Donald Trump will tell anyone who’ll listen that that the United States faces an extraordinary security crisis along our southern border. The situation is so dire, the president likes to argue, that he’s felt the need to dispatch U.S. troops, shut down the government, and circumvent Congress to build a border wall with funds that are supposed to be spent on the military.
The fact that many of those on his team disagree is an embarrassment the Republican prefers to ignore.
Last month, for example, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence issued its annual “Worldwide Threat Assessment” report, and while it pointed to a series of legitimate challenges to our national security, it largely ignored conditions at the U.S./Mexico border.
Policymakers heard a related assessment yesterday from the commander of the U.S. Northern Command.
The four-star Air Force general in charge of the defense of the U.S. homeland told lawmakers Tuesday the influx of illegal immigrants and illicit narcotics across the southern border does not constitute a national emergency, despite claims by the White House otherwise.
In written testimony submitted to Senate Armed Services Committee members, Northern Command chief Gen. Terrence O’Shaughnessy noted that the situation on the U.S.-Mexico border did not rise to the level of a military threat.
As Rachel noted on last night’s show, Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) specifically asked the four-star general whether he believes illegal border crossings represent a military threat. O’Shaughnessy expressed his support for “a secure border,” but quickly added that conditions at the border are “not a military threat.”
Given the president’s policy of diverting funds from the Pentagon’s budget in pursuit of border barriers, the general’s assessment didn’t do the White House any favors.









