Published: July 28, 2006 12:14 am

201st to leave for border security

By ALLEN BLAIR / The Independent

Ashland — Soldiers with Ashland’s 201st Engineer Battalion will leave this weekend for a border security mission in Arizona.

Through Saturday, units from here, Olive Hill, Cynthiana, as well as troops with the 130th Engineers out of Madisonville, will muster for their summer training — this time answering a presidential duty call, too, said Capt. James Richmond with the 201st’s headquarters.

“So the guys feel a sense of urgency,” Richmond said. “I think the troops are really excited to do something to support the president’s initiative.”

Kentucky pledged a 670-troop force after President Bush in May requested states bring 6,000 National Guard troops to the U.S.-Mexico border to boost illegal immigrant and smuggling patrols.

Officials said Kentucky’s force would be sent in rotations, said troops would serve three-week stints, and that their missions would coincide with their annual training requirements.

Specifically, the engineers will help build fences and roads for U.S. law enforcement agencies there, the Guard said.

Only a limited number of state troops, none with the 201st, will be involved with actual enforcement patrols.

For the local soldiers, the mission’s similar to a California training the battalion undertook two years ago, Capt. Richmond said.

“We’ll be doing what engineers do,” he said. “And it will greatly augment the border patrol.”

For example, at a work site of the 201st’s sister unit — the 206th Engineer Battaltin that’s already there — a newly built fence helped border agents nab smugglers loaded down with 9,000 pounds of marijuana, Richmond said.

“It’s important to start shutting these lines down, and the guys are excited to help do that,” he said. “It’s really a good mission; a good use of our services.”

More than 200 soldiers with the battalion will start gathering this evening, then proceed with “soldier readiness processing” through Saturday, Richmond said.

Following Sunday breakfast, they will bus to the Tri-State Airport and board a commercial flight to Tucson, Ariz.

“From there, we’ll spread out the entire 290 miles of border,” he said.

Troops will break up by company, with Company A at Douglas for fence construction and road improvement; Company B and the 130th at Nogales for work on a temporary vehicle barrier; the headquarters company operating out of two towns as well as building roads and fences; and Company C in Yuma for fence construction. [b](Can anyone tell me if these areas are very dangerous?)[/b]
The soldiers should return home about Aug. 19.

http://www.dailyindependent.com/local/l ... 01456.html