Four States Deploy National Guard To US-Mexico Border

New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Kentucky, and Illinois are deploying several national guard units to the U.S.-Mexico border.

This from nationandstate.com.

According to the office of New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu (R), the four states are sending 500 soldiers to help secure the border.

The units will act under the command of the 941st Military Police Battalion, which already has 44 soldiers in place.

An additional 120 soldiers from the 237th Military Police Company will be deployed to set up surveillance sites along the border to block the laundering of drugs, weapons, and money into the U.S. by Mexican cartels, according to the release.

The units will cover a 250-mile stretch where illegal immigrants have been flooding into the U.S.

Lt. Col. Carla Raisler, director of public affairs for the Kentucky National Guard, told The Epoch Times that she was surprised Sununu released specific details about the deployment.

Raisler said:

Due to the security concerns of where the soldiers are inside the U.S. border, we do not generally release information about the units or the size or their movements for security reasons to keep them and their families safe.

In echoing Raisler’s position, Major Jarred Rickey of the Rhode Island National Guard told The Epoch Times:

He could only confirm that the state is under a recent federal command to deploy National Guard units to the southwest border.

He emphasized that it was only a support mission and not part of Operation Lone Star implemented by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, last year.

Lt. Col. Brad Leighton, public affairs officer for the Illinois National Guard, told The Epoch Times

[A] transportation company was being sent as part of a routine rotation to replace a guard unit that has been in place for several months. It will be keeping an aviation detachment already at the border in place.

Leighton said he couldn’t talk too much about the mission but did say it was specifically to assist border patrol with surveillance.

In August, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D) issued a Proclamation For Asylum Seekers declaring the state “a disaster area” based on busloads of immigrants from Central and South America arriving [in Chicago] from Texas.

Pritzker, a democrat communist, said:

[H]e declared a state of emergency. In the interest of aiding the people of Illinois and the local governments responsible for ensuring public health, safety, and welfare in the wake of the influx of what he called ‘asylum seekers’ in Illinois.

In his statement about the New Hampshire Guardsmen being deployed, Sununu called the border situation:

 

“An ongoing humanitarian crisis.”

 

While he didn’t elaborate in the statement about the reasons for sending National Guard troops to the border, last week Sununu expressed support for Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis’s move in September to send 50 illegal border crossers to Martha’s Vineyard.

It was a move that set off a hailstorm of criticism against DeSantis, with communists calling for his arrest for human trafficking.

Sununu called the New Hampshire guardsmen answering the call to the border “heroic men and women.”

Sununu said:

They answered the call to serve during the COVID pandemic and are now answering our nation’s call—deploying to the ongoing humanitarian crisis along our southern border.

According to Sununu, the two New Hampshire National Guard units will remain in place for a year at the U.S.-Mexico border.

The announcement of the deployment comes just weeks after Abbott announced he was reducing the 10,000 national guard soldiers he had in place at the southern border down to 5,000.

Final thoughts: Northern states sending National Guard forces to the southern border is a good sign for all of America.

I’m not quite sure what to make of democrat communist governors assisting with the border enforcement. Sununu of New Hampshire is Republican by the remainder of the governors from the four states are communist: Daniel McKee from Rhode Island, Andy Beshear from Kentucky, and J.B. Pritzker from Illiinois.

Any ideas, Def-Con News readers?