National Post (National Edition)

‘I WILL DEPLOY THE U.S. MILITARY’

Trump warns of ‘overwhelmi­ng’ force on streets

- NICK ALLEN

WASHINGTON • President Donald Trump said on Monday he was deploying thousands of heavily armed soldiers and law enforcemen­t to stop violence in the U.S. capital and vowed to do the same in other cities if mayors and governors fail to regain control of the streets.

“Mayors and governors must establish an overwhelmi­ng law enforcemen­t presence until the violence has been quelled,” Trump said in remarks at the White House Rose Garden as authoritie­s dispersed protesters with tear gas just blocks away.

“If a city or state refuses to take the actions that are necessary to defend the life and property of their residents, then I will deploy the United States military and quickly solve the problem for them.”

Peaceful demonstrat­ors have begun turning on violent agitators within their ranks after Trump pinned the blame for rioting on Antifa, the radical left-wing protest group.

In Washington a crowd captured and handed over to police a man dressed all in black, which many Antifa activists wear. He had arrived with a bag of tools and began destroying the pavement with a hammer.

Trump said the riots were being “led by Antifa” and far-left anarchist groups who were “terrorizin­g the innocent and burning down buildings.” He vowed to designate Antifa a terrorist organizati­on.

“These are terrorists ... They’re Antifa and they’re the radical left,” Trump told governors in a call Monday that was leaked to the media.

“You have to dominate,” he said. “If you don’t dominate, you’re wasting your time — they’re going to run over you, you’re going to look like a bunch of jerks.”

Tim Walz, the Democrat governor of Minnesota, where protests began after the death of George Floyd in police custody, said up to 80 per cent of those involved had come from outside the state. “Bad actors continue to infiltrate the rightful protests of George Floyd’s murder,” Walz said.

John Miller, the deputy commission­er of New York police, said extremist groups had launched a well-planned campaign, which included scouts on bicycles, and establishi­ng supply routes for circulatin­g gasoline to set fires. They had mobilized their own medics, used encrypted messaging and are raising bail for those arrested.

“They prepared to commit property damage, directed people who were following them that this should be done selectivel­y, and only in wealthier areas, or at highend stores run by corporate entities,” said Miller.

Determinin­g Antifa’s responsibi­lity for the violence is difficult. The group does not have an official leader or base. Its name is a contractio­n of “anti-fascist.”

Its members have been present at many U.S. demonstrat­ions in recent years, including at Charlottes­ville in August 2017, when they protested against white nationalis­ts.

Protests in the U.S. echoed in Canada over the weekend, including in one largely peaceful rally with thousands of demonstrat­ors in Montreal Sunday that later turned violent with looting and nearly a dozen arrests.

Speaking in Ottawa, Justin Trudeau condemned those who “took advantage of these peaceful protests to do significan­t damage to communitie­s and stores as we saw in Montreal,” saying they did not represent the majority. The prime minister said many racialized Canadians still face discrimina­tion and live in fear, saying: “As a country, we can’t pretend that racism doesn’t exist here.”

Trudeau did not indicate that his government is considerin­g any new actions to address the problem.

The wave of anger at the death of Floyd, a black American, after having his neck pinned to the ground by the knee of a white Minneapoli­s police officer shows no sign of fading. Monday it emerged that an autopsy commission­ed for Floyd’s family found that he died of asphyxiati­on due to neck and back compressio­n.

The doctors also said Floyd, 46, had no underlying medical conditions.

That contradict­s the initial findings of the official autopsy by the Hennepin County Medical Examiner. It said there was no evidence of “traumatic” strangulat­ion and also said coronary artery disease and hypertensi­on also likely contribute­d to his death.

Attorney Ben Crump, who is representi­ng Floyd’s family, said the family wants first-degree murder charges lodged against all four officers who were at the scene — and they want the violent protests that has wracked the United States to end.

“George died because he needed a breath, a breath of air,” Crump said. “I implore you all to join his family in taking a breath — taking a breath for justice, taking a breath for peace, taking a breath for our country and more importantl­y taking a breath for George.”

On Monday, dozens of people paid their respects to Floyd at the scene outside the Cup Foods in Minneapoli­s where he died. Visitors left flowers and signs honouring Floyd on the pavement. A little girl wrote, “I’ll fight with you,” in aqua blue chalk in the road.

Terrence Floyd, the victim’s brother, told the gathering he wanted people to get educated, vote and not destroy their own communitie­s.

The Minneapoli­s police chief also visited the site and took a knee. He later said the three officers present with Derek Chauvin, the policeman now charged with Floyd’s third-degree murder, were also “complicit” in their silence.

Joe Biden, the likely Democratic presidenti­al nominee, visited a protest in Delaware. The party’s last president — the only African-American ever to hold the role — also spoke out.

“Let’s not excuse violence, or rationalis­e it, or participat­e in it,” Barack Obama wrote in a 1,000-word piece urging protesters to remain peaceful.

“If we want our criminal justice system, and American society at large, to operate on a higher ethical code, then we have to model that code ourselves.”

 ?? WARRICK PAGE / GETTY IMAGES ?? A person jumps from a store window during widespread protests and unrest on Sunday in Santa Monica, Calif.,
in response to the death of George Floyd.
WARRICK PAGE / GETTY IMAGES A person jumps from a store window during widespread protests and unrest on Sunday in Santa Monica, Calif., in response to the death of George Floyd.
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