WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon will make space available on military bases for as many as 20,000 unaccompanied migrant children detained after illegally crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, a spokesman said Thursday.
The request for temporary shelter — amid a growing political battle over detained migrants — was made by the Department of Health and Human Services and accepted by the Defense Department, said the spokesman, Army Lt. Col. Jamie Davis.
Davis said the space is expected to be required at least through the end of this year.
It’s not clear which bases will be used to house the children. HHS has assessed facilities on four military bases, but the Pentagon said it has not been told which, if any, of the four will be used. The Pentagon said it will have no role in operating the temporary shelters, which would be controlled by HHS.
The four bases already assessed as potential shelter locations are Little Rock Air Force Base in Arkansas, plus three bases in Texas: Dyess Air Force Base, Goodfellow Air Force Base and Fort Bliss.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Wednesday he is not involved in decisions about housing migrant children detained after crossing the border. But he said the Pentagon will provide whatever support is requested by either the Department of Homeland Security or HHS.
The children who would be housed on military bases are those who cross the border illegally by themselves, as opposed to those accompanied by adults. On Wednesday, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to keep together children and parents apprehended for crossing the border illegally for at least 20 days. The order also directs the Justice Department to fight in court to permanently remove the threat of separation.
Why not the Trump Hotel in DC? Kinda hard for Donnie to grift money from a military base.
Those kids are gonna go through a whole lot of those $20,000 rolls of bathroom tissue.
Uhhh, that is the kindest possible interpretation, and I don’t think it is deserved.
What he is trying to do is lock the entire family up indefinitely …
… when they could just return to supervised release which both “removes the threat of separation” and doesn’t lock these kids up for years.
Fort Bliss.
Sad irony lives.
I’m surprised Guantanamo isn’t on the list. As John Bohner said, “we have spent hundreds of millions of dollars to build a facility that has more comforts than a lot of Americans get,” a claim that was backed up by Kyndra Miller Rotunda, a former Judge Advocate General officer at Guantanamo, who assured us that “the truth is it’s really more like a Boy Scout camp than it is a prison camp.”