The military now controls zones at southern border. Here’s how that looks to locals.

For locals in southern New Mexico and western Texas, the entrance of a new neighbor – the U.S. military – is stirring up a mixture of hope, distrust, and uncertainty. While some embrace more ways to deter unauthorized migration, others raise questions around the logistics and legality of new military zones.

More than 100,000 acres of federal land along the U.S.-Mexico border in this region has been transferred to the U.S. Army in what it calls new “national defense areas.” The military says it will detain people in these zones for trespassing, including unauthorized immigrants and U.S. citizens. It hasn’t detained anyone so far but has helped the Border Patrol detect over 150 unauthorized trespassers, a military spokesperson said. The creation of these zones is the first of its kind, and comes at a time when illegal border crossings are at their lowest levels in at least 25 years.

The development is part of a military surge directed by President Donald Trump since he declared a national emergency at the southern border on Jan. 20. It’s also emblematic of his whole-of-government crackdown on illegal immigration, forging partnerships across a variety of departments.

Why We Wrote This

Previous presidents have called the military to the U.S. southern border to support immigration agencies. The Trump administration’s novel expansion of the military’s role at the border raises legal questions and uncertainty among local residents.

Border Patrol encounters, a proxy for illegal crossings, swelled to record highs under the Biden administration along the southern border. Those apprehensions eventually fell following stepped-up enforcement from Mexico and narrowed access to asylum. They’ve plunged further – precipitously – as Mr. Trump’s illegal immigration crackdown creates harsher consequences, such as foreign prison cells, for those who cross illegally. April’s 8,383 encounters were down 93% from the same month last year.

Pecan trees grow in an orchard just feet away from the U.S. southern border fence May 2, 2025, near Fabens, Texas.

The Bureau of Land Management gave around 109,651 acres of federal land along New Mexico’s southern border to the Army in April through an emergency transfer. Gen. Gregory Guillot, commander of U.S. Northern Command, said the arrangement will “ensure those who illegally trespass in the New Mexico National Defense Area are handed over to Customs and Border Protection or our other law enforcement partners.”

Earlier this month, the military said a second national defense area was established in western Texas. Around 2,000 acres were transferred from the International Boundary and Water Commission, including part of the Rio Grande. Both transfers will last three years.


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U.S. Bureau of Land Management, Stars and Stripes

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Using the military in this way to assist with immigration enforcement at the border “would be a first,” says Chris Mirasola, assistant professor at the University of Houston Law Center. Legally, he says, “The details here are going to matter a lot.”

The military’s new defense areas

Since 1878, the Posse Comitatus Act has generally prohibited the government’s use of the military for domestic law enforcement. Across Republican and Democratic administrations, military units have long offered support, like surveillance and intelligence, to immigration agencies.

Children participate in a march in support of immigrants’ rights, organized by the Border Network for Human Rights and other local groups, May 3, 2025, in El Paso, Texas.

The Trump administration’s creation of national defense zones along the border may be an effort to sidestep the law and militarize the border, critics say. The Department of Defense set up the new areas as extensions of preexisting Army installations in eastern Arizona and western Texas.

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