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See the military zone in the Roosevelt Reservation, where US troops can arrest migrants along the US-Mexico border

28 April 2025 at 16:38
The shadows of two Blackhawk military helicopters are seen on a field near the southern US border in Douglas, Arizona.
The Trump administration deployed Navy warships, military aircraft, and thousands of troops near the southern US border to support its crackdown on immigration.

David Swanson/AFP via Getty Images

  • President Trump designated federal land near the US-Mexico border as part of an Army base.
  • The controversial order allows US troops to detain migrants as trespassers.
  • Federal law bars US military personnel from acting as law enforcement on US soil.

A narrow strip of federal land along the southwestern US border has been designated as part of an Army installation, potentially allowing troops to take on a more direct role as part of the Trump administration's crackdown on migrants.

President Donald Trump transferred control earlier this month to the US military, which lays the groundwork for soldiers to search and detain migrants as trespassers in the militarized border zone.

With thousands moreΒ US active-duty troops already deployed to theΒ US-Mexico border, the new designation could sidestep federal laws restricting active-duty troops fromΒ directly actingΒ as domestic law enforcement.

The move increases the likelihood they'll be responsible for apprehending migrants and detaining them in safe conditions β€” missions typically reserved for law enforcement agencies.

Creating a military buffer zone
US Army soldiers patrol a sector of the southern border near Santa Teresa, New Mexico.
The Roosevelt Reservation is a sixty-foot-wide stretch of land on the US side of the US-Mexico border.

US Army photo by Pfc. Sean Hoch

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump signed an executive order giving the Department of Defense jurisdiction over the Roosevelt Reservation, a 60-foot-wide stretch of federal land that runs through New Mexico, Arizona, and California.

The Department of the Interior previously maintained the nearly 110,000-acre swath of federal land before the "emergency withdrawal and transfer of administrative jurisdiction" on April 15. The order excludes the jurisdiction of "Federal Indian Reservations."

The Army requested the jurisdiction transfer to increase patrols by federal personnel and implement security measures and infrastructure to "curb illegal cross-border activities," like illegal immigration and drug and human trafficking, according to a DOI statement.

From federal lands to National Defense Areas
A Stryker armored vehicle patrols an area near the US-Mexico border near a sign that reads in Spanish, "United States of Mexico limits."
Formerly run by the Department of the Interior, the Roosevelt Reservation will become a "national defense area" maintained by the Pentagon and the US military.

Herika Martinez/AFP via Getty Images

The April 11 order outlines a phased rollout, starting by testing the implementation of a controlled perimeter in a "limited sector of federal lands" in New Mexico.

For the next 45 days, soldiers will detect and patrol routes and apprehend trespassers in the area. They will also construct temporary barriers and install signs to indicate the boundaries of the military zone.

Following the initial assessment and the Army's acceptance of jurisdiction, the federal land will become a "national defense area," granting the Pentagon the authority to establish and enforce security measures around it.

The 170-square-mile stretch of land will be considered an extension of Fort Huachuca in Arizona β€” despite not being physically connected to all of it β€” and remain under control by the Army for three years, according to the DOI press release.

"Our southern border is under attack from a variety of threats," Trump said in the memo. "The complexity of the current situation requires that our military take a more direct role in securing our southern border than in the recent past."

Extended military installation
US Army Sgt. Edward Rosa discusses the Stryker armored vehicle's capabilities with a US Border Patrol agent.
Under the control of the Army, US troops are authorized to defend the Roosevelt Reservation from trespassers like any other US military base.

US Army photo by Sgt. Griffin Payne

While under the Army's control, the militarized zone, known as the "New Mexico National Defense Area," will be governed and defended like any other military base, allowing US troops to search and temporarily detain trespassers before appropriate civilian or federal law enforcement officials take over.

Military personnel will also work alongside US Customs and Border Patrol agents at the southern border "to repel unlawful mass migration, narcotics trafficking, migrant smuggling, human trafficking, and other cross-border criminal activities," per a Pentagon press release.

Bypassing the Posse Comitatus Act
A US Army patrol perches on a ledge overlooking the southern border near Santa Teresa, New Mexico.
The Posse Comitatus Act bars active-duty troops and federalized National Guardsmen from acting as law enforcement on US soil.

US Northern Command Public Affairs

Though thousands of military personnel have already been deployed to the southern border, the Posse Comitatus Act bars active-duty troops and federalized National Guardsmen from acting as domestic law enforcement.

The US military could be authorized to enforce civil or criminal law on US soil through the Insurrection Act of 1807, which provides a statutory exception to the PCA in specific circumstances of civil disorder or armed rebellion. To enact it to stop migrants, however, would be an extraordinary use of the federal law.

Since Border Patrol agents and civilian law enforcement are only allowed to apprehend migrants, the vast majority of troops deployed to the border have been tasked with "enhanced detection and monitoring," Gen. Gregory Guillot, the commander of the US Northern Command, said.

Some personnel "operating in close proximity to the border" have been armed with rifles or pistols, Guillot said. Military officials have sought authorization for troops to shoot down suspected cartel drones surveilling the border.

Militarizing the southern US border
A Blackhawk helicopter takes off from Fort Huachuca near the southern US border with Mexico.
Pentagon officials said on April 1 that the militarization at the southern border cost about $376 million since President Donald Trump took office.

David Swanson/AFP via Getty Images

Thousands of active-duty troops aren't the only military assets the Trump administration is using to ramp up its crackdown.

Two US Navy warships, several military aircraft, and over 100 combat vehicles have been deployed to support the Pentagon's southern border operation.

On April 1, Defense Department officials estimated the cost of militarization at the US-Mexico border since January 20 at roughly $376 million, or about $5.3 million per day.

'Environmental crisis'
A surface-to-air rocket simulator launches as a C-130H Hercules flies in the distance at Fort Huachuca in Arizona.
Despite the impact of the military build-up at the southern border, the Department of the Interior said migrant border crossings were causing an "environmental crisis."

US Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Patrick Evenson

Traditionally seen as a steward protecting public federal lands, the DOI emphasized the "environmental crisis" at the border β€” not caused by the accelerated military build-up or deferred mitigation efforts, but by the migrants themselves.

The department said "repeated foot traffic, unregulated vehicle use, and the creation of informal trails or camps" cause harm to "ecologically sensitive areas along the southern border."

"Securing our border and protecting our nation's resources go hand in hand," Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum said during a visit to New Mexico. "This transfer reflects Interior's commitment to public safety, national security, and responsible stewardship of our public lands."

Read the original article on Business Insider

Satellite images show 'Beijing Military City,' the secretive command center China is building. It may be the world's largest.

16 April 2025 at 11:07
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of February 9, 2025.
Satellite imagery from February shows a military base under construction that's been dubbed, "Beijing Military City."

Maxar

  • China is secretly building a military command center that is expected to dwarf the Pentagon in size.
  • Satellite images showed the rapid construction of the 1,500-acre site located southwest of Beijing.
  • Analysts and researchers said the facility could be used as a nuclear bunker for Chinese officials.

China is constructing a massive military headquarters that could surpass the Pentagon β€” famously known as the world's largest office building β€” in size.

Dubbed the "Beijing Military City," satellite images captured the rapid build-up of the secretive facility located about 20 miles southwest of the capital.

While there is no visible military presence around the complex, US intelligence officials believe the colossal complex could serve as a wartime command center and nuclear bunker. China is rapidly building a nuclear arsenal that, in a decade, could rival that of the US.

US-China tensions over Taiwan
President Donald Trump attends a bilateral meeting with China's President Xi Jinping during the G20 leaders summit in Osaka, Japan, June 29, 2019.
Taiwan's independence and President Trump's trade war with China are two potential flashpoints between the military superpowers.

Kevin Lamarque/REUTERS

China's increasing military presence in the East and South China Sea β€” particularly in proximity to Taiwan, Japan, and the Philippines β€” prompted the US to counter Beijing's influence in the Indo-Pacific.

As both nations vie for influence in the region, the US has been running joint military exercises with allied nations to ready their forces to operate together.

Beijing has also increased its naval and air operations in waters near Taiwan, leading US military officials to deem them not as "exercises, they are rehearsals" for a forced reunification of Taiwan with mainland China.

Taiwan has bolstered its defense measures ahead of a potential invasion from China, which claims that the self-governing democracy is part of its territory.

With numerous short-range ballistic missiles and international ballistic missiles at its disposal, China's nuclear arsenal poses as much of a threat to global adversaries as it does to its neighbors.

Before construction
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of February 5, 2022.
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of February 5, 2022.

Maxar

The Financial Times first reported the complex's construction in January, showing satellite images of the site spanning nearly 2.5 miles.

In February 2022, the site was built in an area north of the Chongqing Reservoir that appeared to be residential, with large tracts of open land, according to satellite imagery.

Cleared out a year later
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of February 25, 2023.
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of February 25, 2023.

Maxar

Satellite imagery taken in February 2023 showed the area largely cleared of residential buildings in preparation for major construction of the complex, which appeared to begin in mid-2024.

A covert construction project
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of June 26, 2024.
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of June 26, 2024.

Maxar

In June 2024, the construction site hardly resembled what it looked like a little over a year earlier, with new tunnels and roadways surrounding a central block of land potentially reserved for the main complex building.

There are no official mentions of the construction site on Chinese government websites, and the Chinese embassy said they were not aware of the details of the new command center.

While there hasn't been any visible military presence at the complex, access to the facility is strictly prohibited.

Signs show that drones and pictures are not allowed near the site, and a checkpoint has blocked off the back of the site. People have also been banned from using hiking trails near the site.

World's biggest military command center
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of March 20, 2025.
Satellite imagery shows the military base construction progress as of March 20, 2025.

Maxar

Brady Africk, the deputy director of Media Relations and Data Design at the American Enterprise Institute, posted a timelapse on X capturing the site's speedy build-up in just a year.

A satellite imagery time lapse of a new Chinese military command center under construction near Beijing, first reported by @Dimi.The facility is on track to be ten times larger than the Pentagon, according to US officials. pic.twitter.com/RRdhZvcFLp

β€” Brady Africk (@bradyafr) January 31, 2025

A former senior US intelligence official told the Financial Times that the new command center could replace China's existing military headquarters, which was built during the Cold War.

"The size, scale, and partially buried characteristics of the new facility suggest it will replace the Western Hills complex as the primary wartime command facility," the official said.

A potential 'doomsday bunker'
Xi Jinping
Xi Jinping is serving a third term as the general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party.

Xie Huanchi/Xinhua via Getty Images

Aside from being the anticipated central hub of Chinese military operations, the former US official said the facility could also offer "greater security against US 'bunker buster' munitions" for Chinese officials in the event of war.

Renny Babiarz, a former imagery analyst at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, told the Financial Times that satellite images appeared to show about 100 cranes at the site constructing subterranean facilities and passageways.

With deep underground tunnels and spaces reinforced in concrete, a China researcher told the Financial Times that the complex had "all the hallmarks of a sensitive military facility."

"Nearly 10 times bigger than the Pentagon, it's fitting for Xi Jinping's ambitions to surpass the US," the researcher said. "This fortress only serves one purpose, which is to act as a doomsday bunker for China's increasingly sophisticated and capable military."

China's growing military ambitions
A line of Chinese soldiers wearing camouflage and holding rifles behind Xi Jinping, who is walking in front of them wearing a dark green suit.
Xi Jinping has ordered a vast military modernization.

Xinhua News Agency/Xinhua News Agency via Getty Images

The new command center is the latest move that demonstrates China's advancing military ambitions. The Chinese People's Liberation Army set a goal to modernize the country's military by 2027.

As of mid-2024, the Pentagon estimated that China's Rocket Force likely had more than 600 operational nuclear warheads, and the figure is only expected to grow. Defense officials estimate China's nuclear arsenal could have as many as 1,500 deployed nuclear warheads by 2035 β€” roughly matching those of the US.

Senior producer Olivia Nemec and associate producer Erica Star Domena contributed to this report.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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