The U.S. will add 500 troops at Mexico border during coronavirus pandemic -
officials
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - The Pentagon will send roughly 500 troops to the U.S.-Mexico border
to assist federal border agents amid the coronavirus pandemic, three U.S.
officials told Reuters.
The sources said
the Pentagon approved a request by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security
(DHS).
The United
States already maintains an average of 5,000 troops at the southwest border to
support Border Patrol by performing non-law enforcement duties. The latest
deployment will bolster those ranks as border agents grapple with possible
exposure to COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.
Mexico declared
a health emergency on Monday and issued stricter rules aimed at containing the
fast-spreading coronavirus after its number of cases surged past 1,000 and the
death toll rose sharply.
One of the U.S.
officials - all of whom requested anonymity to discuss the decision - said the
Trump administration worries the pandemic could further depress Mexico’s
already troubled economy and encourage illegal immigration from that country to
the United States.
DHS did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
The move came as
the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump shelved a plan to send troops
to the border with Canada, U.S. officials told Reuters.
Canadian Deputy
Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland slammed the proposal last week, calling it “an
entirely unnecessary step” that would damage bilateral relations between the
two nations, which have long maintained an undefended border.
The Trump
administration has stepped up its response to the coronavirus outbreak this
month as infections have spread across the country. For the first time on
Tuesday, the United States recorded nearly 700 new deaths in a single day. The
country now has a total of over 3,800 deaths and over 185,000 cases.
The United
States closed its northern and southern borders to tourist and recreational
travel to limit the spread of the new coronavirus on March 20. At the same
time, the Trump administration began to use a health-focused statute to swiftly
return migrants caught trying to cross U.S. borders illegally.
The rapid
removals also apply to unaccompanied minors from Central America with
exceptions on a case-by-case, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said on
Monday. The minors previously had been transferred into the custody of the
Department of Health and Human Services in accordance with federal law to
protect victims of human trafficking.
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