Defense Secretary James Mattis visited with U.S. troops deployed to the southern border yesterday, and he conceded that the military mission is “non-traditional” because the mission is on American soil. But perhaps the most interesting moment of the Pentagon chief’s time with the servicemen and women came during the Q&A. BuzzFeed reported:
“What are the short and the long-term plans of this operation, sir?” asked another young soldier.
“Short term right now, you get the obstacles in so the border patrolmen can do what they gotta do,” Mattis responded.
“Longer term, it’s somewhat to be determined,” he said, adding that “if we were in war right now, you’d be asking the same question” and that the mission was a “dynamic, unpredictable kind of thing.”
As part of the same answer, Mattis added, “We’ll just have to see what the situation develops in, and then we’ll get you an answer.”
Oh. So the United States deployed thousands of troops for an operation that will cost taxpayers “at least $220 million” by the end of the year. The servicemen and women are there to stop a caravan of Central American migrants, who are still not near the border, and many of whom will never arrive at the border.
Asked to explain what the mission hopes to accomplish, the Secretary of Defense yesterday seemed to be reduced to effectively telling the troops, “We’ll have to get back to you on that.”
The New York Times reported last week on the experiences of the troops stationed at Base Camp Donna in Texas, where access to electricity and water are limited, there is no air-conditioning, and many of those stationed there realize they’ll miss Thanksgiving with their loved ones.
The article added, “Two thousand miles away, at the Pentagon, officials privately derided the deployment as an expensive waste of time and resources, and a morale killer to boot.”









