Floating barrier tests limits of state power


Migrants standing in the Rio Grande behind concertina wire as they try to enter the US from Mexico. — AP

IN the final months of the Trump administration, a new plan to seal off the United States’ southern border started gaining steam: a floating water barrier to discourage migrants from trying to cross from Mexico.

The idea never materialised. But three years later, Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott has put it into action.

The state installed a floating barrier of bright orange, wrecking ball-sized buoys on the Rio Grande last month, stretching roughly the length of three football fields.

It is an untested strategy of deterring migrants along the US border that is already fortified in wide sections by high steel fencing and razor wire.

The rollout of the buoys on the Rio Grande has thrust Texas into a new standoff with the Biden administration over immigration on the state’s 1,930km border with Mexico.

The Justice Department has asked a federal court to order Texas to remove the buoys, saying the water barrier poses humanitarian and environmental concerns along the international boundary.

Abbott has waved off the lawsuit as he is cheered on by conservative allies who are eager for cases that would empower states to take on more aggressive immigration measures.

That legal battle comes as President Joe Biden’s administration defends a new asylum rule in court.

Two weeks ago, a federal judge blocked the policy that the administration sees as a way of controlling the southern border while maintaining avenues for migrants to pursue valid asylum claims. The judge’s order has not taken effect yet.

Like other pieces of Abbott’s multibillion-dollar border mission known as Operation Lone Star, the floating barrier picks up where former President Donald Trump left off.

In 2020, Mark Morgan was the acting commissioner of US Customs and Border Protection.

He told The Associated Press last month that he approved plans to deploy the same water barrier on the Rio Grande that Texas is now using.

Workers assembling large buoys to be used as a border barrier along the banks of the RioWorkers assembling large buoys to be used as a border barrier along the banks of the Rio

That August, the Army Corps of Engineers posted a solicitation for a “buoy barrier system” that would “mitigate the ability of swimmers to climb” over or under it.

Morgan called it the “water wall”.

“It was really designed to be a stopgap to utilise in high-flow areas where we didn’t have a physical structure in place,” Morgan said.

Spokespersons for CBP did not immediately address questions about the 2020 plans.

The federal International Boundary and Water Commission, whose jurisdiction includes boundary demarcation and overseeing US-Mexico treaties, said it didn’t get a heads-up from Texas about the state’s floating barrier.

Experts have raised concerns of the buoys changing the river’s flow or of objects getting caught in them.

Morgan, who is now a visiting fellow with the conservative Heritage Foundation, said environmental reviews under Trump raised issues with the barrier but said he could not recall specifics.

“Just like the physical wall itself, right, there are a variety of things you can do to accommodate that,” he said.

It is unclear how quickly a federal judge in Texas will rule on the Biden administration’s lawsuit.

Until then, roughly 305m of barrier will remain on a portion of the Rio Grande that separates Eagle Pass, Texas, and Piedras Negras, Mexico.

The Mexican government has also raised concerns about the barrier, saying it may violate 1944 and 1970 treaties on boundaries and water.

The Biden administration’s lawsuit accuses Texas of violating the federal Rivers and Harbor Act.

Vanita Gupta, a US associate attorney-general, said Texas “flouted federal law” and risks damaging US foreign policy.

The buoys are the latest escalation in Texas’ border mission that also includes National Guard patrols, jails that house migrants arrested on trespassing charges and busloads of asylum-seekers sent to Democratic-led cities across the United States. Abbott has tried to position America’s biggest red state as the foremost antagonist to the Biden administration’s border policies.

Last year, Abbott easily won a third term in a campaign that focused on border policies.

In a letter to Biden lst month, Abbott said the state was acting within its rights to protects its borders.

“Texas will see you in court, Mr President,” he wrote.

He said it was the Biden administration that was putting putting migrants at risk by not doing more to dissuade them from making the journey to the United States. — AP

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