San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Pentagon streamline­s D.C. National Guard deployment

- By Robert Burns Robert Burns is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon has streamline­d the approval process for urgent use of National Guard forces in the District of Columbia, after months of study in the wake of the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

The changes give the defense secretary sole authority to approve requests that would involve D.C. National Guard personnel participat­ing in civil law enforcemen­t or that would require their deployment within 48 hours, Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said in a statement. That authority had previously been delegated to the Army secretary, the service’s top civilian official.

The changes are intended to make the Pentagon better prepared to handle urgent requests for law enforcemen­t support by civil authoritie­s. After January’s riot, the Pentagon came under criticism by some for a slow response to requests for Guard assistance, although a Defense Department inspector general review concluded that senior defense officials had acted appropriat­ely before and during the riot.

The use of National Guard troops in the nation’s capital is complicate­d by the fact that the usual chain of command headed by a governor does not apply because the district is not a state. Thus, the commanding general of the D.C. Guard reports to the president, although a 1969 executive order delegated control to the secretary of defense, who subsequent­ly further delegated the authority to the Army secretary.

Kirby said Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has amended the previous arrangemen­t so the defense secretary is the sole authority for approval in certain circumstan­ces. The Army secretary remains authorized to control Guard operations in the district and to consider district government requests for use of the Guard in the city for nonlaw enforcemen­t purposes and in nonurgent situations.

Austin said law enforcemen­t activities include crowd control, traffic control, search, seizure, arrest or temporary detention.

It was not immediatel­y clear how this policy change might have affected the response time on Jan. 6, when a mob of supporters of then-President Donald Trump swiftly and violently overran the Capitol Police, which was assisted by the Metropolit­an Police Department, and interrupte­d the certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s election victory. Lawmakers ran for their lives as the rioters climbed through broken windows and doors at the Capitol.

Last spring, Austin ordered a review of how the Defense Department handles requests for support in the National Capital region, including approval authoritie­s, request processes, planning, available forces, command relationsh­ips, staff support, and training exercises.

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