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Pentagon: 2,100 more troops headed to U.S.-Mexico border in Texas

By Allen Cone
A member of the Texas National Guard and a U.S. Customs and a Border Protection agent discuss the border security mission on the shores of the Rio Grande River in Starr County, Texas, on April 10, 2018.  Photo by Sgt. Mark Otte/Texas Army National Guard/Joint Chiefs of Staff
1 of 2 | A member of the Texas National Guard and a U.S. Customs and a Border Protection agent discuss the border security mission on the shores of the Rio Grande River in Starr County, Texas, on April 10, 2018.  Photo by Sgt. Mark Otte/Texas Army National Guard/Joint Chiefs of Staff

July 18 (UPI) -- An additional 2,100 troops, including 1,100 active-duty service members and 1,000 Texas National Guard soldiers, will be deployed to the U.S.-Mexico border "in the next several weeks," the Pentagon announced.

Acting Defense Secretary Richard Spencer, who took responsibility of the Defense Department on Tuesday, authorized the additional personnel Wednesday. On Thursday, Spencer, who has been the Navy secretary since August 2017, announced that he meet Friday in McAllen, Texas, with service members currently deployed in support of the Southwest border security mission.

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The new active-duty personnel will provide "aerial surveillance, operational, logistical, and administrative support" to Customs and Border Patrol, Pentagon spokesperson Maj. Chris Mitchell said in a statement obtained by media, including Politico and Military Times.

Members of the Texas Guardsmen will assist CBP with with intake and detention of migrants.

The additional active-duty forces are necessary because of "shortfall in volunteer National Guard personnel," Mitchell said.

In June, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced the impending mobilization of the additional Texas National Guard troops to help establish holding facilities in the Rio Grande Valley and El Paso for single adults entering the country illegally. The mission will be federally funded and under the control of the governor.

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And earlier this month, the Department of Homeland Security formally sent a request to the Pentagon for extra National Guard troops.

Civilian law enforcement will continue to supervise the migrants and the military troops will assist at the holding camps, officials said.

The 1,000 Guard breakdown includes about 250 additional personnel at ports of entry and airports in Texas and the other 750 to help Customs and Border Protection staff at two "temporary adult migrant holding facilities" in Donna or Tornillo in Texas, Mitchell said.

"Decisions regarding arming military personnel and related rules for the use of force will be informed by the circumstances of their mission and be made by the governor of Texas, in consultation with CBP," Mitchell said.

Army Secretary Mark Esper, who has been nominated as the next defense secretary, spoke about military support at the border during a Senate Armed Services Committee confirmation hearing Tuesday.

"I think in many ways, it's just one of those things we do -- whether it's putting out wildfires in California, helping with hurricane recovery in Texas or Puerto Rico, flooding along the Mississippi," he said. "It's one of those things we provide to other parts of the government, to the American people."

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