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A simple, friendly guide to a new U.S. military medal
Big news can feel big and messy. A new medal was made for troops who help at the U.S.–Mexico border. What is it? Who gets it? Let’s make it easy, quick, and clear.
The Mexican Border Defense Medal is a U.S. military award made in 2025. It thanks troops who support U.S. Customs and Border Protection at the southern border. Service for about 30 days in the set border area can qualify.
It’s a “thank you” medal. If a service member helps on missions at the southern border, the medal shows that duty and care. It replaces a different medal that was used for this work before.
U.S. service members who are sent to help border agents. They need to be assigned to the mission and serve for 30 days, in a row or added up, during the set time window that starts in 2025.
The area is close to the U.S.–Mexico line. It reaches across border states and nearby waters. Some support work based in places like San Antonio, Texas, can count too, because it helps the border mission.
The medal is bronze. On the front, a sheathed sword hangs on a tablet that says: “For Service on the Mexican Border.” The ribbon is green and yellow. These colors stand for freedom and virtue—doing the right thing for our country.
Over 100 years ago, troops got the Mexican Border Service Medal for guarding the border in 1916–1917. The new medal uses the same classic look, but it honors today’s border support missions.
Border duty can be hard, quiet work. This medal shows respect for that service. It also links today’s helpers to the history of people who stood watch long ago.
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