OVER 3,000 MORE US TROOPS HEADED TO SOUTHERN BORDER
Over 3,000 additional active duty troops will
be deployed to the southern US border to bolster security joining the 2,300
troops already there, several defense officials tell CNN.
The additional forces will allow the
Department of Defense to fulfill a Department of Homeland Security request for
assistance that acting Secretary of Defense Pat Shanahan approved earlier this
month.
President Donald Trump confirmed that
additional troops would be sent via a tweet on Thursday.
"More troops being sent to the Southern
Border to stop the attempted Invasion of Illegals, through large Caravans, into
our Country. We have stopped the previous Caravans, and we will stop these
also," Trump wrote.
The combined active duty force at the border
is expected to be slightly smaller than the mission's peak of 5,900 troops.
The Pentagon had previously said that the new
troops would be involved in "mobile surveillance and detection, as well as
concertina wire emplacement between ports of entry."
The Department of Homeland Security is
"tracking" three caravans en route to the United States, "one of
which is over 12,000 people in the latest estimate," Under Secretary of
Defense for Policy John Rood told the House Armed Services Committee Tuesday.
Defense officials have told CNN that the new
mobile surveillance would include troops manning mobile observation posts and
vehicles that would involve the troops radioing Customs and Border Protection
personnel to intercept any detected illegal activity.
US Customs and Border Protection "has
requested that an additional 150 miles of concertina wire be emplaced no later
than March 31," Rood and the Director of Operations for the Joint Staff
Vice Adm. Michael Gilday wrote in a joint statement to the House Armed Services
Committee on Tuesday.
By the end of November, the military had
already placed over 10 miles of wire obstacles in Texas, Arizona and
California.
This effort is separate from the White
House-led effort to potentially use existing Pentagon funds and personnel to
help build new sections of a border wall.
US troops will also continue to provide
aviation support to Customs and Border Protection, which has historically
involved US military aircraft flying CBP personnel to locations along the
border.
The approximately 2,300 active-duty troops
currently deployed to the border were originally scheduled to come home on
December 15 but their deployment was extended to the end of January at the
request of DHS. Officials say that many but likely not all of those troops will
now stay until September.
The cost of that deployment was estimated at
about $132 million, however that estimate was based on an original end date of
January 31.
Additionally, Trump had previously ordered
the deployment of National Guard forces to help secure the border. There are
about 2,200 National Guardsmen assigned to that mission. That deployment, which
also is scheduled to end in September, is estimated to cost $550 million.
The Pentagon has declined to say where the
money to pay for the deployments is coming from.
Deploying active-duty troops for border
security has been questioned by lawmakers.
"The deployments to the border seem to
conflict with the (Defense) Department's stated efforts to rebuild
readiness," Rep. Adam Smith, the Chairman of the House Armed Services
Committee said Tuesday.
"This deployment to the southern border
seems to exacerbate that problem by further disrupting unit training
cycles," he added.
PAID CON
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