National Guard are not trained or equipped to enforce border security
This is an echo editorial opinion published in the Reno Gazette Journal, a Nevada newspaper.
With Trump’s (failed) plan to secure the border with National Guard troops, the buck now has passed to American families and American employers.
Unfortunately, the Guard members will leave behind families and civilian jobs for deployment in border communities. When they arrive at the border, they’re joining a mission in which, for the most part, they can’t participate. Federal law prevents guard members from making arrests, conducting searches or seizing drugs on American soil. And with few exceptions, guard members aren’t allowed to carry weapons.
In other words, the thousands of guard members will be unable to contribute to the core mission of their deployment.
In other words, the thousands of guard members will be unable to contribute to the core mission of their deployment.
It would be like deploying guard members to classrooms during a teacher shortage, but preventing them from grading papers or using textbooks. It’s an unworkable, ill-conceived strategy masquerading as bold action.
Unfortunately, this is nothing new for politicians and the National Guard. Both President Bush and President Obama deployed guard members to the border during their presidencies. In every case, guard members were tasked with immigration enforcement — something they’re not trained to do — and prevented by statute to perform key tasks of the mission.
It’s an uninspired response to a complex problem whenever political solutions fall short. In this case, as with previous cases, it’s the inability of the president to get congressional funding to support his immigration policy, and hoping the National Guard will somehow make it work in spite of a lack of training and resources.
For now, it’s the Department of Defense that will fund the deployment.
But if the American people want to see the Trump administration’s border security proposals become a lasting reality, they need to be prepared to fund those measures, and let their congressional representatives know that they back proper solutions, not ill-fitting Band-Aid measures.
No matter where you stand on the rest of Trump’s proposed border-securing measures, it's an inappropriate use of the Nevada National Guard to be deployed for immigration enforcement.
Unfortunately, this is nothing new for politicians and the National Guard. Both President Bush and President Obama deployed guard members to the border during their presidencies. In every case, guard members were tasked with immigration enforcement — something they’re not trained to do — and prevented by statute to perform key tasks of the mission.
It’s an uninspired response to a complex problem whenever political solutions fall short. In this case, as with previous cases, it’s the inability of the president to get congressional funding to support his immigration policy, and hoping the National Guard will somehow make it work in spite of a lack of training and resources.
For now, it’s the Department of Defense that will fund the deployment.
But if the American people want to see the Trump administration’s border security proposals become a lasting reality, they need to be prepared to fund those measures, and let their congressional representatives know that they back proper solutions, not ill-fitting Band-Aid measures.
No matter where you stand on the rest of Trump’s proposed border-securing measures, it's an inappropriate use of the Nevada National Guard to be deployed for immigration enforcement.
The Reno Gazette Journal Editorial Board agrees that it is not right to fund Trump's border wall, by requiring the National Guard to enforce "border security".
Labels: Mexican government, Reno Gazette Journal
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