Jade Helm 15 exercises kick off in Texas amid strong suspicion
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As the US army began its latest training operation in Texas on Wednesday, a pervasive concern of a pending military invasion rippled across the state:
鈥淚t鈥檚 here,鈥 wrote .
While news reports poke fun at the conspiracy theorists who have been casting suspicion over Operation Jade Helm 15 鈥 hypotheses that include the looming imposition of martial law and the building of a military tunnel under Walmart 鈥 conversations with many residents show their ideas have gained steady and surprising traction in many communities.
Despite officials鈥 attempts to quell public concern about the Jade Helm program 鈥 a Special Operations exercise that was announced in March and is slated to run across several western and southwestern states 鈥 apprehensions among some residents run high.
鈥淲hile such views represent the fringes of American political opinion, they represent a broader suspicion of the federal government that has run deep in Texas for years,鈥 reports Reuters.
One resident of Christoval, a small Texas town of about 500 people, told The New York Times his friend had started to hide them. Another man, a school district superintendent, described seeing low-flying military planes outside.
In Bastrop, a city east of Austin where some of the training exercises will run from July 15 to Sept. 15, fears came to a head at an April town hall meeting, where residents fired questions at a military spokesman. 鈥淎re you planning on detaining or rounding up any American citizens?鈥 one resident blatantly asked.
Rep. Michael McCaul (R) of Texas, who oversees the House Homeland Security Committee, tried to dismiss fears that the program would pose any danger to Americans. 鈥淥ur US military is not a threat,鈥 he told reporters at a Monitor-hosted breakfast聽in May.
Hoping to allay residents' concerns, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) has taken a different stance, taking care not to antagonize worried right-wing voters.
In April, the governor announced he would to monitor the army鈥檚 activities during Operation Jade Helm, calling it an important protective measure 鈥溌爐o ensure that Texas communities remain safe, secure and informed occurring in their vicinity,鈥 he said, according to The Washington Post.
Some residents said they were determined to shut out the theories swarming their communities.
鈥淲e support our military, and they have to train somewhere," Pam Ferguson, an antique storeowner in Bastrop, told Reuters. "It might as well be here."
This report contains material from Reuters.