Ever since President Trump seized management of the California Nationwide Guard and deployed 1000’s of troops to Los Angeles, calls from distressed troopers and their households have been pouring in to the GI Rights Hotline.
Some Nationwide Guard members and their family members have referred to as to say they have been agonizing over the legality of the deployment, which is being litigated in federal court docket, in keeping with Steve Woolford, a useful resource counselor for the hotline, which gives confidential counseling for service members.
Others phoned in to say the Guard ought to play no half in federal immigration raids and that they anxious about immigrant relations who would possibly get swept up.
“They don’t want to deport their uncle or their wife or their brother-in-law,” Woolford stated. “… Some of the language people have used is: ‘I joined to defend my country, and that’s really important to me — but No. 1 is family, and this is actually a threat to my family.’ ”
Though active-duty troopers are largely restricted from publicly commenting on their orders, veterans’ advocates who’re in direct contact with troops and their households say they’re deeply involved in regards to the morale of the roughly 4,100 Nationwide Guard members and 700 U.S. Marines deployed to Los Angeles amid protests in opposition to immigration raids.
In interviews with The Occasions, spokespeople for six veterans’ advocacy organizations stated many troops have been troubled by the task, which they seen as overtly political and as pitting them in opposition to fellow People.
Advocates additionally stated they fear in regards to the home deployment’s potential results on army retention and recruitment, which lately rebounded after a number of years during which varied branches failed to fulfill recruiting objectives.
“What we’re hearing from our families is: ‘This is not what we signed up for,’ ” stated Brandi Jones, organizing director for the Safe Households Initiative, a nonprofit that advocates for army spouses, youngsters and veterans. “Our families are very concerned about morale.”
Horse riders make their well past U.S. Marines close to the Paramount Residence Depot through the Human Rights Unity Experience on June 22, 2025.
(Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Occasions)
Janessa Goldbeck, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran and chief government of the nonprofit Vet Voice Basis, stated that, among the many former Marine Corps colleagues she has spoken to in latest weeks, “There’s been a universal expression of, ‘This is an unnecessary deployment given the operational situation.’”
“The fact that the LAPD and local elected officials repeatedly said deploying the National Guard and active duty Marines would be escalatory or inflammatory and the president of the United States chose to ignore that and deploy them anyway puts the young men and women in uniform in an unnecessarily political position,“ she said.
She added that the “young men and women who raised their right hand to serve their country” did “not sign up to police their own neighbors.”
Trump has repeatedly stated Los Angeles could be “burning to the ground” if he had not despatched troops to assist quell the protests.
“We saved Los Angeles by having the military go in,” Trump advised reporters final week. “And the second night was much better. The third night was nothing much. And the fourth night, nobody bothered even coming.”
The troops in Los Angeles wouldn’t have the authority to arrest protesters and have been deployed solely to defend federal features, property and personnel, in keeping with the army’s U.S. Northern Command.
The personnel’s “quality of life,” the assertion continued, is “addressed through the continued improvement of living facilities, balanced work-rest cycles, and access to chaplains, licensed clinical social workers, and behavioral health experts.”
U.S. Marines guard the Federal Constructing on the nook of Veteran Avenue and Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles.
(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Occasions)
It’s unclear whether or not the Nationwide Guard troops, federalized below Title 10 of the USA Code, had been paid as of this weekend. Process Power 51 advised The Occasions on Saturday that the troopers who acquired 60-day activation orders on June 7 “will start receiving pay by end of the month” and that “those that have financial concerns have access to resources such as Army Emergency Relief,” a nonprofit charitable group.
U.S. Rep. Derek Tran (D-Orange), an Military veteran and member of the Home Armed Providers Committee, stated he has requested Protection Secretary Pete Hegseth “for his plan to manage the logistics of this military activation, but he has failed to provide me with any clear answers.”
Tran stated in an announcement to The Occasions that “the pattern of disrespect this Administration has shown our Veterans and active-duty military personnel is disgraceful, and I absolutely think it will negatively impact our ability to attract and retain the troops that keep America’s military capacity the envy of the world.”
Process Power 51 advised The Occasions that the troopers within the images “were not actively on mission, so they were taking time to rest.” On the time, the assertion continued, “it was deemed too dangerous for them to travel to better accommodations.”
Since then, in keeping with Process Power 51, the army has contracted “for sleeping tents, latrines, showers, hand-washing stations, hot meals for breakfast, dinner and a late-night meal, and full laundry service.”
“Most of the contracts have been fulfilled at this time,” the army stated.
“Under President Trump’s leadership military morale is sky high because our troops know they finally have a patriotic Commander-In-Chief who will always have their backs,” Jackson wrote.
Troops have been posted outdoors federal buildings in an more and more quiet downtown Civic Middle — a number of sq. blocks inside the 500-square-mile metropolis.
At burn zone examine factors, Nationwide Guard members have been usually noticed chatting with locals, a few of whom introduced meals and water and thanked them for conserving looters away.
However downtown, troopers have stood stone-faced behind riot shields as livid protesters have flipped them off, sworn at them and questioned their integrity.
Members of the California Nationwide Guard stand by as 1000’s take part within the “No Kings” protest demonstration in downtown Los Angeles on June 14.
(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Occasions)
Through the boisterous “No Kings” protests on June 14, a girl held up a mirror to troops outdoors the downtown Federal Constructing with the phrases: “This is not your job. It’s YOUR LEGACY.” On a quiet Wednesday morning, a UCLA professor, standing solo outdoors the Federal Constructing, held up an indication to half a dozen Guard members studying: “It’s Called the Constitution You F—ers.”
James M. Branum, an legal professional who works with the Army Legislation Process Power of the Nationwide Attorneys Guild, stated that, in latest weeks, the duty power has acquired two to a few instances greater than the standard quantity of referrals and direct calls. The upward pattern started after Trump got here into workplace, with folks calling in regards to the struggle in Gaza and elevated army deployment to the U.S. southern border — however calls spiked after troops have been despatched to Los Angeles, he stated.
“A lot of these folks joined because they want to fight who they see as the terrorists,” Branum stated. “They want to fight enemies of the United States … they never envisioned they would be deployed to the streets of the United States.”
In his June 7 memo federalizing the Nationwide Guard, Trump referred to as for his or her deployment in locations the place protests in opposition to federal immigration enforcement have been occurring or “are likely to occur.” The memo doesn’t specify Los Angeles or California.
California officers have sued the president over the deployment, arguing in a federal grievance that the Trump administration’s directives are “phrased in an ambiguous manner and suggest potential misuse of the federalized National Guard.”
“Guardsmen across the country are on high alert, [thinking] that they could be pulled into this,” stated Goldbeck, with the Vet Voice Basis.
Jones, with the Safe Households Initiative, stated army households “are very nervous in this moment.”
“They are so unprepared for what’s happening, and they’re very afraid to speak publicly,” she stated.
Jones stated she had been speaking with the spouse of 1 Nationwide Guard member who stated she had lately suffered a stroke. The lady stated her husband had been on Household and Medical Depart Act depart from his civilian job to look after her. The lady stated his depart was not acknowledged by the army for the home task. He was deployed to Los Angeles, and she or he has been struggling to discover a caregiver, Jones stated.
Jones stated her personal husband, an active-duty Marine, deployed to Iraq in 2004 with the 2nd Battalion, seventh Marine Regiment primarily based at Twentynine Palms — the identical infantry unit now mustered in Los Angeles.
The unit was exhausting hit in Afghanistan in 2008, with no less than 20 Marines killed and its excessive price of suicide after that 12 months’s deployment extremely publicized.
Jones stated she was shocked to study the battalion — nicknamed the Struggle Canine — was being deployed to Los Angeles.
“I said, ‘Wait, it’s 2/7 they’re sending in? The War Dogs? Releasing them on Los Angeles?’ It was nuts for me,” Jones stated. “To hear that unit affiliated with this — for my family that’s been serving for two decades, it brings up a lot.”
The Los Angeles deployment comes at a time of 12 months when the California Nationwide Guard is commonly engaged in wildfire suppression operations — a coincidence that has raised issues amongst some officers.
On June 18, Capt. Rasheedah Bilal was activated by the California Nationwide Guard and assigned to Sacramento, the place she is backfilling in an operational position for Joint Process Power Rattlesnake, a Nationwide Guard firefighting unit that’s now understaffed as a result of roughly half its members are deployed to Los Angeles.
“That’s a large amount to pull off that mission … so you have to activate additional Guardsmen to cover on those missions,” stated Bilal, talking in her capability as government director of the nonprofit Nationwide Guard Assn. of California.
Nationwide Guard members are primarily part-time troopers, who maintain civilian jobs or attend school till referred to as into energetic obligation. In California — a state liable to wildfires, earthquakes and floods — they get referred to as into obligation lots, she stated.
Lots of the similar Nationwide Guard troopers in downtown Los Angeles are the identical ones who simply completed a 120-day activation for wildfire restoration, she stated.
“You have the state response to fire and then federal activation? It becomes a strain,” Bilal stated.
“They haven’t complained,” she added. “Soldiers vote with their feet. We’re mostly quiet professionals and take a lot of pride in our job. [But] you can only squeeze so much of a lemon before it is dry. You can only pound on the California Guardsmen without it affecting things like retention and recruiting.”