Drill Funded By DHS Simulates Nuke Attack On The US-Mexico Border

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Drill Funded By DHS Simulates Nuke Attack On The US-Mexico Border

A drill funded by the Department of Homeland Security took place yesterday in New Mexico.

The drill simulated an emergency involving the detonation of a ‘weapon of mass destruction’ on the US-Mexico border and how authorities would deal with a mass migration of about 3,000 people, reported KFox14

InfoWars reports: The drill, which involved numerous police and fire departments as well as the American Red Cross and the Salvation Army, included an exercise where thousands of people were in need of decontamination and oxygen.

The news station featured an interview with a resident who said he would be happy to participate in a drill where police went door to door to evacuate people under a simulated emergency.

“Maybe have some [mock] evacuations. Have them come to the houses, knock on doors and have us go out someplace,” said Gill Cadena.

The sheriff’s office said that the Santa Teresa High School would be used as a temporary facility to house victims under such an emergency.

The scenario of thousands of people streaming across the border from Mexico in the context of a national emergency has been a persistent concern for the DHS.

In 2011, the federal agency directed ICE to prepare for a mass influx of immigrants into the United States, calling for the plan to deal with the “shelter” and “processing” of large numbers of people.

“DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano, according to a statement by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, recently directed ICE to develop a national-level mass migration plan, ” reported GSN. “The plan will outline how to address the health care, sheltering, processing, transition and disposition of large numbers of undocumented individuals who might arrive in the U.S. as the result of a mass migration.”

Part of the preparations for sheltering and processing an influx of people includes the construction and manning of detention camps.

In 2006, Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root was contracted by Homeland Security to build detention centers designed to deal with “an emergency influx of immigrants into the U.S,” or the rapid development of unspecified “new programs” that would require large numbers of people to be interned.

Niamh Harris
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