The uniforms arrived before the answers. Families who fled soldiers in their home countries now watch Marines roll into ICE detention centers, told they’re “only” there for support. Fear spreads faster than any official press release. Civil rights advocates see a dangerous shift: immigration treated as war, not refuge. A temporary move with a precedent that could outl

What happens when the same uniforms that symbolize war and national defense appear at the gates of immigrant detention centers? Even if Marines never touch a detainee, their presence sends a message: this is not a humanitarian challenge, but a security threat to be contained. For parents who escaped military crackdowns abroad, the sight of U.S. troops near their children is not reassuring—it is retraumatizing.

Officials insist this is about logistics, not law enforcement, yet the line between the two blurs once soldiers share space with cages and concrete. Critics warn that once the military is normalized in immigration spaces, it will be easier to call them back, each time for “just a little more help.” Long after this deployment ends, the images will remain, reshaping how America sees migrants—and how migrants learn to fear America.

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