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Trump could expand role of national guard for ‘quick reaction' to unrest
Trump could expand role of national guard for ‘quick reaction' to unrest

The Guardian

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Trump could expand role of national guard for ‘quick reaction' to unrest

Donald Trump could expand the use of national guard troops in US cities even further, if a plan from the Pentagon comes to fruition. The Washington Post, reporting on internal documents on Tuesday, says Pentagon officials are 'evaluating plans' to create a 'Domestic Civil Disturbance Quick Reaction Force' that would deploy to crack down on cities in events of unrest or during protests. The newly revealed plans come as Trump has used the national guard in ways beyond the norm. He deployed troops to Los Angeles against the state and city's wishes to tamp down protests against immigration enforcement, and sent troops to Washington DC and took over the local police under the guise of increased crime. The Department of Defense wouldn't weigh in directly on the idea of a 'reaction force'. 'The Department of Defense is a planning organization and routinely reviews how the department would respond to a variety of contingencies across the globe,' a defense official said in a statement to the Guardian. 'We will not discuss these plans through leaked documents, pre-decisional or otherwise.' In the documents, the Post reports, it calls for 600 troops to be placed at the ready at military bases in Alabama and Arizona, able to deploy quickly if called. This force could cost 'hundreds of millions of dollars'. The documents have timestamps from late July and early August, though they are marked as 'pre-decisional'. The plan, if implemented, would be an expansion of the use of troops in US cities and is legally questionable. National guard troops are frequently deployed in their states to respond to disasters and, particularly in 2020, to civil unrest, when many states called on their units to deploy amid protests over police brutality. In 2020, around the time of the election, the Associated Press reported then, the guard designated military police units in Alabama and Arizona to rapidly respond 'if requested by a governor in another state'. In that instance, reporting at the time said, governors would need to request the help – it wouldn't be deployed just by the administration, as has happened in recent months.

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