
White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller
THE GATEWAY PUNDIT | Published January 30, 2025
President Trump’s deputy chief of staff for policy, Stephen Miller, joined CNN’s Jake Tapper on Tuesday and discussed the administration’s plans to use US Military troops to eradicate cartel presence on the Southern Border.
President Trump, immediately after taking office on day one, signed an executive order designating cartel groups as Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) and Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGTs). He further signed an executive order, declaring a national emergency on the Southern Border.
President Trump has already sent US troops to the southern border, and military cargo planes are being used for the first time in history to deport planeloads of illegal aliens from Arizona and Texas.
Miller on Tuesday hinted that Trump may also invoke the Insurrection Act to combat the cartels in line with the “national objective of eradicating their physical presence on US soil.” This law allows the President to deploy the military domestically. President Trump’s executive order to declare a national emergency at the border references the Insurrection Act as “additional actions that may be necessary to obtain complete operational control of the southern border.”
This comes after recent incidents of cartel violence on the Southern Border. As The Gateway Pundit reported, on Monday, Border Patrol agents exchanged gunfire with Mexican drug cartel members who tried to bring a group of illegals over the border in Fronton, Texas.
Border Czar Tom Homan also responded to these developments Wednesday, saying, “the whole of government is going to dismantle these people and wipe them off the face of the earth.” Homan continued, “The Trump administration is going to take them on, just like he did the Caliphate, and we’re going to destroy them.”
Miller says that invoking the Insurrection Act “is still being considered based on operational needs on the southern border” and would be used “specifically in the context of countering that cartel threat.” However, it does not appear that the military will be used to conduct raids on illegal aliens in American cities. “In the interior, it’s going to be about enrolling state and local law enforcement to massively increase the supply of guns and badges to conduct these immigration raids,” Miller says.
The White House deferred to Miller’s comments when we asked how the Trump Administration plans to address the violence from Cartels at the southern border and whether they plan to use military force to combat the Foreign Terrorist Organizations on the border.
Watch below:
Miller: ICE is absolutely prioritizing terrorists, public safety threats, and national security threats. It is also true that Joe Biden admitted some unknowably large number of millions of illegal immigrants into this country, all of whom are ineligible for asylum, ineligible for any form of immigration relief, are ineligible to remain in the country.
So, if you look at public polling on this issue, about 70% of Americans think that everybody that Joe Biden let in should be removed. About 80% of Americans agree that all criminal aliens should be removed. That’s the baseline of public opinion support.
Tapper: So you are going to prioritize the violent criminals, though?
Miller: Yes, but we’re not going to immunize everybody that Joe Biden let in. I mean, let me just, let me ask you a hypothetical and you can treat as a rhetorical question, not answer it if you don’t want to, Jake.
Let’s say that an illegal alien arrived in the last three months of the Biden administration from, say, Peru. He was released. He failed to appear in immigration court.
He was issued a final removal order, showed up, got released, didn’t appear, wasn’t deported, been here for six months. Is it your position, Jake, that that guy should get to stay till the end of his life? I mean, what kind of country can run that way? I mean, no country in the world runs that way.
Tapper: So, let me ask you: President Trump has left the door open to invoking the Insurrection Act, which would allow him to use military forces, US military forces, inside the United States for law enforcement. What would that look like? Are we going to see US troops in American cities arresting undocumented immigrants? Tell us what this is about.
Miller: So, the insurrection act in this context mostly applies to considerations related to the border and the cartel threat. So, we’ve already seen two shooting incidences in the last two days of suspected cartel violence against Border Patrol agents.
President Trump’s clampdown and closure of the southern border has disrupted the flow of funds to the most ruthless and dangerous organizations on planet Earth, like the Sinaloa Cartel, like the Mexican Mafia.
These are organizations that are being designated as foreign terrorist organizations, and the President has set the national objective of eradicating their physical presence on US soil. So, you should understand considerations about the insurrection act in that context.
Tapper: With respect to interior enforcement, that’s where a program known as 287G comes into play, that you’re probably familiar with, and that’s where we’re going to be enrolling state police, local police, local sheriffs, and law enforcement across the nation into federal immigration programs, and that’s how we’re going to significantly increase the arrest numbers.
But is the insurrection act going to possibly be used to use the US military to go after undocumented immigrants in American cities and American towns? Is the door open for that?
Miller: Right now, the Insurrection Act, which is still being considered based on operational needs on the southern border until a decision has been made, is specifically in the context of countering that cartel threat. In the interior, it’s going to be about enrolling state and local law enforcement to massively increase the supply of guns and badges to conduct these immigration raids.
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SOURCE: www.thegatewaypundit.com
RELATED: Trump immigration enforcement push comes with military flourish
Planes, troops and tactical gear have been part of a show of force
An American soldier monitors the U.S.-Mexico border in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Friday. (Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images)
ROLL CALL | Published January 30, 2025
President Donald Trump’s initial steps toward executing his promised tough-on-immigration plans featured a highly visible role for the military and federal agents in tactical gear, a show of force that the administration has touted on social media.
Military aircraft flew migrants back to numerous countries, a move that sparked some international pushback. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt posted photos on social media of a line of people behind a military plane and wrote, “Deportation flights have begun.”
The White House account posted a video on social media last week of what appears to be the Marine Corps operating Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft and trucks along the U.S.-Mexico border with the message “Promise Made –> Promise KEPT!”
And administration officials, including Tom Homan and newly confirmed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, have appeared on the ground in media reports and social media posts alongside agents tasked with performing immigration enforcement raids.
CNN reported that at least two agencies aiding in immigration raids have told personnel to ensure their clothing clearly depicts their respective agency in case they are filmed.
Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona, a Democrat and member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said the visibility of such domestic deportation efforts by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement was no accident.
“I think an ICE raid, to me anyway, when you’re going into a school, into a community, you do it very publicly with cameras, you’re looking for a photo op, and you’re looking to intimidate people,” Kelly said Wednesday during a breakfast forum hosted by Politico.
Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., said Tuesday that Trump’s visible use of the military was intended to send a signal to potential migrants who would seek to break the law by entering the United States illegally.
“I do think that what’s going to help a lot is the fact that the president has made it very clear that in his mind, and I think in the minds of most Americans, illegal immigration is illegal, duh,” Kennedy said. “And we’re going to enforce the law, and the word is going to go forward, and I think that will help to stem the tide of the migrants coming to the southern border.”
The short-lived dispute over the weekend that started with Colombia’s revocation of authorization of the return of migrants apparently was based in part on President Gustavo Petro’s objections to the use of military aircraft as the mode of travel, which he articulated Sunday in a post on social media.
“A migrant is not a criminal and must be treated with the dignity that a human being deserves,” Petro wrote in Spanish, according to translation. “That’s why I turned back the U.S. military planes that were carrying Colombian migrants. I cannot allow migrants to remain in a country that does not want them; but if that country sends them back, it must be with dignity and respect for them and for our country. We will receive our fellow citizens on civilian planes, without treating them like criminals.”
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SOURCE: www.rollcall.com
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