Trump’s $46 Billion Border ‘Smart Wall’ Underway
The Trump administration is rapidly transforming security along the U.S.-Mexico border through an ambitious “smart wall” initiative that combines towering steel barriers with advanced surveillance technology, even as illegal border crossings have fallen to their lowest levels in decades. The project, backed by tens of billions of dollars from Congress, has drawn praise from supporters who say it strengthens border security while prompting criticism from opponents concerned about cost, privacy, and its impact on border communities.
For many years, long stretches of the southern border were marked by little more than barbed-wire fencing. Today, however, the administration is replacing those areas with 30-foot steel barriers integrated with sophisticated monitoring systems, including surveillance towers, motion sensors, cameras, and other technologies designed to give Border Patrol agents continuous awareness of activity along the frontier.
Despite the sharp decline in illegal crossings, the project remains under intense debate because of the enormous federal investment required to complete it. Critics argue the effort is further militarizing the border through the widespread deployment of surveillance systems that extend well beyond the physical fence itself.
“We are seeing a massive expansion of surveillance and surveillance technology across the borderlands,” said Ricky Garza, border policy counsel at the Southern Border Communities Coalition. “The wall in all its forms is harmful to communities.”
Federal officials maintain that the technology is intended to enhance—not replace—the physical barrier by allowing agents to focus on enforcement rather than constant monitoring.
“It’s a smart wall. It’s not just a barrier,” Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Rodney Scott said during congressional testimony. “It maximizes the use of our most valuable resource, which is our agents.”
Border security has remained one of President Donald Trump’s signature priorities since his first presidential campaign.
During President Joe Biden’s administration, illegal migration surged, with thousands of migrants arriving at the border daily. Those numbers began falling before President Trump returned to office last year and have since dropped dramatically, with administration officials attributing much of the decline to tougher immigration enforcement policies that have discouraged attempted crossings.
Congress has allocated approximately $46 billion to complete the border barrier and related enforcement measures, enabling Customs and Border Protection to award major construction contracts aimed at finishing one of the administration’s highest-profile initiatives.
Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin recently said an initial phase of the project should be completed by this time next year. Scott told lawmakers that construction crews are currently installing roughly six miles of new wall each week.
Although hundreds of miles of border fencing had already been completed before President Trump returned to office, CBP has added another 74 miles as of mid-June 2026 and plans to construct hundreds more. Officials have no plans to build fencing across approximately 535 miles of the nearly 2,000-mile border, relying instead on difficult terrain supplemented by surveillance towers and underground detection systems.
In addition to new construction, CBP is upgrading existing sections of wall with improved lighting, patrol roads, and additional monitoring equipment. Along portions of the Rio Grande in Texas, authorities are also deploying large cylindrical floating barriers measuring 12 to 15 feet in length to deter migrants and smugglers from crossing the river.
Technology has become an increasingly central component of the administration’s border strategy. The effort reflects the broader evolution of Customs and Border Protection since the September 11 attacks into an intelligence-driven agency operating an extensive surveillance network reaching well beyond the border itself.
Opponents argue that this growing technological footprint creates new problems.
The Southern Border Communities Coalition contends that heightened surveillance forces migrants onto more dangerous routes while also raising privacy concerns for residents living near the border.
Garza said local landowners have discovered motion sensors installed on private property without their permission, arguing that the practice infringes upon their property and privacy rights.
Nayda Alvarez, whose family owns land along the Rio Grande approximately 125 miles from the Gulf of Mexico, said surveillance equipment has repeatedly appeared on their property. She recently noticed a new surveillance tower positioned roughly a quarter mile from her home.
“Are we expecting a war or something?” she said. “It doesn’t make me feel safer.”
Dave Maass of the Electronic Frontier Foundation said the expanding surveillance network has fundamentally changed life along the border for both residents and migrants.
According to Maass, the organization has even produced a guide identifying the various surveillance towers currently operating throughout the southern border region to help local residents understand the technologies surrounding them.
Those systems include permanent towers equipped with video cameras, infrared sensors, and radar capable of monitoring activity across roughly eight miles, as well as mobile surveillance units mounted on trucks that can be relocated wherever needed. Some units combine cameras with powerful spotlights to monitor remote areas.
Many of the newest towers operate autonomously, scanning surrounding terrain and using artificial intelligence to analyze activity before alerting Border Patrol agents to potential threats. Supporters say the systems allow agents to remain in the field rather than spending hours watching camera feeds. Critics, however, caution that increasing reliance on AI raises concerns about algorithmic bias and other potential errors.
Legislation approved by Congress last summer requires Customs and Border Protection to purchase only autonomous surveillance towers, and the agency is now deploying an additional 95 units.
The surveillance network also extends underground. Fiber-optic cables buried beneath the surface detect movement and transmit data for artificial intelligence systems to evaluate.
“We follow the contour of the land. We go through trees. We go down into the river banks. We can go absolutely everywhere,” said Magnus McEwen-King, CEO of Sintela, whose company is installing the fiber-optic systems under contract with CBP. He spoke during a recent border security exposition in Phoenix showcasing the technology.
Border agents also continue using traditional ground sensors and remote trail cameras to identify smuggling corridors and illegal crossing routes.
The nonprofit watchdog Taxpayers for Common Sense has questioned whether the massive expenditures on both physical barriers and surveillance technology provide sufficient value for taxpayers.
The group points to a previous effort abandoned in 2011, when Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano terminated an earlier “virtual wall” initiative after it exceeded its budget, experienced technical failures, and fell significantly behind schedule.
Josh Sewell, the organization’s research and policy director, said additional scrutiny is needed before committing such vast sums to emerging technologies. He also criticized what he described as insufficient oversight of the administration’s spending, an allegation that Customs and Border Protection rejects, saying appropriate oversight mechanisms are already in place.
In Texas’ Big Bend region, the administration’s construction plans have drawn bipartisan resistance, particularly in environmentally sensitive areas encompassing state parks, national parks, and wildlife preserves.
CBP has since announced it no longer intends to build a 30-foot steel bollard wall through those protected locations. Instead, current plans call for patrol roads, vehicle barriers, and technological detection systems.
Clara Benson, a founder of the No Big Bend Wall coalition, said residents remain worried that powerful border lighting could diminish one of the area’s defining features—its famously dark night skies.
“There’s still a lot of fear and dread that the plan is still going to be quite damaging,” she said.
{Matzav.com}
