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mardi 31 mars 2026

BE HONEST. We want YOUR real answer.


 

🚨 BE HONEST. We want YOUR real answer.

Imagine waking up tomorrow and turning on the news: ICE has launched coordinated enforcement operations in every major city across America. Every single person who broke federal immigration law, who crossed illegally, who overstayed a visa — gone. Every one.

No more anchor baby loopholes being exploited. No more sanctuary city politicians shielding criminals from law enforcement. No more taxpayer dollars flowing to people who are here illegally while Americans struggle to pay their bills.

Some people would panic. Others would celebrate.

President Trump has already deported more illegal immigrants than any administration in modern history. Border crossings have collapsed. And support for tough enforcement keeps growing.

So we're asking — no judgment, just honesty:

If ICE swept every city and carried out full enforcement of immigration law, removing every illegal immigrant from the country — how would you feel?

As of March 31, 2026, the claim that over 1,000 Afghan refugees have had their flights to the U.S. canceled is factually accurate according to multiple reports. This development is part of a broader shift in U.S. refugee policy under the current Trump administration.
The Current Situation
  • Flight Cancellations: Approximately 1,660 Afghan refugees who were approved for resettlement in the United States have had their scheduled flights canceled through April 2026.
  • Targeted Groups: Those removed from flight manifests include unaccompanied minors seeking reunification with their families in the U.S., former Afghan military personnel who served alongside U.S. forces, and immediate family members of active-duty U.S. service personnel.
  • Closure of Camp As Sayliyah: The U.S. government is scheduled to close Camp As Sayliyah in Qatar today, March 31, 2026. This was the primary U.S.-run transit site for Afghan evacuees. Over 1,000 allies currently at the camp have been told they must either find a third country for resettlement or return to Afghanistan.
Policy Context
  • Refugee Suspension: On his first day in office in 2025, President Trump signed an executive order indefinitely suspending the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP). The administration cited concerns over "unsustainable groups of migrants" and "proper vetting" as reasons for the pause.
  • Record-Low Cap: For the 2026 fiscal year, the administration has set the annual refugee admissions cap at 7,500, the lowest in the program's history.
  • Security Re-evaluations: Following a shooting incident involving an Afghan national in Washington, D.C., in late 2025, the administration launched a "full-scale, rigorous reexamination" of green cards and asylum applications for individuals from 19 "countries of concern," including Afghanistan.
Humanitarian and Strategic Concerns
  • Safety Risks: Advocacy groups like #AfghanEvac warn that stranded allies face severe danger from the Taliban if forced to return.
  • Impact of Regional Conflict: Evacuees in Qatar are also currently caught in the crosshairs of Operation Epic Fury, with reports of missile fragments from the conflict with Iran falling near their transit sites.
  • Credibility Concerns: Veterans and advocates argue that these cancellations represent a "betrayal" of allies, potentially undermining future U.S. strategic partnerships.

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