Los Angeles Times

First of hundreds of troops arrive at the border

Forces are sent to help out as end of Title 42 health order brings more asylum seekers.

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WASHINGTON — About 550 U.S. active-duty troops have begun arriving along the Mexican border in the first group of military support ahead of an expected increase of migrants, Defense Department officials said Tuesday.

The forces will mainly be used to help monitor and watch the border as pandemic-era restrictio­ns on asylum end, and they will have no contact with the migrants, the officials said.

More than 900 more soldiers, Marines and airmen will follow around the end of the month, as the Biden administra­tion bolsters efforts to monitor the border and process incoming migrants. The initial plan calls for a 90day deployment of the active-duty forces because they can be moved much more quickly to the border than National Guard or Reserve troops.

The Pentagon has said that some of the active-duty forces could be replaced over time by reservists, who need more time to deploy.

According to a Defense official, most of the activeduty troops will be doing monitoring and detection, which are done from trucks positioned along the border. They will replace border agents who normally do those jobs, freeing them up for enforcemen­t and other tasks. In addition to monitoring the border, the troops will also do data entry and warehousin­g support.

The Defense official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss details not yet made public.

U.S. and internatio­nal law give migrants the right to seek asylum, but the U.S. has used a public health law called Title 42 to expel migrants 2.8 million times since March 2020 on the grounds of preventing the spread of COVID-19. Those restrictio­ns are set to expire Thursday.

Nearly all of the troops arriving at the border this week are Army soldiers, according to the official. The second group of more than 900, which will arrive later, will include about 300 soldiers, 550 Marines and 75 airmen, the official said. The soldiers will include military police units.

The Marines will come from Camp Pendleton outside San Diego and Camp Lejeune, N.C., said Marine Maj. Jim Stenger. The exact timing of their arrival was not given.

Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder, Pentagon press secretary, said that at least some of the troops will be used near El Paso.

Roughly 2,500 National Guard members are already spread across all sectors of the border, providing an array of support to Customs and Border Protection, including monitoring, detection and air transporta­tion. The new infusion of troops will do some of that, as well as administra­tive and dataentry duties to free up border agents to deal more directly with the migrants. The military troops are not authorized to perform law enforcemen­t duties.

Even with the COVID-19 asylum restrictio­ns still in place, the administra­tion has seen record numbers of people crossing the border, and President Biden has responded by cracking down on those who cross illegally and by creating new pathways meant to offer alternativ­es to a dangerous and often deadly journey.

 ?? PATRICK T. FALLON AFP/Getty Images ?? A BORDER PATROL officer monitors migrants waiting to turn themselves in for asylum processing Tuesday after they crossed the border into El Paso.
PATRICK T. FALLON AFP/Getty Images A BORDER PATROL officer monitors migrants waiting to turn themselves in for asylum processing Tuesday after they crossed the border into El Paso.

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