The Department of War is pressing civilians to step into border security duties alongside the Department of Homeland Security. Supporters say this interagency collaboration strengthens the homeland defense and reflects the leadership of War Secretary Pete Hegseth and the Trump administration.

An email circulated among DoW civilian personnel on Thursday and circulated on social media. It renews the call for additional volunteers, aligning with a broader push to deploy civilian talent to border missions.

“I am renewing the call for additional dedicated civil servant volunteers to meet continued mission-critical roles in support of DHS,” the email reads. The message comes from the Office of the Secretary of Qar for Personnel and Readiness and underscores a persistent push to expand the interagency effort.

The email, sent by the Office of the Secretary of War for Personnel and Readiness, first circulated on an unofficial Air Force Facebook page. A Pentagon official declined to confirm or deny the authenticity of the email to Military Times on Thursday.

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DOD’s encouragement of civilian employees’ interagency collaboration when it comes to DHS is nothing new. Since August 2025, the department has tried recruiting civilian employees for up to six-month details in support of the southern border mission at participating DHS agencies.

Last week, DOD issued a release urging civilian employees to consider volunteering. Any civilian can volunteer regardless of their job or skills and no resume is required, according to the release, which states 1,000 civilians have been “added to the roster to assist DHS” and 200 have already been deployed.

The Pentagon official declined to comment on whether civilian volunteers approved undergo any additional training.

Details typically last 60 days, but volunteers can opt to complete three 60-day details for a total of 180 days, according to the release.

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The email, meanwhile, states that many personnel have already “answered the call to defend the homeland,” claiming that 900 individuals have already submitted applications.

Detailees, which is how the email referred to the individuals, will directly support Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection, according to the email.

The email states that participants have assisted ICE and CBP in developing “concepts of operations, provide logistics support, and managed informant tiplines that led to the arrests of human smugglers, drug dealers and other criminals.”

The Pentagon official declined to comment on how many applicants have been approved and deployed already out of the 900 or on what the application process looks like exactly.

Amid President Donald Trump’s push for immigration enforcement operations across the country, ICE has offered large signing bonuses and reduced their age requirements in an effort to expand its workforce.

Despite claims that ICE has exceeded its recruitment goals, National Guard troops have been mobilized in the past to offer the department support on top of Federal Emergency Management Agency employees being temporarily reassigned to ICE, according to The Washington Post’s reporting.

According to an August 2025 War Department memo, the agreement between DOD and DHS agencies lasts until Sept. 30, 2026.

Supporters argue the program reflects a practical, disciplined approach to border security that leverages seasoned civil servants across agencies, backed by a leadership team determined to protect the homeland.

War Secretary Hegseth has framed civilian mobility as a force multiplier in this critical national effort, and the President has made border enforcement a top priority.

The broader implication, allies say, is a united government willing to deploy all capable resources to secure American communities and uphold the rule of law.

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