Posted on 01/18/2019 10:08:32 AM PST by BeauBo
The largest single group of asylum seekers ever to cross into the U.S. tunneled beneath the border wall near San Luis, Arizona, on Monday, voluntarily turning themselves into Customs and Border Protection... The agency says 179 of the record 376 people who crossed were children, including over 30 unaccompanied minors -- children under 18 traveling on their own.
(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...
“Wheres the military?”
They are mostly around a few major Ports of Entry, stringing concertina wire, to fortify those locations against a mob rush tactic by caravans.
This incident was in a rural location, with only three Border Patrol Officers.
It really highlights that the laws and policies that allow basically anyone with a child to walk in without a visa and be released into the country, is now the main problem - 80% of those apprehended.
Legal reform can only come from Congress - so the President really needs more than just wall funding from them, to really solve the problem. It would require epic leverage.
I had read somewhere that the military
were patrolling the border with
helicopters and night vision. If they
are mainly stationed at ports of entry,
a change of tactics seems to be in order.
They should be patrolling in areas where
the BP is limited, in wide open areas.
I understand full well what laws need to
be changed to actually stop the influx.
And bury vibration sensors under there too so we can detect digging going on.
“I had read somewhere that the military were patrolling the border with helicopters and night vision.”
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) have their own helicopters and night vision for patrol.
The additional military aviation assets that were requested/provided last year, were to transport CBP personnel and equipment (e.g., if a caravan shifts from San Diego to El Paso at the last minute).
If the Military is patrolling the border from the air, it is likely a longstanding function of Joint Task Force - Bravo (JTF-B), a standing counter drug organization within DoD, rather than part of the new mission.
The Military also supports Homeland Security with the Aerostat program - tethered blimps with a high-tech surveillance package.
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