An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | Dec. 20, 2016

8,000 Guard troops will help support Inauguration Day

By xxxC. Todd Lopez Army News Service

WASHINGTON - The Joint Task Force-National Capital Region hosted a rehearsal of concept drill Dec. 14 to demonstrate the roles the members will perform Jan. 20 during the 58th Presidential Inauguration.

Using a 60-by-40-foot map of the nation's capital, spread out on the floor of the D.C. Armory, Army Master Sgt. Aaron Lovely walked journalists and other guests through the plans for the inauguration, detailing the various roles military elements would play during the event.

"Across the Potomac River, we have the Pentagon north parking lot," he said as he walked across the floor map and gestured downward to the image of the Department of Defense headquarters. The location, he explained, will play host to the largest number of participants on Inauguration Day.

"In addition to [hosting] the joint service men and women who make up the military cordon, the 1,500-person formation who will stand shoulder-to-shoulder across Pennsylvania Ave," he said, "[the location] will also be the starting point for both the civilian and military participants in the parade."

Lovely, the senior enlisted inauguration planner for the task force, also serves as a tuba player in the Army band "Pershing's Own." The upcoming presidential inauguration will be the fourth one he has played a role in, though it's his first time as the task force's senior enlisted planner.

He considers it an honor. Every day, he said, it's exciting to get up and go to work.

"Normally, I'm in an Army environment, but this is a joint-service environment," he said. "Our sister services and the teammates I get to work with are stellar, and I enjoy the product we're able to put together in preparation for whatever the Presidential Inaugural Committee is going to ask us to do."

When inauguration day rolls around, about 15,000 military personnel will be on hand to provide support. That number will include about 7,000 active-duty military personnel and 8,000 National Guard members from more than 40 states and territories - some as far away as Guam. The inauguration will involve the participation of all five military services.

This year, active-duty personnel will provide support in musical units, marching bands, color guards, salute batteries, and honor cordons, said Maj. Gen. Bradley A. Becker, commander, Joint Task Force-National Capital Region.

"Along with orchestrating the ceremonial aspects of the inauguration," Becker said, "Our [task force] provides substantial assistance to the Presidential Inauguration Committee, the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies, and the U.S. Secret Service, as well as other federal, state and local agencies, to ensure a safe and secure environment."

Maj. Gen. Errol R. Schwartz, commander, District of Columbia National Guard, said the Guard members, many of whom come from military police and security forces backgrounds, will provide support to local law enforcement. They will provide crowd control and security assistance to the Metropolitan Police Department, the U.S. Capitol Police and the U.S. Park Police.

According to Schwartz, the Guard members will be deputized by the Metropolitan Police Department before going on duty during the inauguration. But it will be local law enforcement who will be calling the shots.

"If something goes bad, it's up to the law-enforcement agency to make the first move," Schwartz said. "We look forward to having a peaceful transition of power on the 20th of January. And we will continue to work with our state and interagency partners to make sure that we have a peaceful transition of power."

The Guard personnel working with local police to keep order the streets in D.C, Schwartz said, will not be armed. Neither will the active-duty personnel.

The unknowns

The U.S. military has participated in every inauguration since the very first one, which took place April 30, 1789. Even with that long history and tradition, Soldiers and organizers will nonetheless have to adapt to a number of unknowns when the event finally plays out in January.

Among them will be the weather. Depending on the conditions that day, it's possible, however unlikely, that the inauguration could take place without any outdoor events at all, Becker said.

Becker expects to know early that morning, around 4:30 a.m., whether outdoor events will proceed as scheduled. He will then issue orders to ensure all participants are wearing the appropriate uniforms.

Schwartz expressed some concern for Guard troops who are traveling from warmer areas like Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Also currently unknown are the wishes of the president-elect himself. Ultimately, how the events of Inauguration Day play out will be determined largely by the Presidential Inaugural Committee. And that committee takes its marching orders from the incoming president.

 

 

Related Articles
Sgt. 1st Class Michael Engel, Warrant Officer 1 Courtney Topper, Warrant Officer 1 Jacob Shumway, Warrant Officer 1 Alex G. Sama, chief of logistics for the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces, and Maj. Edward K. John pose for a photo during a Department of War National Guard Bureau's State Partnership Program engagement in Michigan, December 2024. The Michigan National Guard hosted two Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces representatives for a weeklong visit focused on logistics, facility management and sustainment operations, including engagements with the 246th Transportation Battalion and the Combined Support Maintenance Shop in Lansing. The exchange strengthened military-to-military cooperation and reinforced the growing partnership between Michigan and Sierra Leone. Photo by 1st Lt. Paige Bodine.
Michigan National Guard Hosts Sierra Leone to Strengthen New Partnership
By 2nd Lt. Paige Bodine, | Dec. 19, 2025
LANSING, Mich.— The partnership between the Michigan National Guard and Sierra Leone recently marked another significant step forward in the Department of War National Guard Bureau’s State Partnership Program, or SPP.The...

U.S. Army Soldiers from the 1st Squadron, 303rd Cavalry Regiment, 96th Troop Command, Washington Army National Guard fill sand bags in Sedro Woolley, Wash., Dec. 11, 2025. More than 300 Washington National Guard members provided flood relief support to citizens in Skagit County since Dec. 10, 2025. Photo by Staff Sgt. Adeline Witherspoon.
National Guard Responds to Historic Flooding in Western Washington
By Joseph Siemandel, | Dec. 19, 2025
CAMP MURRAY, Wash. – As rivers overtopped banks and levees failed across western Washington, the Washington National Guard launched one of its largest and fastest flood responses in recent memory, mobilizing approximately 300...

Members of the Alaska Air and Army National Guard and the Department of Homeland Security, along with volunteers from the Salvation Army and the Alaska National Guard Child and Youth Program, hosted families from Kipnuk and Kwigillingok during Operation Santa Claus 2025 at the Alaska Native Heritage Center in Anchorage, Alaska, on Dec. 14, 2025. Operation Santa Claus, a longstanding annual Alaska National Guard community outreach program, has provided gifts, toys, backpacks and books to children in remote Alaskan communities since 1956. The program partners with the Salvation Army and numerous volunteers to spread holiday cheer and continue its tradition of support. This year’s event supported families who were displaced following Typhoon Halong and provided an opportunity for continued engagement with impacted Western Alaska communities. Photo by Alejandro Peña.
Operation Santa Comes to Anchorage, Spreads Holiday Cheer for Western Alaskans
By Maj. David Bedard, | Dec. 19, 2025
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska — For nearly 70 years, the Alaska National Guard has worked with partner agencies to spread holiday cheer to rural Alaskan communities through Operation Santa.   For the first time in...