The Coast Guard is adding to its force at the Gulf of Mexico and other spots in the wake of President Trump's firing of the service branch's commandant. The plan calls for stepping up the Coast Guard's presence in waterways approaching Florida and the maritime border around Alaska,
In support of President Trump's executive orders, the Coast Guard will send additional resources to maritime borders, the military branch said Tuesday.
The US Coast Guard is taking President Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant mandate seriously, announcing this week it will step up patrols in migrant-prone crossings.
The U.S. Coast Guard is increasing its presence in the waters off South Florida in the wake of President Donald Trump’s executive orders, signed his first day back in office, aiming to curb
MIAMI (Tribune News Service) — The U.S. Coast Guard said Tuesday night that it will be surging ships, boats and aircraft to South Florida and other areas of the country to bolster anti-maritime migration efforts to comply with President Donald Trump’s executive order to use the nation’s military to defend the border.
The U.S. Coast Guard has responded to executive orders from President Donald Trump to deploy assets around maritime borders and use the name “Gulf of America" when referring to Gulf of Mexico.
The U.S. Coast Guard says it is deploying assets around maritime borders in support of President Donald Trump’s executive orders.
The US has renamed the Gulf of Mexico "Gulf of America" through an executive order, though international recognition remains uncertain.
The I Marine Expeditionary Force is made up of about 53,000 active-duty troops, who are primarily stationed at Camp Pendleton, as well as at Marine Corps Air Stations Miramar and Yuma, and the Marine Corps Air/Ground Combat Center at 29 Palms, California.
The Coast Guard has called off its search for a missing teenage couple, Samantha Chun and Joey Fujioka, believed to have gone swimming one night last week off of Oahu's North Shore in Hawaii
As part of a torrent of decisions he issued hours after taking office, President Donald Trump declared that the name of America’s tallest mountain be changed from Denali to Mount McKinley, and that the Gulf of Mexico be renamed “The Gulf of America.”