By Terri Moon Cronk DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, April 17, 2018 — There are 965 National Guard
troops deployed to the U.S.-Mexico border, the chief of the National Guard
Bureau told a Senate panel today.
Air Force Gen. Joseph L. Lengyel spoke at a hearing of the
Senate Appropriations Committee’s subcommittee on defense.
On April 4, President Donald J. Trump signed a proclamation
directing the Defense Department to assist the Homeland Security Department by
providing security on the border, Lengyel said. The Defense Department
authorized use of the National Guard to assist U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, he told the Senate panel, noting that Defense Secretary James N.
Mattis authorized up to 4,000 troops through Sept. 30 in the ongoing effort.
National Guard troops were deployed April 6, Lengyel said,
with the Guard soldiers and airmen under the command and control of their state
governors. “With the movement from Texas and Arizona and a few planners from
New Mexico, they began to move in and posture their assistance for the CBP,”
the general said.
Support for Customs and Border Protection
The Guard troops are involved in “primarily things that
enable Customs and Border Protection agents to leave nondirect border security
jobs and go to the border and provide border security, and doing things like
maintenance, communications, transportation, the operation of perhaps heavy
equipment, analysis, trend analysis, and using some intelligence and
surveillance and some aviation assets to assist in those endeavors,” Lengyel
said.
“What they are not doing is [having] any direct civilian law
enforcement operations, and they are not doing any direct contact with migrants
unless … explicitly authorized by the Department of Defense, and that has not
yet occurred,” he added.
The DoD comptroller has been directed to look across the
department to find funding to pay for the National Guard resources to work for
Customs and Border Protection, Lengyel said.
The cost of the mission is difficult to estimate, Lengyel
told the senators, because it is not known how many of the authorized 4,000
troops will be deployed or how long they will stay.
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