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![]() by Christen Mccurdy Washington DC (UPI) Jun 04, 2020
The Department of Defense is returning some members of active duty units that had deployed to Washington, D.C., to their home bases, a senior Pentagon official said Thursday. The official told UPI the return of the remaining active duty service members will be "conditions-based." The official did not name the number of troops being removed from the capital, but Stars & Stripes reported that Esper sent about 700 soldiers with the 82nd Airborne Division back to Fort Bragg, N.C. Earlier this week, the military deployed 1,600 troops to the nation's capital to respond to police-brutality protests spurred by the death of Minneapolis man George Floyd. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said Wednesday that it was not yet necessary to invoke the Insurrection Act, which would allow the federal government to send troops to states in response to protests. It was Esper's first public comment on the matter. Earlier this week U.S. Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., demanded the Trump administration and Defense Department officials offer more detail about potential domestic deployments of the military, including a comment from Esper -- on a phone call recording that was leaked to The New York Times -- that National Guard forces needed to "dominate the battlespace" in cities. President Donald Trump has said multiple times this week that he would send the military into cities where protests have been punctuated by looting and vandalism as well as deployment of tear gas and flash bangs by police. The Insurrection Act of 1807 was last used in 1992 as Los Angeles residents rioted after officers who beat Rodney King were acquitted of criminal charges.
![]() ![]() Amid protests, Pentagon squirms under pressure to do Trump's political bidding Washington (AFP) June 3, 2020 President Donald Trump wants the US military to take the lead in stopping violent race protests, making the Pentagon increasingly vulnerable to accusations of being a tool for his political goals. Trump put the issue out in front Monday in a made-for-TV show of force. After having police fire tear gas to clear away peaceful protestors in front of the White House, he walked with Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark Milley at his side to a nearby church to pose for p ... read more
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