US
Troops Lay Down Razor Wire At Southern Border
4
November, 2018
US
troops at the US-Mexico border are laying down approximately 1,000
feet of razor wire fending along the Texas side of the Rio Grande
river underneath the McAllen-Hidalgo International Bridge, as
three separate caravans of Central
Americans make their way north in
the hopes of claiming asylum.
Soldiers participating
in "Operation Faithful Patriot" are working with US Customs
and Border Patrol officers to install the fending, according to the
Department of Defense.
During
a Saturday campaign rally in Montana, President Trump said "Mexico
is trying, they are trying but we’re different, we have our
military on the border," adding "And I noticed all that
beautiful barbed wire going up today. Barbed wire, used properly, can
be a beautiful sight."
A
spokesman for the US Border Patrol told the New York Post that the
fencing was part of "necessary preparations" for the
caravans.
Troop
arrivals
Around
900 troops have arrived at the US-Mexico border since the Trump
administration announced the deployment on October 26.
The president vowed the forces would block the caravans, which contain thousands of migrants, from entering US turf.
Military units are heading to outposts along the border from Texas to California.
After saying about 5,000 active-duty troops would be deployed as part of Operation Faithful Patriot,Trump on Wednesday boosted the number from 10,000 to 15,000.
A separate contingent of about 2,100 National Guard troops had already been deployed to work with Border Patrol in anticipation of the caravans, which have about 7,000 people total, according to the Defense Department. -NY Post
The
original caravan continued on foot Saturday after Mexico rescinded an
offer to bus them to Mexico City, citing a lack of water. They are
currently making their way through the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz,
and are around 750 miles from the US border. The caravan's numbers
have dropped from 7,000 to around 4,000 over the last few weeks,
while around 3,000 have applied for asylum in Mexico and others haver
returned home.
On
Friday night, Veracruz governor Miguel Ángel Yunes offered
bus rides to the country's capital, however he quickly rescinded the
offer, blaming maintenance work on Mexico City's water supply which
he said left 7 million people without water over the weekend.
Mexican
officials, meanwhile, have ceased to provide bus, truck and van rides
to the group.
A
second caravan of around 1,000 to 1,500 people from Guatemala,
Honduras and El Salvador entered Mexico last week and is around 1,000
miles from the southern US border, while a much smaller caravan also
entered Mexico from Guatemala on Friday - wading across the Suchiate
River after Mexican authorities blocked access over a bridge.
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