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frets5150
06-24-2006, 05:15 PM
Schwarzenegger Denies Bush Troop Request

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (June 24) - Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger this week rejected a request from the Bush administration to send an additional 1,500 National Guard troops to the Mexican border, the governor's office confirmed Friday.

The National Guard Bureau, an arm of the Pentagon, asked for the troops to help with the border-patrol mission in New Mexico and Arizona, but Schwarzenegger said the request would stretch the California Guard too thin in case of an emergency or natural disaster.

Schwarzenegger spokesman Adam Mendelsohn confirmed the governor's decision Friday after two California National Guard officials revealed it to The Associated Press.

Mendelsohn said the governor believed sending more troops would create an inappropriate burden on the state and disrupt the guard's training schedule.

The overall deployment for the border mission will remain at 6,000 soldiers.

White House spokesman Blain K. Rethmeier said the administration remained committed to expanding the border patrol and reaching its targets of deployment as soon as possible.

"We are reviewing how this decision by California's governor may affect the overall deployment schedule of National Guard troops to the border," Rethmeier said in a statement Friday night.

On June 1, Schwarzenegger agreed to send the California National Guard to the Mexican border to help the federal government's effort to curb illegal immigration. That ended a 17-day standoff with the Bush administration over whether the state would join the border patrol effort and who would pay for it.

California has committed to putting 1,000 troops on the border by July 31 and has 250 there already.

Schwarzenegger initially criticized the administration's plan to deploy troops to the border, saying it was the wrong approach to dealing with illegal immigration.

The governor finally relented after the Pentagon signed a document promising to pay for the entire mission, a cost that could top $1.4 billion nationally.

Schwarzenegger also wanted the Bush administration to commit to a firm end date. It did not, but Schwarzenegger signed an executive order saying he would not authorize the deployment beyond the end of 2008.

Associated Press Writer Scott Lindlaw contributed to this report from Soda Springs, Calif.


06/24/06 05:58 EDT


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.



Can't believe I am saying this but I have to go with Chimp on this one :(

FORD
06-24-2006, 06:18 PM
Damn.... I was hoping to see Herr Gropenator refusing to deploy national guard to Iraq.

He's right here though anyway. Deploying the Guard to the border is useless, because they can't actually do anything there due to Posse Comitatus laws. The Guard troops who have been "deployed to the border" are actually working desk jobs for the Border Patrol, who still are actually the ones on the border. And they wouldn't need any help if Junior hadn't reduced THEIR forces not long ago.

Maybe the Governator is trying to remind Monkey Boy of that?

frets5150
06-24-2006, 09:36 PM
Originally posted by FORD
Damn.... I was hoping to see Herr Gropenator refusing to deploy national guard to Iraq.

He's right here though anyway. Deploying the Guard to the border is useless, because they can't actually do anything there due to Posse Comitatus laws. The Guard troops who have been "deployed to the border" are actually working desk jobs for the Border Patrol, who still are actually the ones on the border. And they wouldn't need any help if Junior hadn't reduced THEIR forces not long ago.

Maybe the Governator is trying to remind Monkey Boy of that?

Or if we didn't have 150,000 troops in Iraq they could be used here.



:rolleyes:

Big Train
06-25-2006, 07:28 PM
There are two things. One, he is trying to avoid being stuck with the bill. He still has the "Undo what Gray Davis did to fuck up california" plan to implement, which involves CUTS not Increases.

Two, he does have some concern about the immigration thing, although immigrants seem to LOVE him (despite what the national press would have you believe. He did a rally in East Los that attracted THOUSANDS.) If he balks a bit, it plays well for him.

FORD
06-25-2006, 09:27 PM
Immigrants love him because he is one. Maybe they think that,"hey if this immigrant can get himself elected, then some day maybe I could"

Well, sure, if they make a lot of movies, marry a Kennedy, and be involved in politics for several years, maybe.

Not to mention that the Gropenator didn't exactly get elected under normal circumstances. I doubt his chances would have been anywhere near as good in a normal election.