Daily Mail

SO HOW DID THEY GET IN?

Outrage over claims Trump refused to let troops defend the Capitol

- From Daniel Bates in New York

DeMOCRATs last night t demanded answers as to how rioters t- were able to storm the Us s Capitol so easily – amid claims ms that Donald Trump refused to o send in the National Guard.

Videos shared on social media showed ed police apparently opening fences for or the mob and taking selfies with them, m prompting suspicions that some of them sympathise­d with the invasion.

Observers questioned whether other protesters would have been treated so leniently – pointing out the contrast with last summer’s reaction to Black Lives Matter gatherings in Washington DC.

Amid the chaos, Mr Trump initially ‘rebuffed and resisted’ a request to mobilise the National Guard, the New York Times reported.

This meant Vice President Mike Pence and other White House officials had to step into the breach to raise troops.

The scenes of carnage sparked outrage in Washington over the fact that the Capitol Police force, which has 1,879 officers and a budget of £380million, was unable to carry

‘Strategic errors from beginning’

out its most basic function. It seemingly had no excuse for being so unprepared, as Trump supporters had telegraphe­d their intentions on social media and online forums, with posts on website Reddit stating: ‘storm the Capitol’.

Another post online said they would ‘break into Congress and drag these politician­s out onto the streets’.

Representa­tive Tim Ryan, the House appropriat­or, said that there were ‘strategic mistakes from the beginning’ by law enforcemen­t. He said: ‘I think it’s pretty clear that there’s going to be a number of people who are going to be without employment very, very soon because this is an embarrassm­ent – both on behalf of the mob and the President, and the insurrecti­on and the attempted coup, but also the lack of profession­al planning and dealing with what we knew was going to occur’.

And Representa­tive Maxine Waters tweeted: ‘I had an hour-long conversati­on with the Chief of Police four days ago. He assured me the terrorists would not be allowed on the plaza and Capitol secured. What the hell?’ Videos shared online showed police completely outnumbere­d by rioters who streamed past them.

One Capitol Police officer – his badge clearly visible – posed for a selfie with a rioter who smiled broadly as he took the image. Another held a woman’s hand to steady her as she walked down the Capitol steps.

Mr Ryan said: ‘I have no idea why that would be permissibl­e. That’s unacceptab­le… We’ll be looking at all of that’. Meanwhile, Kim Dine, who was chief of the Capitol Police from 2012 to 2016, said: ‘It’s like watching a real-life horror movie.

‘I mean, we train and plan and budget every day, basically, to have this not happen. How it happened, I can’t figure that out’.

security experts said that the police had completely underestim­ated the size of the crowd and their intentions. Many of the officers who were guarding the Capitol were not even dressed in riot gear and were wearing street clothes.

The treatment was a stark contrast to the thousands of officers deployed to Washington last June for a protest over the death of George Floyd.

A photograph from the Lincoln Memorial shows armed law enforcemen­t agents standing 6ft apart for what was an overwhelmi­ngly peaceful protest. The New York Times reported that Mr Trump’s refusal to send in the National Guard sparked outrage among even his closest allies.

He was reportedly so angry at Mr Pence for refusing to stop the certificat­ion of the election results that he would not act. The eventual authorisat­ion of the troops was said to have been undertaken by Mr Pence and Pat Cipollone, the White House counsel.

The Army activated 1,100 troops of the DC National Guard while Virginia’s governor dispatched members of the Virginia Guard along with 200 Virginia state Troopers. Later into the evening Capitol Police and federal law

enforcemen­t agencies mounted a massive show of force to secure the Capitol building. Washington mayor Muriel Bowser declared a 6pm curfew and a state of emergency in the city for the next 15 days until the inaugurati­on.

Officers arrested 68 people, including seven for illegal weapon possession and 61 for curfew violations and unlawful entry.

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