Monday, July 26, 2010
Deployment of National Guard Troops on Mexican Border
By Sgt.
Michael J. Carden
The National Guard is sending 1,200 troops to southwest
United States-Mexico border states to provide temporary support for the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency, officials
announced July 19.
The citizen-soldiers and -airmen will serve alongside
federal agents for one year as an augmentation force. The troops will work to prevent illegal immigration and drug trafficking
north of the border, as well as to counter weapons and cash smuggling going south, Alan Bersin, CBP commissioner, said at
a Pentagon news conference.
The deployment will give CBP and the Department of
Homeland Security the time to hire and train 1,000 more border patrol agents and CBP officers, Bersin said.
The deployment and measures to increase border patrol
personnel, he said, are part of ongoing efforts to strengthen the border. More than 340,000 illegal aliens and smugglers have
been apprehended along the border since October, he added.
“What we have to do is continue … to be
able to deal with the transnational criminal organizations …,” Bersin said. “To this extent, the Guard has
been a tried and tested support to law enforcement on the border, and I’m confident [it] will prove again this instance.”
Troops are expected to begin deploying to Texas, New
Mexico, Arizona and California by Aug. 1. All 1,200 troops should be on the ground by September, Air Force Gen. Craig R. McKinley,
National Guard Bureau chief, said at the news conference.
“We’re very pleased to be in support of
our interagency partners,” McKinley said. “Our ramp-up will be over time, and we’ll make sure that all our
soldiers and airmen are well qualified, well integrated and well briefed on the mission at hand.”
Some troops will work as criminal and intelligence
analysts. Others will support CBP entry identification teams. Troops operating in those capacities are undergoing training
now, McKinley noted. Also, about 300 guardsmen are already on the ground working on counternarcotics teams, he added.
“Those are specifically the jobs that we’ve
been asked to do,” McKinley said, noting those specialties are well within the “job jar” of the National
Guard.
“These are efforts that I think will bring synergy
and bring real teamwork together,” he said. “I know our young men and women will do a great job.”
Troops will be armed during the deployment. However,
their weapons are for self-defense purposes, the general explained. The CBP and border patrol agents “have the lead”
and determine the amount of force necessary for certain situations, he added.
“Self protection means just that, that if under
some kind of danger, they are able to protect themselves, to extricate themselves from the situation,” McKinley said.
“[Guardsmen] will be taking the lead from the law-enforcement personnel who they will be assisting.”
The troops will only be deployed on the United States
side of the border and will follow the rules of engagement set by the agencies in each state, the general said. He added that
the troops will fall under the command and control of the state governors.
“We have done this before,” he said. “It
is common practice for our soldiers and airmen to follow the leads, to only take that action which is necessary to extricate
themselves from the situation and not be provocative.”
The border deployment does not hinder the Guard’s
mission overseas, McKinley said. Although states are providing guardsmen for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, a “sizeable”
number of troops remain available for duty, he said.
“Right now I cannot see a case where we would
be overextending the National Guard in this effort,” he said.
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"National Guard to Deploy Troops to Mexican Border,"
by Army Sgt. 1st Class Michael J. Carden, American Forces Press Service, Washington, July 19, 2010