in Donna, Texas.
[AP PHOTO] Members of a U.S Army engineerin­g brigade place concertina wire around an encampment for troops, Department of Defense and U.S. Customs and Border Protection personnel, Nov. 4 near the U.S.-Mexico Internatio­nal bridge in Donna, Texas.

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