Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump may want to build a giant wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, but it would be Ben Carson who is open to defending it with deadly drones.
While touring the southwest border on Wednesday, Carson — a renowned neurosurgeon running for the Republican presidential nomination — said he would not rule out military drone strikes to keep immigrants from crossing illegally into the United States.
More from @RealBenCarson on border issues: "You look at some of these caves and things out there one drone strike, boom, and they'd gone."
— Dennis Welch (@dennis_welch) August 19, 2015
Carson’s comments, first reported by the CBS5 News in Arizona, are just the latest in a series of far-flung options floated by Republican candidates, many of whom in recent weeks have discussed means to decrease the undocumented immigrant population currently in the U.S. and keep others from coming. Proposals have ranged from politically impossible to outrageously expensive, veering the immigration debate far to the right in ways that could seriously imperil the Republican Party when it comes time for the general election.
Trump has played a significant role in pushing the needle, calling on the Mexican government to foot the bill in building a fence across the U.S.-Mexico border. (A spokesman for Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto assured Bloomberg that scenario simply isn’t happening, while experts contend the plan would cost millions and wouldn’t work). Meanwhile in the last few days, more than half of the GOP field has said they are open to ending birthright citizenship, a political feat that would require changing the United States Constitution.
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But the option Carson is leaving on the table — military strikes against likely unarmed and unidentified targets — is clearly profound.
Republicans have long hailed heightened enforcement at the border as a precondition for immigration reforms aimed at addressing the estimated more than 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living in the United States. Lawmakers have flooded the border with resources since the 9/11 terror attacks, flushing the budget with more than $3.7 billion a year and 21,000 Border Patrol agents on the ground.
Critics of the heightened enforcement presence at the border say militarizing the 1,933-mile stretch better serves to keep undocumented immigrants in the United States, rather than shutting them out.
Other candidates — former Govs. Rick Perry of Texas and Jeb Bush of Florida, for instance — have said they support surveillance drones to aid agents in pin-pointing border-crossers in real time. But what Carson referred to takes militarizing the border to levels unheard of before.









