In the wake of a tragic shooting involving two members of the United States National Guard near the White House — which left one dead and another critically wounded — President Donald Trump announced a sweeping new immigration directive. He has vowed to “permanently pause migration from all third-world countries,” immediately suspend benefits to non-citizens, and deport individuals considered not to be “net assets” to the United States.
🔹 What the New Order Means
President Trump, via a late-night social media post on the eve of Thanksgiving, declared that migration from all what he described as “third-world countries” will be indefinitely halted. He pledged to end federal benefits and subsidies for non-citizens and to deport anyone judged not to contribute positively to U.S. society. The announcement followed the fatal shooting of a National Guard member and the critical wounding of another, in an incident authorities attribute to an Afghan national.
Despite the dramatic tone, the statement offered no specifics — the administration did not define which countries would be affected, what “permanent pause” entails legally, nor how the policy would be enforced across pending or future immigration cases.
🔹 Immediate Moves by Authorities
Across federal agencies, action was swift. The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced an indefinite suspension of processing applications for Afghan nationals, pending review. At the same time, the Department of Homeland Security said it is reviewing asylum approvals and green-card issuances from a broader list of “countries of concern.
Officials indicated that the re-examination will include all cases approved under prior administrations — effectively casting a wide net over both recent arrivals and longer-term immigrants from certain regions.
🔹 Reaction and Legal Uncertainty
Critics argue that the policy — especially defined only as a “pause” — lacks clarity and may face serious legal and congressional challenges. Past immigration-banning efforts under Trump have been blocked or delayed by courts and lawmakers.
Human-rights groups warn the new measures could discriminate against entire populations based on nationality, undermining asylum and refugee protections long upheld under U.S. and international law.







