Detroit Free Press

Pentagon girds for truck convoys

Protesters expected to begin arriving next week

- Ashraf Khalil and Lolita Baldor

WASHINGTON – The Pentagon is expected to approve the deployment of 700 to 800 unarmed National Guard troops to the nation’s capital, a U.S. official said Tuesday, as trucker convoys are planning protests against pandemic restrictio­ns beginning next week.

The District of Columbia government and the U.S. Capitol Police are requesting the National Guard assistance.

The troops would be used largely to help control traffic and are expected to come from the district’s National Guard and three states, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss aid not yet formally approved.

Modeled after recent trucker protests in Canada, separate truck convoys have been planned through online forums with names like the People’s Convoy and the American Truckers Freedom Fund – all with different starting points, departure dates and routes. Some are scheduled to arrive in time for President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address Tuesday, though others might arrive after.

Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said the D.C. government and Capitol Police had requested National Guard personnel “to provide support at traffic control points in and around the District” and stand ready in case of “possible disruption­s at key traffic arteries.” He too said no formal decision on the requests had been made.

The convoys follow the recent Canadian truckers’ protest which shut down the busiest U.S.-Canadian border crossing and besieged the streets of the capital, Ottawa, for weeks to protest government pandemic restrictio­ns. The multiple blockades were broken up by police last week, with more than 100 arrests.

It remains to be seen if any of the U.S. convoys would seek to actively shut down Washington’s streets, the way their Canadian counterpar­ts did in Ottawa. Some convoy organizers have spoken of plans to briefly roll through the city, then focus on shutting down the Beltway, which encircles the capital.

A statement from the People’s Convoy specifical­ly says the trucks “will NOT be going into DC proper.” That convoy is planning to embark Wednesday from southern California and arrive in D.C. around March 5.

The U.S. convoys seek an immediate lifting of what they say are heavy-handed pandemic restrictio­ns like mask mandates and vaccine requiremen­ts. The American Truckers Freedom Fund website says the group is protesting “the unscientif­ic, unconstitu­tional overreach of the federal government.”

Vaccines have proven effective at preventing COVID-19 infections, especially serious illness and death, and high-quality masks offer strong protection against spreading or contractin­g the disease.

Public sentiment, especially among conservati­ves, has been shifting against government mandates as the pandemic heads into its third year.

People’s Convoy organizer Mike Landis, in a video testimonia­l on the group’s website, said the current COVID-19 vaccine “is not proven yet” but supported individual choice on whether to take it or not. Landis said the convoy was open to all vehicles and said the primary goal was to pressure Biden to lift the national state of emergency.

“We want this government to bring back the Constituti­on,” Landis said. “We do not want to be under a dictatorsh­ip communisms­tyle regime, like where we are right now.”

A state of emergency in the U.S. was declared by former President Donald Trump in March 2020. Last week, Biden announced his intention to extend it beyond the current March 1 expiration date.

The websites organizing the American trucker convoys directly reference the inspiratio­n of the Canadian movement. A statement on the People’s Convoy website pays homage to “our brave and courageous neighbors to the north – our Canadian brothers and sisters who led the charge.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Heavy vehicles, including garbage trucks and snow plows, are parked near the entrance to Capitol Hill in Washington amid reports that trucker protests will arrive Tuesday.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Heavy vehicles, including garbage trucks and snow plows, are parked near the entrance to Capitol Hill in Washington amid reports that trucker protests will arrive Tuesday.

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