The Pentagon will prepare to house up to 20,000 unaccompanied migrant children on military bases, a US military spokesman has announced.
The decision follows a request from the US Department of Health and Human Services "to determine its capabilities to provide up to 20,000 temporary beds for unaccompanied alien children at DoD (Department of Defense) installations," Pentagon spokesperson Jamie Davis told AFP.

Border patrol agents detain asylum seekers, including children, near McAllen, Texas. Source: Getty
The request came one day after President Donald Trump moved to end the practice of splitting migrant families, with more than 2,300 children recently separated from their parents under a "zero tolerance" policy.
But the US government has also been examining whether it can use military bases to house the far greater number of unaccompanied children who routinely cross the US border from Mexico.
HHS had been considering for weeks the possibility of using military bases in the southern United States - three in Texas and one in Arkansas - to house unaccompanied minors.

President Donald Trump recently moved to end the practice of splitting migrant families. Source: AAP
But while those four bases "have been visited by HHS for possible housing, it doesn't mean any or all children would be housed there," Mr Davis said.
"HHS and DoD are working closely to determine the requirements and timing for support," he said.
"Secretary Mattis' guidance has been clear: that the DoD will support our federal partners."
In an executive order, US President Donald Trump yesterday instructed the Department of Defense to make available existing facilities to house migrant families or to build new ones if necessary.
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