These Are the Active-Duty Units Deployed to DC Region for Protests

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Command Sgt. Maj. Veronica E. Knapp, incoming Command Sgt. Maj. of 16th Military Police Brigade, posts in her newly appointed leadership position during a dual Change of Command/ Responsibility ceremony at Fort Bragg, North Carolina July 12, 2019. (Brittany L. Downing/U.S. Army)
Command Sgt. Maj. Veronica E. Knapp, incoming Command Sgt. Maj. of 16th Military Police Brigade, posts in her newly appointed leadership position during a dual Change of Command/ Responsibility ceremony at Fort Bragg, North Carolina July 12, 2019. (Brittany L. Downing/U.S. Army)

Some 1,600 active-duty soldiers are now staged just outside Washington, D.C. awaiting possible orders to support protest response in the city, the Pentagon announced Tuesday night.

The troops were dispatched from Fort Bragg, North Carolina and Fort Drum, New York at the order of Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, according to the announcement.

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"Active duty elements moved to the National Capital Region by military aircraft over the last 24 hours," officials said.

Officials confirmed on Monday that active-duty units from Bragg had been moved into the region and placed on alert status. Tuesday night, they identified the units that had been deployed. They include the following:

  • An infantry battalion, designated Task Force 504, out of Fort Bragg
  • 16th Military Police Brigade headquarters, out of Fort Bragg
  • 91st Military Police Battalion, out of Fort Drum

It's not clear how many troops from each element were deployed. Officials said that the 16th Military Police Brigade headquarters would provide command and control capability for military police and engineers attached to the 91st.

"Active duty elements are postured on military bases in the National Capital Region but are not in Washington, D.C," officials said in the statement. "They are on heightened alert status but remain under Title X authority and are not participating in defense support to civil authority operations."

The prospect of deploying active-duty troops to suppress protests on American soil is a hotly contested issue.

President Donald Trump, who has expressed dismay at what he called states' "weak" responses to protest violence, property damage and looting, said in a Monday address that he was ready to deploy "thousands and thousands of heavily armed" troops to quell the demonstrations. While employing Title 10 troops in a domestic law enforcement capacity is prohibited in most cases under the Posse Comitatus Act, the president has the authority under the Insurrection Act to determine such a mission necessary.

At the Pentagon Tuesday morning, a senior defense official said Defense Department leaders hoped to avoid employing active-duty troops.

"We really would like to see this stay a National Guard response to the degree that we have to put any uniformed forces against it," the official said.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser has also expressed her strenuous objection to military presence at the protests.

"We don't want armed National Guard, armed military -- we don't want any of those things on D.C. streets," she said in a Tuesday interview with MSNBC. "I would regard that as an affront to even our limited home rule and the safety of the District of Columbia, absolutely."

Some 2,700 National Guard members from Washington, D.C.; Utah; New Jersey; Indiana; South Carolina and Tennessee are now in the district to support local law enforcement. Pentagon officials said Tuesday that they were not armed with non-lethal weapons such as tear gas and rubber bullets, although some carried long guns and sidearms.

A striking photograph published Tuesday night showed masked Guard members -- unarmed but in helmets and body armor -- standing in rows on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial as the sun set.

-- Hope Hodge Seck can be reached at hope.seck@military.com. Follow her on Twitter at @HopeSeck.

Related: Active-Duty Troops Remain Outside DC as Guard Force Grows

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