Pentagon is sending 1,500 active duty troops to help secure the
US-Mexico border
Send a link to a friend
[January 23, 2025]
By LOLITA C. BALDOR and TARA COPP
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon said Wednesday it has begun deploying
1,500 active duty troops to help secure the southern border, putting in
motion plans President Donald Trump laid out in executive orders shortly
after he took office to crack down on immigration.
Acting Defense Secretary Robert Salesses said the troops will fly
helicopters to assist Border Patrol agents and help in the construction
of barriers. The Pentagon also will provide military aircraft for
Department of Homeland Security deportation flights for more than 5,000
detained migrants.
The number of troops and their mission may soon change, Salesses said in
a statement. “This is just the beginning,” he said.
“In short order, the department will develop and execute additional
missions in cooperation with DHS, federal agencies, and state partners
to address the full range of threats outlined by the President at our
nation’s borders," Salesses said.
Defense officials added that the department is prepared to provide many
more troops if asked, including up to 2,000 more Marines.
Officials said there was no plan now for the troops to do law
enforcement, which would put them in a dramatically different role for
the first time in decades. Any decision on this would be made by the
White House, they said.
The active duty forces will join the roughly 2,500 U.S. National Guard
and Reserve forces already there. Until this deployment, there were no
active duty troops working along the roughly 2,000-mile border.
A couple hundred troops started moving to the border earlier Wednesday,
according to a senior military official. The military official and a
defense official briefed reporters on the condition of anonymity to
provide additional details on the deployment. The troops will include
500 Marines from Camp Pendleton in California, and the remainder will be
Army.
The U.S. forces being used for the deportation flights are separate from
the 1,500 deployed for the border mission. Those flights will involve
four Air Force aircraft based in San Diego an El Paso, along with crews
and maintenance personnel.
Troops have done similar duties in support of Border Patrol agents in
the past, when both Trump and former President Joe Biden sent active
duty troops to the border.
Troops are prohibited by law from doing law enforcement duties under the
Posse Comitatus Act, but that may change. Trump has directed through
executive order that the incoming secretary of defense and incoming
homeland security chief report back within 90 days if they think an 1807
law called the Insurrection Act should be invoked. That would allow
those troops to be used in civilian law enforcement on U.S. soil.
The last time the act was invoked was in 1992 during rioting in Los
Angeles in protest of the acquittal of four police officers charged with
beating Rodney King.
The widely expected deployment, coming in Trump’s first week in office,
was an early step in his long-touted plan to expand the use of the
military along the border. In one of his first orders on Monday, Trump
directed the defense secretary to come up with a plan to “seal the
borders” and repel “unlawful mass migration.”
“This is something President Trump campaigned on,” said Karoline
Leavitt, White House press secretary. “The American people have been
waiting for such a time as this -- for our Department of Defense to
actually implement homeland security seriously. This is a No. 1 priority
for the American people.”
On Tuesday, just as Trump fired the Coast Guard commandant, Adm. Linda
Fagan, the service announced it was surging more cutter ships, aircraft
and personnel to the “Gulf of America” — a nod to the president’s
directive to rename the Gulf of Mexico.
[to top of second column]
|
Dogs are near a border wall separating Mexico from the United States
Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
Trump said during his inaugural address on Monday that “I will
declare a national emergency at our southern border. All illegal
entry will immediately be halted, and we will begin the process of
returning millions and millions of criminal aliens back to the
places in which they came.”
Military personnel have been sent to the border almost continuously
since the 1990s to help address migration. drug trafficking and
transnational crime.
In executive orders signed Monday, Trump suggested the military
would help the Department of Homeland Security with “detention
space, transportation (including aircraft), and other logistics
services.”
There are about 20,000 Border Patrol agents, and while the southern
border is where most are located, they’re also responsible for
protecting the northern border with Canada. Usually agents are
tasked with looking for drug smugglers or people trying to enter the
country undetected.
More recently, however, they have had to deal with migrants actively
seeking out Border Patrol in order to get refuge in America — taxing
the agency’s staff.
In his first term, Trump ordered active duty troops to the border in
response to a caravan of migrants slowly making its way through
Mexico toward the United States in 2018. More than 7,000 active duty
troops were sent to Texas, Arizona and California, including
military police, an assault helicopter battalion, various
communications, medical and headquarters units, combat engineers,
planners and public affairs units.
At the time, the Pentagon was adamant that active duty troops would
not do law enforcement. So they spent much of their time
transporting Border Patrol agents to and along the border, helping
them erect additional vehicle barriers and fencing along the border,
assisting them with communications and providing some security for
border agent camps.
The military also provided Border Patrol agents with medical care,
pre-packaged meals and temporary housing.
It also was not yet clear if the Trump administration will
eventually order the military to use bases to house detained
migrants. The defense officials said such a request has not been
made as of yet.
Bases previously have been used for that purpose, and after the 2021
fall of Kabul to the Taliban, they were used to host thousands of
Afghan evacuees. The facilities struggled to support the influx.
In 2018, then-Defense Secretary Jim Mattis ordered Goodfellow Air
Force Base in San Angelo, Texas, to prepare to house as many as
20,000 unaccompanied migrant children, but the additional space
ultimately wasn’t needed and Goodfellow was determined not to have
the infrastructure necessary to support the surge.
In March 2021, the Biden administration greenlighted using property
at Fort Bliss, Texas, for a detention facility to provide beds for
up to 10,000 unaccompanied migrant children as border crossings
increased from Mexico.
The facility, operated by DHS, was quickly overrun, with far too few
case managers for the thousands of children that arrived, exposure
to extreme weather and dust and unsanitary conditions, a 2022
inspector general report found.
____
Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani and Rebecca Santana
contributed to this report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |