Donald Trump’s original vision was for Mexico to pay for a giant border wall. When that didn’t go well, the president said the wall would pay for the wall. That didn’t prove persuasive, either.
This week, the Trump administration announced plans to divert $3.6 billion away from the Pentagon to pay for border barriers, adversely affecting 127 planned construction projects. Which projects? Officials released a public list last night, and now we know several pertinent details — such as the fact that the children of American military servicemembers will help pay for a wall. Reuters reported:
The Pentagon said on Wednesday it would pull funding from 127 Defense Department projects, including schools and daycare centers for military families, as it diverts $3.6 billion to fund President Donald Trump’s wall along the U.S. border with Mexico.
Schools for the children of U.S. military members from Kentucky to Germany to Japan will be affected. A daycare center at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland — the home of Air Force One — will also have its funds diverted, the Pentagon said.
NBC News ran a report noting that Puerto Rico, a frequent target of Trump criticism, was also poised to receive funding for major projects, but the administration is moving that money to border barriers: “The department said it was holding off on over $400 million in funding for ten construction projects on the island, including a power substation and a National Guard readiness center.”
In case that weren’t quite enough, the Washington Post reported, “Roughly $770 million of the money will be taken from projects in allied European nations aimed at helping them deter a possible attack from Russia.”
I’m not saying there’s always a Russia angle to Trump-related news, but it does seem to come up quite a bit.
Retired Army Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling published a tweet last night that read, “To the untrained eye, the 127 defense projects postponed for the border barrier may seem confusing. But as a former commander in Europe, many of these — elementary schools, training support projects, etc — are big deals. ‘Support the troops?’ Not so much.”
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) added this morning that the administration’s plan to divert funds from the European Defense Initiative comes on the heels of the White House’s apparent willingness to delay security aid to Ukraine.









