ICE Is A Paramilitary Force, And Those Don’t End Well
from the seems-bad dept
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
As the operations of Immigration and Customs Enforcement have intensified over the past year, politicians and journalists alike have begun referring to ICE as a “paramilitary force.”
Rep. John Mannion, a New York Democrat, called ICE “a personal paramilitary unit of the president.” Journalist Radley Balko, who wrote a book about how American police forces have been militarized, has argued that President Donald Trump was using the force “the way an authoritarian uses a paramilitary force, to carry out his own personal grudges, to inflict pain and violence, and discomfort on people that he sees as his political enemies.” And New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie characterized ICE as a “virtual secret police” and “paramilitary enforcer of despotic rule.”
All this raises a couple of questions: What are paramilitaries? And is ICE one?
Defining paramilitaries
As a government professor who studies policing and state security forces, I believe it’s clear that ICE meets many but not all of the most salient definitions. It’s worth exploring what those are and how the administration’s use of ICE compares with the ways paramilitaries have been deployed in other countries.
The term paramilitary is commonly used in two ways. The first refers to highly militarized police forces, which are an official part of a nation’s security forces. They typically have access to military-grade weaponry and equipment, are highly centralized with a hierarchical command structure, and deploy in large formed units to carry out domestic policing.
These “paramilitary police,” such as the French Gendarmerie, India’s Central Reserve Police Force or Russia’s Internal Troops, are modeled on regular military forces.
The second definition denotes less formal and often more partisan armed groups that operate outside of the state’s regular security sector. Sometimes these groups, as with the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia, emerge out of community self-defense efforts; in other cases, they are established by the government or receive government support, even though they lack official status. Political scientists also call these groups “pro-government militias” in order to convey both their political orientation in support of the government and less formal status as an irregular force.
They typically receive less training than regular state forces, if any. How well equipped they are can vary a great deal. Leaders may turn to these informal or unofficial paramilitaries because they are less expensive than regular forces, or because they can help them evade accountability for violent repression.
Many informal paramilitaries are engaged in regime maintenance, meaning they preserve the power of current rulers through repression of political opponents and the broader public. They may share partisan affiliations or ethnic ties with prominent political leaders or the incumbent political party and work in tandem to carry out political goals.
In Haiti, President François “Papa Doc” Duvalier’s Tonton Macouts provided a prime example of this second type of paramilitary. After Duvalier survived a coup attempt in 1970, he established the Tonton Macouts as a paramilitary counterweight to the regular military. Initially a ragtag, undisciplined but highly loyal force, it became the central instrument through which the Duvalier regime carried out political repression, surveilling, harassing, detaining, torturing and killing ordinary Haitians.
Is ICE a paramilitary?
The recent references to ICE in the U.S. as a “paramilitary force” are using the term in both senses, viewing the agency as both a militarized police force and tool for repression.
There is no question that ICE fits the definition of a paramilitary police force. It is a police force under the control of the federal government, through the Department of Homeland Security, and it is heavily militarized, having adopted the weaponry, organization, operational patterns and cultural markers of the regular military. Some other federal forces, such as Customs and Border Patrol, or CBP, also fit this definition.
The data I have collected on state security forces show that approximately 30% of countries have paramilitary police forces at the federal or national level, while more than 80% have smaller militarized units akin to SWAT teams within otherwise civilian police.
The United States is nearly alone among established democracies in creating a new paramilitary police force in recent decades. Indeed, the creation of ICE in the U.S. following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, is one of just four instances I’ve found since 1960 where a democratic country created a new paramilitary police force, the others being Honduras, Brazil and Nigeria.
ICE and CBP also have some, though not all, of the characteristics of a paramilitary in the second sense of the term, referring to forces as repressive political agents. These forces are not informal; they are official agents of the state. However, their officers are less professional, receive less oversight and are operating in more overtly political ways than is typical of both regular military forces and local police in the United States.
The lack of professionalism predates the current administration. In 2014, for instance, CBP’s head of internal affairs described the lowering of standards for post-9/11 expansion as leading to the recruitment of thousands of officers “potentially unfit to carry a badge and gun.”
This problem has only been exacerbated by the rapid expansion undertaken by the Trump administration. ICE has added approximately 12,000 new recruits – more than doubling its size in less than a year – while substantially cutting the length of the training they receive.
ICE and CBP are not subject to the same constitutional restrictions that apply to other law enforcement agencies, such as the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on unreasonable search and seizure; both have gained exemptions from oversight intended to hold officers accountable for excessive force. CBP regulations, for instance, allow it to search and seize people’s property without a warrant or the “probable cause” requirement imposed on other forces within 100 miles, or about 161 kilometers, of the border.
In terms of partisan affiliations, Trump has cultivated immigration security forces as political allies, an effort that appears to have been successful. In 2016, the union that represents ICE officers endorsed Trump’s campaign with support from more than 95% of its voting members. Today, ICE recruitment efforts increasingly rely on far-right messaging to appeal to political supporters.
Both ICE and CBP have been deployed against political opponents in nonimmigration contexts, including Black Lives Matter protests in Washington, D.C., and Portland, Oregon, in 2020. They have also gathered data, according to political scientist Elizabeth F. Cohen, to “surveil citizens’ political beliefs and activities – including protest actions they have taken on issues as far afield as gun control – in addition to immigrants’ rights.”
In these ways, ICE and CBP do bear some resemblance to the informal paramilitaries used in many countries to carry out political repression along partisan and ethnic lines, even though they are official agents of the state.
Why this matters
An extensive body of research shows that more militarized forms of policing are associated with higher rates of police violence and rights violations, without reducing crime or improving officer safety.
Studies have also found that more militarized police forces are harder to reform than less-militarized law enforcement agencies. The use of such forces can also create tensions with both the regular military and civilian police, as currently appears to be happening with ICE in Minneapolis.
The ways in which federal immigration forces in the United States resemble informal paramilitaries in other countries – operating with less effective oversight, less competent recruits and increasingly entrenched partisan identity – make all these issues more intractable. Which is why, I believe, many commentators have surfaced the term paramilitary and are using it as a warning.
Erica De Bruin, Associate Professor of Government at Hamilton College
Filed Under: cbp, donald trump, ice, militarized police, paramilitary forces


Comments on “ICE Is A Paramilitary Force, And Those Don’t End Well”
They leave cars running from their victims in the road. We have to find tows and clear it.
They deploy tear gas taking people from parks. We have to clean up and help those hurt.
They harass and stalk schools, taking kids with impunity. They approach our school patrols pretending to be locals to get info.
They kill and are protected.
They do not care if the people they take are actually what they’re told to look for, they just take brown people and those that piss them off.
They took Native-Americans and have not returned them.
This is ethnic cleansing and it is done at the behest of a white supremacist administration hunting brown people.
This has not stopped. There is no draw down.
Please stop arguing over the KIND of fascism this is and start rattling cages in DC to abolish this bullshit.
This is not a fucking drill.
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i appreciate your posts outside of the the barking orders bits which (especially here) are stupid and counterproductive.
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This motherfucker can’t figure out why I’m salty.
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This.
It’s not a warning. It’s a fact. And the writings have been on the wall for many, many years now.
ICE is to Trump as was the SA was to Hitler.
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Let’s hope Trump at least has the courtesy to do a Night of Long Knives.
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Things didn’t improve in Germany after that.
The word you’re looking for here is “Gestapo.”
Etymologically, “paramilitary” means “against the military”. It was armed groups fighting against oppressive regimes (the ones that use military force on citizens), but not necessary militia, and weren’t mercenaries (i.e. professionals privately hired).
Many paramilitaries polices are specialized military forces (like SWAT and French GIGN) trained for delicate civil intervention, unlike armies.
ICE cannot be described of any of theses categories, and seems more like wildcats with vague orders and a lazy chain of command, but with a big budget and some few fancy weapons (even they don’t use them a lot).
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Except etymologically, para- means besides or next to, not against. Paramilitary generally means an informal military, rather than an official national military. And ICE and CBP’s Meal Team Six tacticool cosplay equipment is definitely paramilitary in nature.
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Think about “paramedicine”, as in paramedics—who regularly work with hospital-based medical practioners, not against them.
Or maybe they’re a hybrid? A combination of Big Brother’s agents, a military force and “double oh” agents of the King Trump’s secret service, each of them with the requisite license to kill.
It’s a law enforcement force, actually. Y’know, enforcing the law.
You just don’t want the law enforced.
STFU, deportations will continue until morale improves.
ICE doesn’t know they are being deployed as sacrificial lambs to trigger the Insurrection Act.
What Trump doesn’t know or care about is that actually using the Insurrection Act may well be the one thing that gets him an actual impeachment and removal before 2028.
At some point before the country indulges an Irish Troubles slide into a Mad Max regional fragmentation, the progressives need to develop and force a mirror of Project 2025 as a Project 2032 on the next Democratic nominee. They won’t be able to stop them from cherrypicking from the policy options meant to be a comprehensive and revolutionary rework of the Federal Government and US Constitution to abolish right wing politics entirely, and may still be stuck with a corporatist nominee that won’t fully commit to taxing billionaires until forced.
But it’s going to be significantly better than the alternative of trying to start 10-15 years too late building hyperlocal community ground games to resist a centralized fascist government that invariably doesn’t have the manpower or control of the economy to hold this much ground regardless of how much surveillance and information processing they deploy.
There are extremely good reasons the moderate Democratic and Progressive movements are adamantly non-violent, but they are going to have to have a separated second half of Project 2032 hidden away as a ‘break glass in emergency’ failsafe plan if States start to secede in regions and casualties start to mount. That half of a policy document would need to be hidden from a Democratic Nominee until such time as they have clearly won an election and are president-elect being illegally withheld from inauguration and likely handed to the VP-elect first.
Short of doing exactly all of the above the opposition hoping to protest and vote their way out of this are engaging in wishful thinking. Anything in the second half may never see the light of day but the first half is a necessary complete 180 on Project 2025 with appropriate reforms or dismantling of traditional right wing campaign finance/donation pipelines and forced bankruptcy and dissolution of certain large billionaire/trillionaire corporations holding government contracts.
As a counterpoint, I would remind readers that the WWII resistance forces in Germany, occupied France, and elsewhere were often organized in paramilitary fashion. It is a tool, and while seeing such tools in the hands of an oppressor is a bad sign, it does not mean that such a tool is only able to be used to oppress.
ICE coming out in a show of force isn’t bad because of the show of force, but because it’s ICE and their raison d’etre is to target foreigners, immigrants, and “the yucky races” for persecution.
Anyone in a repub state?
Mine is already preparing for DHS/Fubar.
They are requiring ICE to wearing masks, and wear Body cams.
But what can the state Do? Against the Fed and its police agencies?
So what are the odds, the Repub states Kick ICE out?
Re: Just to ask
I do know the answer.
WHO is picking the states to attack? IN WINTER?
Start with community. Start with your neighbors.