National Guard troops will soon carry weapons in US capital

Published
WASHINGTON: Metropolitan police, accompanied by federal law enforcement, take a man into custody at a traffic stop in Chinatown. — AFP
WASHINGTON: Metropolitan police, accompanied by federal law enforcement, take a man into custody at a traffic stop in Chinatown. — AFP

WASHINGTON: National Guard troops will soon be carrying military weapons in Washington, where President Donald Trump ordered their deployment as part of a crackdown on crime, a defence official said on Friday.

Trump claims Washington was a “crime-infested rat hole” before he sent troops onto its streets last week, and says Chicago and New York — two more major Democrat-led cities — are set to receive similar treatment.

“At the direction of the secretary of defence, JTF-DC members supporting the mission to lower the crime rate in our nation’s capital will soon be on mission with their service-issued weapons,” the defence official said, referring to the Joint Task Force-DC.

“The interim commanding general of the National Guard retains the authority to make any necessary force posture adjustments in coordination with the Metropolitan Police and federal law enforcement partners,” the official added.

The US Army had previously said as troops began to arrive that “weapons are available if needed, but will remain in the armoury”.

There are now more than 1,900 National Guard troops in Washington, both from the city as well as the Republican-led states of West Virginia, South Carolina, Ohio, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Tennessee, which have also sent forces.

On Friday, Trump indicated that Chicago and New York are set to receive similar treatment.

“We’re going to make our cities very, very safe,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “I think Chicago will be our next and then we’ll help with New York.”

Republican politicians, led by Trump, have claimed that the overwhelmingly Democratic US capital is overrun by crime, plagued by homelessness and financially mismanaged.

Data from Washington police, however, showed significant drops in violent crime between 2023 and 2024, though that was coming off a post-pandemic surge.

A Justice Department statement from January said based on that data, “total violent crime for 2024 in the District of Columbia is down 35 per cent from 2023 and is the lowest it has been in over 30 years”.

But Trump has accused Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser of “giving false and highly inaccurate crime figures”, threatening “bad things” including a total federal takeover of the city if she does not stop doing so. ­

Published in Dawn, August 23rd, 2025

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