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#Soldiers deployed to stop DC protests were issued bayonets

#Soldiers deployed to stop DC protests were issued bayonets

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has confirmed that some of the active-duty service members mobilized to Washington, DC, last month to respond to civil unrest were issued bayonets.

And Defense Department documents show that some were not trained in riot response before they were deployed to the nation’s capital, according to the Associated Press, which first reported about the bayonets.

Members of the Army’s famed 82nd Airborne Division from Fort Bragg, N.C., and the 3rd US Infantry Regiment, which is based in DC and usually guards the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, were mobilized last month to respond to massive protests over the police killing of George Floyd and police brutality.

But they were never actually sent to confront the protesters after they arrived in DC, with Attorney General William Barr saying that they’d be used only as a “last resort.”

The soldiers were issued bayonets for their June 2 deployment — but told they were to remain in their scabbards and not attached to their service rifles, Joint Chiefs Chairman Army Gen. Mark A. Milley wrote to two lawmakers in a letter obtained by the AP.

The soldiers were also told no weapons were to enter the capital without clear orders and only after nonlethal options were first reviewed, he said.

Milley said the order to mobilize the troops came from Major Army Gen. Omar Jones, who serves as commander of the military district of Washington.

His letter, dated June 26, was sent to two Democratic Congressmen, Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois, and Rep. Ted Lieu of California, who asked him for an explanation after the AP first reported on the use of bayonets on June 2.

Roughly 700 members of the 82nd Airborne Division were sent to two military bases near the District Capitol Area.

The soldiers were armed with live-rounds, bayonets, and riot gear.

Division paratroopers were sent back to Fort Bragg on June 4, just days after they arrived.

An unclassified military document obtained by the AP showed that some of the soldiers were not prepared to deal with the protesters. Instead, commanders planned to give paratroopers the proper training within 96 hours of their arrival in Washington, the document shows.

While some infantry soldiers are trained in crowd control, especially those preparing for an overseas deployment, they don’t typically undergo training for riot control and domestic civil unrest.

In a letter to Milley on June 22, Krishnamoorthi and Lieu expressed concern that the use of bayonets could escalate any potential violence at the protests.

They drew parallels to the 1970 Kent State shootings in which four students were killed by National Guardsmen.

“The escalation and violence leading up to and following those killings included those same troops meeting peaceful demonstrators with bayonets,” wrote Krishnamoorthi and Lieu.

In his response, Milley stopped short of agreeing to bar service members from deploying to domestic protests with bayonets, saying the decision would depend on circumstances.

In a joint statement to the AP, the lawmakers responded: “While we are grateful for General Milley’s responses to our questions concerning the arming of troops with bayonets for potential deployment against protesters, we were disappointed he was not willing to commit to banning the practice.”

The bayonet news broke at the same time the AP first reported that President Trump ordered military aircraft to fly above demonstrators in a “show of force,” according to two Defense Department officials, who insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss ongoing operations publicly.

Show-of-force missions within the US military are designed to intimidate an opposing force and to warn of potential military action if provoked further.

Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy told reporters that the incident involving an Army National Guard medical evacuation helicopter that hovered low over protesters in Washington, D.C., was under investigation.

Milley also found himself embroiled in controversy over the White House’s response to the protesters, especially after he walked in combat fatigues with Trump to St. John’s Church after passing through Lafayette Park, which the military had forcefully cleared of protesters beforehand.

He later apologized and said he “should not have been there.”

With AP

Source

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