Military Sides with Trump Border Plans, Will Airlift Criminals Out of Country

Sometimes, America feels like the world’s janitor—cleaning up messes no one else wants to touch.

But when the mess is spilling over our own fence, and it is bringing “chaos” and “danger,” we have to roll up our sleeves and take matters into our own hands.

This from thepatriotjournal.com.

Enter the United States military. Once known for toppling regimes and parachuting freedom into ungrateful corners of the globe, it is now poised for a new mission that hits closer to home—literally.

The southern border has been a hot mess for too many years. And depending on who we ask, it is either “a symbol of the American Dream or the backdrop of its nightmare.”

We have seen caravans, chaos, and a host of talking points that includes human trafficking, sex slavery, drug mule smuggling, child adrenochrome harvesting, and more. But finally, the story is not about what is coming in—it is about who is being flown out.

Yes, America’s armed forces are now into the moving business, and the payload is not military supplies or humanitarian aid.

This is Operation Clean House and the stars of the show? Detained illegal aliens, a few trusty aircraft, and Uncle Sam’s determination to get his house in order.

The Pentagon has announced its latest deployment—and it is not a battlefield assignment or a show of force halfway across the world. This time, the troops are sticking close to home to assist with:

[A]n entirely different kind of mission: Deportation Logistics.

The Department of Defense is lending its planes, its personnel, and its patriotic pizzazz to help fulfill President Trump’s promise to mass deport criminal aliens. This is an operation that is:

[E]qual parts ‘get off my lawn’ and ‘ready for takeoff.’ 

According to the Pentagon, the Air Force will provide four aircraft—two C-130 Hercules and two C-17 Globemasters—to transport up to 5,000 detained illegal aliens out of the United States.

These “bad boys”—the aircraft, not their cargo—typically reserved for troop movements and humanitarian aid, are now getting into the business of expedited departures.

Who says the government doesn’t innovate?

Now, let us fully appreciate the bigger picture: President Trump’s executive order, signed earlier this week, declared a national emergency along the southern border.

There is no room to argue with the logic. Unchecked migration, the human misery, the flow of opiates, and a general sense of lawlessness are not exactly great for the “land of the free and the home of the brave.”

In Trump’s own words, this is not just about immigration—it is about sovereignty and security.

He said:

Through this order, I am acting in accordance with my solemn duty to protect and defend the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the United States.

And, if there is one thing Trump is good at, it is making a point loud and clear. And this time, the point comes with an airlift.

Acting Secretary of Defense Robert Salesses confirmed that the Department of Defense “is not just dipping a toe into this effort—they are diving in headfirst.”

Alongside the airlift support, the Army is already conducting border security missions using UH-72 Lakota helicopters, helping Customs and Border Protection (CBP) patrol the region with better situational awareness, and more airborne intelligence and surveillance assets may soon join the party.

The logistics of this operation are impressive. Between the aircraft, the personnel, and the coordination required to pull it off, it is a masterclass in military precision applied to domestic issues.

 The message: America means business.

This is also a reminder that borders matter, security is non-negotiable, and when push comes to shove, the U.S. government is not afraid to call in the big guns.