These are excerpts from the chapter entitled "Operation Wetback":
Operation “Wetback”
“Under my administration, anyone who illegally crosses the border will be detained until they are removed out of our country and back to the country from which they came. And they’ll be brought great distances. We’re not dropping them right across. They learned that. President Eisenhower. They’d drop them across, right across, and they’d come back. And across. Then when they flew them to a long distance, all of a sudden that was the end. We will take them great distances. But we will take them to the country where they came from, O.K.?” (Trump, 2016)
Donald Trump (Campaign Speech)
The quote above was from a campaign speech given by President Trump here in Arizona, where I live. I think because the speech was given here, I had a heightened interest in what he said. One thing, in particular, stood out in this quote. It was a reference to President Eisenhower. I wanted to know what the Eisenhower reference was about.
The reference was to “Operation Wetback,” which was conducted in 1955. Operation Wetback was “the biggest mass deportation of undocumented workers in United States history. As many as 1.3 million people may have been swept up in the Eisenhower-era campaign with a racist name, which was designed to root out undocumented Mexicans from American society.” (Blakemore, 2018)
Operation Wetback used “military-style tactics” to deport both illegal immigrants and American citizens. (Blakemore, 2018)
Here’s an outline from History.com of the history of Operation Bracero and timeline that led up to Operation Wetback:
The historical account of Operation Bracero is fascinating to me. Despite all the historical racist rhetoric about Mexicans, the truth was that U.S. farmers benefitted from illegal immigrant labor and encouraged it, despite the legal vehicle set up in Operation Bracero, to provide immigrant labor.
As a non-Latino, all my life, I have been led to believe “wetback” to be a racist and disparaging term to describe Mexicans illegally crossing the border. The truth is that these “illegals” were encouraged to cross by South Texas farmers. These farmers even went as far as “hiring armed guards to fend off Border Patrol officers” to keep their illegal immigrant workers. (Blakemore, 2018) It was only when there became “too many” illegal immigrants that there became a “need” to round them up and deport them.
I went into great detail to describe Operation Wetback so that you can understand the historical backdrop behind President Trump’s words. For the president to say that he would repeat a program like this and even do it better, without mentioning the horrible racist undertones that accompanied it, the fact that U.S. citizens were also deported or that people died in the harsh military-style treatment tactics is unconscionable.
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