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The administration of Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey is pushing back against a demand by the Biden administration that it take down a number of shipping containers it has used to plug a gap in the incomplete border wall, saying that border states "cannot rely on the federal government to ensure its security."

"The myriad of federal agencies that claim jurisdiction on the southern border but do nothing to prevent the public nuisance caused by illegal immigration and criminal activity that exploits the open border is quite frustrating to those that live, work and recreate on that border and in our state," Allen Clark, director of Arizona’s Department of Emergency and Military Affairs, said in a letter to the Department of Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation, obtained by Fox News Digital.

The bureau had written to Gov. Ducey’s office last week, arguing that the move in August to fill nearly 4,000 feet of gaps in the border wall with shipping containers topped with razor wire is illegal. Ducey had announced the filling of the gaps in early August.

The construction consisted of 60 double-stacked shipping containers, welded shut and topped with four feet of razor wire. His office said that it is 22 feet tall and weighs nearly 9,000 lbs.

ARIZONA GOV BEGINS SEALING GAPS IN BORDER WALL WITH SHIPPING CONTAINERS TOPPED WITH RAZOR WIRE

Shipping containers close gaps in Yuma border wall

Construction to place these shipping containers in gaps in the border wall began on Aug. 12, 2022, in Yuma, Arizona. (Ashley Soriano/Fox News)

"Arizona has had enough," Ducey said in a statement at the time. "We can’t wait any longer.

In its letter, the Bureau of Reclamation states that Arizona placed containers on lands within the vicinity of the Morelos Dam and also on land that is part of the Cocopah Indian Tribe’s West Reservation. It also said that the placement interferes with a Customs and Border Protection (CBP) project to fill the gaps, and calls on Arizona to stop further construction and assist in removing the containers.

"The unauthorized placement of those containers constitutes a violation of federal law and is a trespass against the United States. That trespass is harming federal lands and resources and impeding Reclamation’s ability to perform its mission," the letter, reported by 12News, stated.

A spokesperson for the Bureau told Fox News Digital that the bureau's priority is to ensure the integrity of the water delivery infrastructure and the safety of its workforce in order to maintain operational readiness.

The letter, which comes more than two months after Ducey’s office sealed the gap, was issued just as CBP put out a notice of its own plan to close the gaps near the Morelos Dam.

VENEZUELAN MIGRANTS REMOVED UNDER NEW BIDEN MOVE FEEL BETRAYED BY MEXICO, US

That notification says that the gaps will be filled instead with "a combination of temporary mesh fencing and mechanized bollard vehicle gates that allow for access to the riverside of the barrier." According to the CBP notice, construction of that temporary replacement would not begin until "early 2023."

In its searing response to the Bureau of Reclamation’s letter, Arizona hit out at what it said was a "lack of coordination" from federal agencies that means that states like Arizona "cannot rely on the federal government to ensure its security."

Clark said Arizona disagrees with the feds’ claim that Arizona has trespassed against the U.S., arguing that the regulation in question provides an exemption for federal and state employees when carrying out official duties. 

"Moreover, 43 C.F.R. Part 429.4(c)(8) provides that "activities authorized under other Federal statutes or regulations" are not subject to regulation," he wrote. "Since, the U.S. Constitution provides for the protection of the states (Article IV, section 4) and specifically reserves the right of states to defend themselves (Article 1, section 10), the regulation you cite does not prohibit Arizona’s actions."

Arizona says it is "committed to working with all our federal partners" but adds that federal officials have said that border construction was set to begin since December 2021. 

"However, to date, Arizona has not seen any action by the federal government to do so and was therefore required to take its own action. For this reason, the containers will remain in place until specific details regarding construction are provided," Clark says. 

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The back-and-forth between Arizona and the Biden administration comes as states are increasingly taking matters related to illegal immigration and border security into their own hands amid what they say is a vacuum left by the feds. 

Arizona is one of a number of states, along with Florida and Texas, that has been transporting migrants north to cities like Washington, D.C., in an effort to draw attention to the border crisis and relieve their overwhelmed communities. 

"Sadly, the federal government doesn't seem to be acting either with a sense of urgency or in good faith to deal with this problem." Ducey spokesman C.J. Karamargin told Fox News Digital.