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Task Force Rattlesnake members pulled from LA mission to battle state’s wildfires

"It’s like this deployment doesn’t exist"

Maggie BenZvi by Maggie BenZvi
July 7, 2025
california national guard deployment los angeles

U.S. Army Soldiers assigned to 1st Battalion, 160th Infantry Regiment, 79th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 40th Infantry Division, California Army National Guard, provide protection to federal law enforcement personnel, property, and function during a federal operation in Los Angeles, June 13, 2025. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Chase Murray.

Specialized crew members from the California National Guard were rerouted last week from Los Angeles to assist the state in battling wildfires, according to California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Teams from Task Force Rattlesnake, which comprises more than 300 Cal Guard members partnering with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE), are responsible for “clearing brush, cutting fire lines, and deploying on the frontlines of the state’s peak fire season.” Newsom and President Donald Trump have been locked in a battle over the federalization of California’s guardsmen since early June when “numerous incidents of violence and disorder” broke out involving U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations.

Soldiers from the California Army National Guard’s Task Force Rattlesnake out of Redding, California, put out a fire Sept. 1, 2020, near Scott’s Valley, California, during the CZU Lightning Complex Fire in Santa Cruz and San Mateo counties. Photo by Staff Sgt. Eddie Siguenza

Legal battles ensue

On June 7, in response to “violent protests” against ICE in Los Angeles, Trump ordered the mobilization of California National Guard soldiers under Title 10 of the U.S. Code. As guardsmen rolled out to protect ICE agents on their missions to detain undocumented immigrants across the city, a furious legal battle began.

California sued the Trump administration in federal court on June 9, claiming that the president falsely called the situation in Los Angeles a rebellion in order to unlawfully bypass Newsom’s authority over the California National Guard.

“At no point in the past three days has there been a rebellion or an insurrection,” the lawsuit stated.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta told CBS News that federalization of the National Guard “stokes the flames” of civil unrest in the city.

“The authority that the president cites only allows for the deployment of the National Guard by the president when there’s an invasion by a foreign nation, which there’s not, when there’s a rebellion to overturn leadership of the United States of America, which there’s not, or when the regular forces of the federal government cannot execute the law, which is also not present,” Bonta said.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer temporarily enjoined the Trump administration from deploying the California National Guard in Los Angeles on June 12, saying that the president’s “actions were illegal — both exceeding the scope of his statutory authority and violating the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

Breyer wrote that the administration’s claim it had unilateral authority to deploy troops against the will of a state “threatens serious injury to the constitutional balance of power between the federal and state governments [and] sets a dangerous precedent for future domestic military activity.”

On June 19, a three-judge panel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit granted the Trump administration’s request for an emergency stay of the district court’s temporary restraining order.

“Under longstanding precedent interpreting the [statute], our review of that decision must be highly deferential,” the court said. “Affording the President that deference, we conclude that it is likely that the President lawfully exercised his statutory authority.”

Additionally, the court determined that Newsom has no veto power in this circumstance. The statute says the deployment must go “through” the governor, but according to the appellate court, that simply describes a procedural mechanism and does not grant Newsom authority to override the president’s decision.

Sgt. 1st Class Andres Agag, a mortar team leader with Troop A, 1st Squadron, 18th Cavalry Regiment, California Army National Guard, pushes against the shields of other unit members while playing the role of an aggressive demonstrator during training at Joint Forces Training Base, California, on riot and crowd control techniques, June 22, 2025. Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jon Soucy

A ‘fascinating and troubling’ case

Daniel Maurer, associate professor of law at Ohio Northern University and former Army JAG officer, disagrees with the decision of the appellate court.

“They gave no attention to the lower court’s rejection of the administration’s ‘rebellion’ argument and instead concluded that Trump’s ‘unable to execute the laws with regular forces’ argument was sufficient,” he said. “Either one would be, if the facts on the ground actually merited those conclusions.”

Maurer, a 22-year veteran who held high-level positions at the Pentagon, the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, and other Army installations through the course of his military legal career, described the arguments in the case as “fascinating and troubling.”

“He has not invoked the Insurrection Act, which means the Posse Comitatus Act is still the default setting,” he said during a recent conversation with Reserve + National Guard Magazine. “That means military cannot be used for law enforcement. So then that begs the question, what exactly is the California Guard being asked to do?”

“The Department of Defense’s protection mission allows the Department of Homeland Security law enforcement personnel to focus on performing law enforcement functions and effectively enforcing immigration laws,” a spokesperson from U.S. Army North Task Force 51 Public Affairs told Reserve + National Guard via email.

Maurer worried that the line between protection and active participation might be easy to cross in the heat of the moment.

“Engagement may feel different, look different, when you’re staring down the barrel of the proverbial gun,” said Maurer. “How that actually works in practice may look very different than how it looks on paper, which is why we have JAGs embedded in units at almost every level of command to help train those soldiers on rules for the use of force and the law in situations that might be confusing.”

An officer in the California National Guard who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed that there is heavy involvement from active duty JAGs on the mission.

“They’re very thorough,” he said. “They are very deliberate in explaining what our roles are going to be when we go out there to help ICE on an operation, to make sure that we don’t blur the lines, make sure that we stay within our limits as Title 10.”

U.S. Army North emphasized that all military members are to follow the standing rules for the use of force (SRUF). “Service members are trained in de-escalation techniques and always retain the inherent right to self-defense to a hostile act or demonstrated hostile intent,” the spokesperson said. “Military members may also take actions to provide for the defense of others as well as the defense of property, using the minimum necessary force.”

‘It’s like this deployment doesn’t exist’

The anonymous guardsman was disheartened to see the legal dispute affect the execution of the mission. “At the political level, it got ugly for the National Guardsmen,” he said. “There’s a lot of pettiness between the California Military Department and the active-duty component. The California Guard basically signaled to the subordinate units that, ‘hey, because you’re on Title 10, you’re cut off from us, you’re on your own.’”

As examples, he cited guardsmen being banned from using their own armories, needing to cover California National Guard placards on their shields, and receiving no public support on social media.

“If we were deployed to the Middle East right now, the Cal Guard would be posting photos of the soldiers saying goodbye to their significant others or arriving on a plane,” he said. “But if you look at X, they’re not even mentioning it. It’s like this deployment doesn’t exist.”

He had praise for U.S. Army North stepping up to provide resources for the guardsmen, despite delays due to lack of access to pre-existing infrastructure on the ground.

When reached for comment, the California Military Department referred all queries, including those related to facilities and equipment, to U.S. Army North Task Force 51.

As of June 23, there were approximately 4,000 California National Guardsmen activated to the mission in Los Angeles. Currently, the California National Guard has orders for a 60-day deployment, set to conclude on Aug. 7.

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Tags: CAL FIRECalifornia Attorney General Rob BontaCalifornia Military DepartmentCalifornia National GuardDaniel MaurerJAGPresident Donald TrumpStanding Rules for the Use of ForceTask Force RattlesnakeTitle 10U.S. Army North
Maggie BenZvi

Maggie BenZvi

Maggie BenZvi is a freelance writer and editor who spent five years as a founding writer for Coffee or Die Magazine, focusing on service members, veterans, and their families. She is also Director of Editorial for Count on Mothers, a non-partisan organization that provides data and insights to policymakers and industry leaders on issues that matter to American mothers. She has a bachelor's degree in political science from the University of Chicago, a master's degree in human rights from Columbia University, and lives with her husband, two kids, and rescue dog in Rochester, NY. In her spare time, she enjoys hiking and yelling at Buffalo Bills games.

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