The arrival of 200 Marines in Florida ICE facilities marks a symbolic crossing of wires between America’s military and its most contentious domestic enforcement agency. Officials frame it as a practical fix: overburdened ICE staff, strained infrastructure, and surging caseloads in Florida, Louisiana, and Texas. Marines will manage communications systems, supplies, and internal logistics, carefully kept away from direct contact with detainees and any law-enforcement decisions.Yet the sight of camouflage in detention centers carries a political and emotional weight that technical explanations cannot erase. Civil rights advocates warn of a dangerous normalization of military presence in civilian spaces, especially those already associated with fear and trauma. Supporters counter that the mission is lawful, limited, and necessary to stabilize an overwhelmed system. In the weeks ahead, the true impact may be measured less in policy memos than in trust lost—or regained—on both sides of the detention fence.