Guardsmen
Patrolling DC Will Soon Be Armed, Pentagon Says
Trump speaks with members of law enforcement and National
Guard soldiers, Thursday, August 21, 2025, in Washington DC. (AP
Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Posted: August 23, 2025 --- Military.com | By Rebecca
Kheel
Published August 22, 2025, at 2:48pm
ET
National
Guardsmen patrolling Washington, D.C., as part of Trump's
purported crackdown on crime will soon be armed, the Pentagon said Friday. "At
the direction of the secretary of defense, 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, consistent with their mission and
training," the Pentagon said in an emailed statement, using an acronym for
Joint Task Force-District of Columbia.
The statement provided few other details on
the decision to arm Guardsmen, including what weapons they will carry, when
exactly they will start carrying weapons, and why they need to be armed. Asked
separately about the decision, a spokesperson for the task force would say only
that they were aware of reports but that, as of right now, Guardsmen are not
armed.
The decision to allow Guardsmen to carry weapons on the streets of D.C. marks an escalation in Trump's policing takeover of the capital. When Trump first announced he would deploy the Guard in D.C., officials had stressed that troops would not be armed. Incorrectly claiming D.C. is facing a crime wave, Trump last week mobilized 800 members of the D.C. National Guard, deployed hundreds of federal law enforcement members on city streets, and moved to federalize the local D.C. police force.
The Guard deployment has since ballooned to about 2,000 troops as Republican governors from 6 states have sent hundreds of members of their National Guards to the capital. Guardsmen have mostly been patrolling tourist areas not known for high crime rates, such as the National Mall and a transit hub near Capitol Hill called Union Station, as well as several Metro stations throughout the city.
In recent days, they have also been spotted
expanding across the city in areas popular for dining and socializing, such as
near the Nationals Park baseball stadium. In its statement on the decision to
authorize carrying weapons, the Pentagon said the commander of the D.C.
National Guard "retains the authority to make any necessary force posture
adjustments in coordination with the D.C. Metropolitan Police and federal law
enforcement partners."
"The D.C. National Guard remains
committed to safeguarding the District of Columbia and serving those who live,
work and visit the District," the statement said. The federal takeover of
D.C. has become a major talking point of the Trump administration, with
Attorney General Pam Bondi posting daily updates on social media about total
arrests and top administration officials doing photo ops with troops and
police.
Trump himself, after suggesting earlier in
the day he would be going on patrol with police and troops, on Thursday evening
briefly visited a Park Police station to address federal law enforcement
officers and Guardsmen and hand out pizza. "You got to be strong. You got
to be tough," Trump, who also suggested the Guard deployment could last 6
months, told the group. "You got to do your job. Whatever it takes to do
your job."
Trump has also suggested he will continue
escalating by deploying troops to other Democratic-run cities such as Chicago
and New York City and possibly use active-duty troops. "We haven't had to
bring in the regular military, which we're willing to do if we have to,"
Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Friday. "And after we do this,
we'll go to another location, and we'll make it safe also."
Active-duty troops are generally banned
from conducting law enforcement on U.S. soil under a law called the Posse
Comitatus Act, though there are exceptions such as invoking a separate law
called the Insurrection Act. During his first term, Trump toyed with invoking
the Insurrection Act amid racial justice protests in 2020, but was talked out
of it at that time.
The D.C. deployment follows a pattern of
Trump increasingly pulling the military into his political agenda while
claiming to be combating lawlessness. Earlier this year, Trump deployed
thousands of Guardsmen and hundreds of Marines to Los Angeles in response to
protests against immigration raids, a move that sparked a lawsuit by state
officials arguing he usurped their authority over the Guard.
Local D.C. officials have pushed back on
Trump's characterization of the city as crime ridden and sued over the attempt
to take over the police force, but have walked a finer line on the deployment
of the Guard, which Trump has the power to do unilaterally in D.C. since the
district is not a state.
At a news conference Monday, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser deflected a question about reports that the administration was considering arming Guardsmen, but she has stressed that Guardsmen should not be used for law enforcement. "They have to be used on mission-specific items that benefit the nation," she said at a Wednesday news conference. "I don't think you have armed militia in the nation's capital."
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