San Antonio Express-News

Pandemic, unrest fuel Guard mobilizati­on

- By Alex Horton

A year defined by a wave of protests, wildfires and a deadly pandemic brought a milestone for the National Guard, which activated more troops for duty than at any time since World War II, officials said.

Tens of thousands of Guard memberswer­e mobilized in all 50 states, three territorie­s andwashing­ton, logging more than 8.4 million duty days this year, National Guard data shows. The bulk of efforts has focused on the pandemic, with roles in administer­ing tests, distributi­ng protective equipment and in some cases, retrieving the dead.

In interviews, Guard members described their work in ways as varied as their missions, from pride in helping neighbors in crisis to frustratio­ns over bureaucrat­ic hurdles.

Others said they felt conflicted over missions to help quell civil unrest after the police killing of George Floyd in May sparked demonstrat­ions nationwide.

Jason Robertson, a noncommiss­ioned officer in the California National Guard, was activated in early April to help support food bank operations after demand surged. Soldiers packaged produce, distribute­d canned goods and gave logistics tips to food bank workers.

Soldiers who couldn’t return home nightly because they lived too far from the site were put up

in hotels for weeks, he said. But a tangible mission to assist people in need helped alleviate stress, Robertson said, and bolstered a sense of purpose when many of his civilian colleagues were selfisolat­ing.

“I’m very grateful for getting called up for that,” he said.

Some of the missions didn’t run smoothly.

In North Carolina, amid concerns hospitals would be overwhelme­d, a task force of about 40 soldiers from an engineer unit supported a mission in April to survey sites for a temporary field hospital. The soldiers would design and construct a facility if needed.

The National Guard has deep experience in working with government agencies in emergencie­s

such as hurricanes but rarely has had to coordinate with private health care officials, a soldier in the North Carolina National Guard said.

“A hospital CEO just has what he sees on TV about Javits to go by,” the soldier said, referring to a field hospital that was set up in New York this spring when cases in the city exploded. “We built the plane in flight, more or less.”

Talks broke down after staffing questions for the field hospital arose. Medical staff from the Guard couldn’t be pulled from their duties to fill those roles, said the soldier, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Soldiers on the mission experience­d other frustratio­ns, including too few computers with necessary software, the soldier said.

Ultimately, the hospital was not built after hospitals concluded they could handle the demand. But the soldiers salvaged the effort by collecting a book of best practices that could be helpful in another pandemic.

Guard activation­s rose sharply in the summer following the death of Floyd while in Minneapoli­s police custody. The single busiest day of the year was June 8, with 86,400 mobilized Guard members fanned out across the country. About half of them were on civil disturbanc­e missions, National Guard data shows.

Tension within the Guard over its role to bolster police spilled into public view May 30. Khaled Abdelghany, a Black soldier in the D.C. Guard, was shown on video emotionall­y mouthing the protest chant, “I’m Black and I’m proud,” in a moment that went viral.

“We were conflicted; we were in pain. We were feeling every emotion,” Abdelghany told the Washington Post, referring to himself and other minority service members. “I’m a Black man before I put the uniform on.”

The Guard’s image, which has improved since the dark days of the Kent State killings in 1970, was tested the next day.

Federal police, backed by D.C. National Guard members, fired pepper balls and rubber pellets at protesters in Lafayette Square outside the White House.

Hours later, a pair of D.C. Army Guard helicopter­s descended as low as 45 feet over demonstrat­ors in an apparent effort to disperse them, prompting a backlash and an investigat­ion by the D.C. Guard.

The fallout was immediate in some corners of the force. Some Guard members turned down voluntary call-ups for civil unrest support because they didn’t want to be associated with potential violence, an Army officer in the National Guard said.

“It’s a hard thing to do when you say you’re up for every mission,” said the officer, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Some leaders recommende­d that soldiers not wear their uniforms while traveling for military duty to avoid confrontat­ions with civilians, the officer said.

Other Guard members were heartened by moments in which they connected with protesters in an effort to distinguis­h themselves from police. In Nashville, soldiers laid their riot shields on the ground at the request of demonstrat­ors during unrest in June.

“I’ve been proud to be part of the organizati­on that did that,” said Thomas Hayden, a warrant officer in the Maine National Guard who mobilized for coronaviru­s duty to help supply nursing homes with protective coronaviru­s equipment. “You hear cries of defund the police. But no one is saying that about the Guard.”

Guard troops also mobilized for hurricane, flooding and wildfire response missions.

 ?? Evelyn Hockstein / Washington Post file photo ?? Guard troops protect the White House on June 2 after national unrest over the Memorial Day killing of a Black man by police.
Evelyn Hockstein / Washington Post file photo Guard troops protect the White House on June 2 after national unrest over the Memorial Day killing of a Black man by police.

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