National Guard Posts, Deletes, Re-Posts 13 Internment/Resettlement Specialist Job Listings Mostly Near Jails and Prisons

Stunning DoD Directive states that “civilian internees may lawfully be detained”

NATIONAL FILE has obtained a chart showing the 13 job openings the U.S. National Guard posted for an “Internment/Resettlement Specialist” on July 15, 2021.

The U.S. National Guard then took all of the job postings down, then re-posted them on August 17, several days after NATIONAL FILE’s original report on the Internment/Resettlement program. In this chart, you will see that 12 of the 13 job openings are for internment/resettlement specialists in locations close to jails or prisons (with the only exception being the job in Washington, D.C.)

The U.S. military is coming under increased scrutiny from patriots as the Joe Biden regime attempts to force all military servicemembers to take the Coronavirus injection despite widespread reports of health problems surfacing in people who took the vaccine. Here are the 13 U.S. Army National Guard Internment/Resettlement locations, according to this report obtained by NATIONAL FILE:

Remember, as Coronavirus tyranny ramps up again, that a DoD directive during the Obama administration said that civilians can be interned “for their protection,” and that includes U.S. citizens. Here are a few of the job listings that were posted on July 15 and then later re-posted:

As NATIONAL FILE RECENTLY REPORTED: The Army National Guard is actively recruiting for a job position called “Internment/Resettlement Specialist.” People as young as seventeen years old are eligible for the gig, which includes “Search/Restraint” as “Some of the Skills You’ll Learn,” according to an Army National Guard job posting with a job location listed as Washington, D.C. Meanwhile, military documents show that the military can detain civilians here in America, including U.S. citizens. A leaked U.S. Headquarters of the Army document entitled “INTERNMENT AND RESETTLEMENT OPERATIONS” describes an official category of detained person called “civilian internee.” A Department of Defense Directive published below discussed “civilian internees” and made it clear that military detainees can be U.S. citizens. Job Postings document: InternmentJobPostings

“In the Army National Guard, you will learn these valuable job skills while earning a regular paycheck and qualifying for tuition assistance. Job training for an Internment Resettlement Specialist requires 10 weeks of Basic Combat Training, where you’ll learn basic Soldiering skills, and seven weeks of Advanced Individual Training with on-the-job instruction. Part of this time is spent in the classroom and part of the time in the field,” states this Army National Guard job posting. Note the location for the job: Washington, D.C.

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