Tear gas and smoke envelop ICE agents as people protest against Trump’s immigration policies, outside an ICE detention facility in Portland, Oregon, on September 1 © REUTERS

Donald Trump has ordered that troops be sent to Portland, Oregon, authorising them to use “full force” as he expands the deployment of the US military in American cities.

The US president said on Saturday that he was directing defence secretary Pete Hegseth “to provide all necessary Troops to protect War ravaged Portland” and combat what he described as domestic terrorism.

Portland will become the fourth US city where Trump has deployed the military. It comes as the president intensifies efforts to target political opponents and “leftist” political groups following the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

The deployment, which was requested by homeland security secretary Kristi Noem, is also intended to protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities, which the president claimed were “under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists”.

“I am also authorising Full Force, if necessary,” Trump wrote in a social media post.

The administration did not provide a timeline for the deployment, or indicate which specific troops would be ordered into Portland.

“We stand ready to mobilise US military personnel in support of DHS operations in Portland at the President’s direction,” chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said in a statement.

Speaking on Thursday, Trump said that “professional agitators and anarchists” who are “wild” and “crazy people” are “trying to burn down buildings, including federal buildings” in Portland, but he offered no evidence.

“These are bad people, and they’re paid a lot of money by rich people, some of whom we know.”

“I hear names of some pretty rich people that are radical left people,” he said, naming billionaire progressive donor George Soros and LinkedIn co-found Reid Hoffman. “If they are funding these things, they’re going to have some problems.” Last month the president called for Soros to be charged for allegedly supporting “violent protests” across the country.

There have been steady protests at a Portland ICE facility since the start of the summer which have led to some clashes between demonstrators and law enforcement. But Oregon officials have disputed the Trump administration’s depiction of a city out of control.

Oregon governor Tina Kotek said on Saturday: “There is no national security threat in Portland. Our communities are safe and calm.”

Kotek said Trump told her “there are elements [in Portland] that create an insurrection”, and she asked him not to send troops.

Portland mayor Keith Wilson said: “The number of necessary troops is zero, in Portland and any other American city. Our nation has a long memory for acts of oppression, and the president will not find lawlessness or violence here unless he plans to perpetrate it.”

A White House official said on Saturday that “protesters have been congregating outside of ICE’s field office in South Portland since early June. As of September 8, the US attorney’s office had brought federal charges against 26 people for crimes including arson, assaulting a police officer and resisting arrest.”

On Monday, Trump designated “Antifa” — a decentralised activist movement whose name is derived from “anti-fascist” — a domestic terrorist organisation. The president and his allies have claimed that Antifa was responsible for violent protests in US cities.

The Portland troop order was announced three days after a shooting at an ICE office in Dallas that the FBI described as an act of targeted political violence after investigators said they found bullet casings containing anti-ICE messages near the gunman. One detainee was killed and two others were injured.

Trump has already ordered National Guard troops to Los Angeles, Washington, DC and Memphis, all cities that, like Portland, are led by Democratic mayors. However, the deployment to Memphis, which is in deeply Republican Tennessee, is shaping up to look rather different than the Los Angeles and Washington operations.

The defence department sent about 4,000 National Guard members to Los Angeles, along with 700 Marines, to quell unrest following the federal government’s immigration crackdown. It also deployed about 2,000 National Guard troops to Washington as part of the president’s law enforcement efforts to combat crime in the nation’s capital.

Memphis, however, is expecting just 150 troops, Tennessee’s Republican governor has told local media.

Trump has also threatened to send troops into New York City and Chicago.

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