U.S. Army Major Wes Shinego at the DOD News offers a piece on the military on the southern border:
In the two months since President Donald J. Trump's inauguration
Jan. 20, 2025, the administration has launched a multifront campaign to secure
the U.S.-Mexico border, targeting cartels, transnational criminal organizations
and illegal immigration.
The 52-day period marks a shift in
national security priorities, with the administration designating cartels as
terrorist threats, deploying thousands of troops resulting in a 94% reduction
of unlawful border crossings. Backed by executive orders, military resources
and international cooperation, these efforts signal a change in border
enforcement aimed at restoring sovereignty and protecting American communities.
A
New National Security Framework
On his first day in office, Trump issued
an executive order designating Mexican cartels and transnational criminal
organizations as foreign terrorist organizations and specially designated
global terrorists, elevating them to the same threat level as ISIS or al-Qaida.
That move, long advocated by national
security experts, reframes cartels as existential dangers rather than criminal
enterprises. Attorney General Pam Bondi's subsequent Department of Justice memo
operationalized this shift, directing prosecutors to pursue terrorism charges
under 18 U.S.C. § 2339B alongside traditional drug trafficking and racketeering
offenses.
By streamlining processes — suspending
National Security Division approvals and fast-tracking terrorism-related
warrants — the DOJ has empowered law enforcement to act swiftly against cartel
leaders with penalties now including life imprisonment or the death penalty.
That legal overhaul complements a
broader strategic pivot. While the administration continues to prioritize
near-peer competitors like China and Russia, it has closed the gray area that
cartels exploited for decades. The result is a unified approach that marshals
the full weight of U.S. national security resources to dismantle these
organizations that control over 80% of illegal drugs such as fentanyl entering
the U.S. and earn billions from human trafficking.
Military
Mobilization and Operational Control
Under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth,
the Defense Department has matched this policy shift with unprecedented action.
Within 36 hours of Trump's Jan. 20 executive order declaring a national
emergency at the southern border, Acting Defense Secretary Robert Salesses
announced the deployment of 1,500 active-duty troops, making the total 4,000
alongside 2,500 reservists already in place.
By March 1, 2025, the Pentagon deployed a 4,400-soldier Stryker
brigade combat team and a 650-troop general support aviation battalion,
bringing Title 10 forces to approximately 9,000. Equipped with Stryker
vehicles, Black Hawk and Chinook helicopters, these units enhance detection,
logistic and aerial support for Customs and Border Protection.
During Hegseth's visit to the Laredo,
Texas, Feb. 3, 2025, he defined "mission accomplishment" as
"100% operational control" of the southern border. Troops have
installed physical barriers, provided real-time surveillance and freed CBP
agents for interdiction, while U.S. Northern Command coordinates a joint task
force with DHS.
An agreement with Mexico added 10,000
Mexican troops to patrol their side of the border. Meanwhile, Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, will be used to detain criminal migrants. The first detainees are 10 Tren
de Aragua members — a newly designated terrorist group — who arrived at
Guantanamo Bay Feb. 5, 2025.
Measurable
Results
Border Patrol Chief Mike Banks reported
March 4, 2025, unlawful crossings have decreased from 4,800 to 285 daily
apprehensions. Executive actions, including the closure of the asylum system
for illegal entrants and the cancellation of Biden-era policies, have halted
migrant releases into the U.S. interior.
Since Jan. 20, 2025, only two migrants
have been released from custody — both as witnesses in criminal cases. Banks
credits the "greater punishment, larger deterrent" strategy,
bolstered by troop surges and Texas National Guard soldiers deputized as
immigration officers.
Reinforcing
Legislative Efforts
The administration is also pressing
Congress to act. The Halt Fentanyl Act, passed by the House Feb. 9, 2025, aims
to permanently classify fentanyl-related substances as Schedule I drugs, though
it awaits Senate approval. Proposals to schedule xylazine — a deadly sedative
mixed with fentanyl — as a Schedule III substance and designate large-scale
fentanyl trafficking as a weapon of mass destruction are gaining traction.
These measures would enhance
interdiction and grant agencies like DOD and DEA authority to counter the
opioid epidemic as a whole that has claimed thousands of American lives since
2000.
Note: The above photo taken by Army Sgt. 1st Class Andrew R. Sveen shows Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visiting the Joint Task Force, Northern Command, to see the efforts military men and women are undertaking in support of U.S. Customs and Border Protection at Fort Bliss, Texas on February 3, 2025.
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