Kimberly “Kim” Wexler MA JD Profile picture
Dec 8, 2024 13 tweets 11 min read Read on X
🔥🧵/1 In the corruption of our borders, many names have emerged as having played a direct role.

Let’s take a look at one whose part in the border crisis you may not have heard about:

💥JAKE SULLIVAN💥

Biden’s Executive Order 14010, issued in February 2021, is titled “Creating a Comprehensive Regional Framework to Address the Causes of Migration, to Manage Migration throughout North and Central America, and to Provide Safe and Orderly Processing of Asylum Seekers at the United States Border.”

Section 2 of the EO directs the “Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs” (also known as the National Security Advisor) to prepare two strategy documents:

(i) the United States Strategy for Addressing the Root Causes of Migration (the “Root Causes Strategy”); and

(ii) the United States Strategy for Collaborative Management of Migration in the Region (the “Collaborative Management Strategy”).

According to the White House Transition Project (2009), “ideally, the national security advisor serves as an honest broker of policy options for the president in the field of national security, rather than as an advocate for his or her own policy agenda.”

Read on to learn more about how Sullivan strategized to “manage” migration …Image
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🧵/2 Per the Executive Order, the primary objectives of the Collaborative Management Strategy were to “manage” migration and to provide “safe and orderly processing of asylum seekers” — NOT to prevent or discourage mass numbers of undocumented people from approaching our borders, although there is some attention given to resettling migrants in countries close to their own home countries.

According to the EO, the Strategy “shall identify and prioritize actions to strengthen cooperative efforts to address migration flows, including by expanding and improving upon previous efforts to resettle throughout the region those migrants who qualify for humanitarian protection.”

“The Collaborative Management Strategy should focus on programs and infrastructure that facilitate access to protection and other lawful immigration avenues, in both the United States and partner countries, as close to migrants’ homes as possible.”

“To support the development of the Collaborative Management Strategy, the United States Government shall promptly begin consultations with civil society, the private sector, international organizations, and governments in the region, including the Government of Mexico.”

“These consultations should address … humanitarian assistance, including through expansion of shelter networks, to address the immediate needs of individuals who have fled their homes to seek protection elsewhere in the region.”

From the July 29, 2021 Collaborative Migration Management “Fact Sheet,” it is clear that the aim was to expand migration and create “LAWFUL PATHWAYS” to the United States, not to discourage or prevent illegal immigration.

The Fact Sheet explains that implementation of the Strategy would involve enlisting support from:

🔹governments in and outside the region

🔹international organizations

🔹civil society

🔹the private sector

🔹multilateral organizations

🔹international financial institutions

🔹members of U.S. Congress and their staff

🔹labor unions

(This is starting to look familiar…) 🤔Image
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🧵/3 The 13-page Strategy document begins by acknowledging “the humanitarian situation in the Northern Triangle” (El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras) caused by “long-standing … violence, lack of employment opportunities and corruption” as well as more recent events like “the COVID-19 pandemic, recurrent droughts, and two hurricanes in November 2020” as predicates to launch “both immediate responses and a new, strategic approach for managing regional migration in the medium- to long-term.”

Note 1: With the possible exception of targeted violence, none of the above factors constitutes lawful grounds for asylum under U.S. or international law.

Note 2: President Nayib Bukele of El Salvador, who took office in June 2019, has dramatically reduced violent crime in his country by reforming the criminal justice system.Image
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🧵/4 The first objective of the Strategy is to reduce “irregular migration” which is defined by the UN International Organization for Migration as “the act of crossing borders without complying with all the legal administrative requirements for entry into the [country].”

The second objective is “promoting safe, orderly, and humane migration” by “expanding access to legal pathways.”

The Strategy claims that the U.S. has strong “interests” in reducing illegal border crossings and expanding “legal pathways.”

Note: In other words, the plan was to reduce illegal border crossings by either making them legal or making them appear to be legal. (Don’t believe me? Read on ….)Image
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🧵/5 “This strategy does not seek to end migration. To the contrary — human mobility is part of the fabric and tradition of Central and North America. Instead, the Migration Strategy envisions that migration within and through Mexico and Central America would be by choice, and that fewer people would feel compelled to make that choice. It envisions more legal pathways available for those who choose to leave….”Image
🧵/6 Sullivan’s Strategy sets out eight concrete “Lines of Action” for the U.S. to pursue. The Lines of Action are megalomaniacal in scope, seeking to reform and financially support border management and migration throughout the region, albeit with the “collaboration” of the United Nations and relevant governments.

1. “Stabilize Populations with Acute Needs” — defined as coordinating with the United Nations and surging humanitarian aid to the Northern Triangle “given the COVID-19 pandemic, November 2020 hurricanes, and prolonged droughts”

2. “Expand Access to International Protection” (see below)

3. “Expand Access to Protection in Countries of Origin” — a focus on assisting Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) who are homeless within their own countries

4. “Expand Third Country Labor Migration Programs While Improving Worker Protections” — such programs “allow individuals to find work opportunities and provide support for their families through formalized migration channels”

5. “Assist and Reintegrate Returned Persons”

(continued) …Image
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🧵/7 “Lines of Action” (continued)

6. “Foster Secure and Humane Management of Borders” — involves working with governments “to build the region’s migration-focused departments and agencies to develop institutional capacity” as well as providing “support for their modernization of border infrastructure”

7. “Strengthen Regional Public Messaging on Migration” — the U.S. sought to take the lead on “messaging” to “share factual information” about migration policies in the region, “counter disinformation … discourage irregular migration and promote “safe, orderly and humane migration.”

“Partnerships with international organizations and other stakeholders can amplify these messages ….”

(continued) …Image
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🧵/8 “Lines of Action” (continued)

8. “Expand Access to Lawful Pathways for Protection and Opportunity in the United States”

“The United States is committed to enhancing access to protection and opportunity in the United States. The United States is taking a number of steps to increase access to the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP) for Northern Triangle nationals. The United States is also examining parole options … and evaluating options to enhance access for Northern Triangle nationals to immigrant and non-immigrant visas to the United States….”

The Central American Minors (CAM) program was started in 2014 during the Obama administration and was designed to allow “young people with parents in the United States” to apply for asylum status from their home countries. The Trump administration phased the program out in 2018 because “the vast majority of individuals accessing the program were not eligible for refugee resettlement.”

The CAM program was revived by Biden and has been noted as one of the major driving forces behind the current child trafficking crisis due to poor planning and poor implementation of the program, as well as the lack of meaningful oversight.Image
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🧵/9 “The Del Rio incident” in September 2021, in which some 15,000 Haitians moved from Brazil and Chile up to the Texas border, “was a wake-up call” writes Katie Tobin in a September 2024 report for the Carnegie Endowment.

“Migration trends were shifting, and old playbooks and policies would not be sufficient. There was growing consensus that a new, hemisphere-wide strategy was needed. Building one would require leaders to come together.”

The incident spurred Biden to have his national security team draft a regional migration pact involving the participation of Canada, Mexico and Colombia and the imprimatur of the UN Refugee agency (UNHCR) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM). Other countries joined in negotiations, and eventually a total of 22 Latin American and Caribbean nations adopted the Los Angeles Declaration on Migration and Protection.

carnegieendowment.org/research/2024/…Image
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🧵/10 In July 2023, after meetings between Mexico’s President Lopez Obrador and a U.S. delegation, Sullivan announced the U.S. “is taking additional steps to expand access to safe, orderly, legal migration pathways. Today we are announcing our full support for an international multipurpose space that the Government of Mexico plans to establish in southern Mexico to offer new refugee and labor options ….”Image
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🧵BONUS — How did Sullivan handle migrant caravans that threatened to surge the border at the beginning of Biden’s administration?

Did their approach set the tone for U.S.-Mexico relations for the rest of the Biden administration? Did it work? Or did it contribute to the crisis?
The UN’s squishily defined “lawful pathways” concept infected U.S. agencies like USCIS and DHS
h/t @truthteller_x1 Image

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More from @KimWexlerMAJD

Jul 23
🔥BIDEN OFFICIAL FUNDED HAMAS WITH U.S. TAX DOLLARS

Julieta Valls Noyes served as head of the State Department Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM) and simultaneously chaired the Advisory Commission (AdCom) for UNRWA, the UN Refugee Works Agency for Palestine Refugees.

In recent years the U.S. has been the largest single donor to UNRWA, with funding flowing directly from PRM. The Framework of Cooperation (functionally a Memorandum of Understanding) specifies terms and conditions, including ensuring funds are not used to support terrorism, consistent with Section 301(c) of the Foreign Assistance Act.

Noyes was welcomed to her first AdCom meeting on November 14, 2022 and served as chair until October 4, 2024. She signed, together with UN Commissioner General Philippe Lazzarini, the Framework of Cooperation between UNRWA and the U.S. on May 30, 2023.

In August 2023, the Nahum Bedein Center for Near East Policy Research released an eight-minute film titled “Askar-UNRWA: Cradle of Killers” documenting how UNRWA-operated schools were indoctrinating children and young people to hate Jews and to wage Jihad against Israel. David Bedein has worked to expose radicalization in Palestine for more than 20 years.

Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups launched a rocket attack and incursion on Israel on October 7, 2023, initiating the ongoing Gaza war.

On January 29, 2024, the Wall Street Journal reported on an Israeli intelligence dossier that estimated about ten percent of UNRWA’s 12,000 staff in Gaza were affiliated or have membership in Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and nearly half of UNRWA employees had a close relative with “official ties to the militant groups, especially Hamas.”

In a follow-on report in February 2024, WSJ reported that weapons caches had been found in UNRWA schools “for years,” that Hamas had built a network of tunnels linking UNRWA facilities, and that UNRWA-provided fuel and aid was going to Hamas.

In an April 15, 2024 report for the Center for Immigration Studies, Nayla Rush asked: “What is the exact role and engagement of Noyes, a high-ranking U.S. State Department official, within UNRWA? […] Moreover, if the chair was here to assist UNRWA implement its work, does this mean the U.S. government is partly to blame for UNRWA’s failures and biases?”

In August 2024 the UN Office of Oversight Services determined that at least nine UNRWA staff members “may have been involved in the 7 October 2023 Hamas-led attacks against Israel.” UNRWA reportedly terminated the staff members’ contracts.

In October 2024 The Jerusalem Post reported Hamas members take UNRWA vehicles to move around the Gaza strip, “as a form of defense, so they can move around easily…. [W]hen they get into a UNRWA vehicle and drive in it, and get things with it, the supplies, of course, then they are protected … because it’s an agency vehicle.”

Middle East Monitor reported on November 20, 2024 how three attempts to dismantle UNRWA — efforts led by the U.S., Canada, Italy, Sweden and Denmark — had been successfully thwarted by the UNRWA Advisory Commission. Beirut-based Association 302 to Defend Refugees’ Rights “emphasized that the failure of the proposals aimed at dissolving UNRWA can be attributed to the unity of the countries hosting Palestinian refugees: Lebanon, Jordan, Syria and Palestine.”

In January 2025 Israel’s Ambassador to the UN, Danny Danon, demanded that UNRWA cease operations in Jerusalem and close its office due to “widespread infiltration of UNRWA’s ranks by Hamas and other terrorist organizations.”

In March 2025, the Trump administration said UNRWA funding would be cut for one year.

Will Trump’s DOJ investigate Julieta Valls Noyes and other U.S. State Department officials for radicalizing and funding terrorists?

Was the State Department’s role in funding UNRWA a chronic, tragic failure of oversight? Or was it something more sinister?

U.S. taxpayers and the Israeli people deserve the truth. 🕊️Image
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@HillelNeuer 🕊️
Read 7 tweets
Jun 6
🧵/1 How did the 🌐 UNITED NATIONS organize the INVASION OF THE UNITED STATES?

According to the Center for Immigration Studies, in recent years the U.S. has “devoted significant taxpayer funds to facilitating illegal immigration” through a network of NGOs coordinated by the UN. Image
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🧵/2 At the June 4, 2025 DOGE Subcommittee hearing, “Public Funds, Private Agendas: NGOs Gone Wild,” Executive Director of the Center for Immigration Studies Mark Krikorian testified about a vast UN-NGO network formed in 2019 to establish way stations for illegal migration.
🧵/3 “What the Center has examined is what happened before the migrants got to the Rio Grande. In other words, how NGOs and UN agencies were paid by U.S. taxpayers to facilitate the illegal movement of migrants through South and Central America and Mexico.”
Read 24 tweets
Jun 4
🔥“THE MAIN LINK IS IN CARACAS”: Tren de Aragua is an aspect of 🇻🇪 Venezuela’s unrestricted warfare against the U.S., expert says

Jose Gustavo @ArochaJG, a former Lieutenant Colonel in the Venezuelan military and national security expert at @SecureFreeSoc, responded for Fox News Digital on the recently released intelligence assessment on Tren de Aragua (TDA). Arocha says the memo, prepared by the National Intelligence Council on April 7, failed to comprehend the Maduro regime’s relationship with Tren de Aragua.

“I feel that the missing point, here, is that the intelligence report is just a narrow lens about TDA. It’s about crime and immigration, but they’re missing the warfare dimension,” Arocha said.

“They’re missing that, for the Maduro regime, the United States is the enemy — has been the enemy for years, since Hugo Chavez came to power.”

Arocha points out that the Tocorón prison, from which TDA’s leader Hector “El Niño” Guerrero Flores and others reportedly escaped during a military operation to retain control of the prison from the inmates, is not a real prison but a “palace” serving as “the epicenter of crime in Venezuela.” When Tocorón was raided in September 2023, news reports revealed Tocorón’s swimming pool, nightclub, and even a zoo — as well as tunnels allowing inmates to pass in and out of the compound.

Arocha believes the raid was staged to convince the public that Maduro’s government was attempting to regain control of the prison.

“On the contrary, the TDA has safe haven in Venezuela,” he said.

“The TDA is not a gang. It’s a [military] arm of the Venezuelan regime in the hybrid warfare strategy. That’s the missing point. And that is the point that explains how a local gang [is] now in more than 10 countries, including the United States. That’s incredible. That is not possible without a state sponsor behind them.”

Arocha says the Venezuelan regime acts as a proxy of Russia, China and Iran — “especially China right now” — to create chaos in Latin America. He said the regime exploits Russian and Chinese expertise in propaganda, spinning a narrative that “the United States is against Latin America, is racist.”

According to Arocha, the U.S. intelligence community is failing to see the full picture.

“Unrestricted warfare,” Arocha said, “means using criminals, using disinformation, using every single tool they have” short of a direct military confrontation with the United States.

“We not only have to chase criminals, but start targeting command structures, which means nodes. That is very important right now,” Arocha said.

Arocha praised U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi for pursuing a suspected high-ranking TDA leader in custody in Colombia. The Justice Department intends to prosecute Jose “Chuqui” Enrique Martinez Flores, 24, in Texas for drug offenses and for providing material support to a terrorist organization. The State Department designated TDA a foreign terrorist organization on Feb. 20.

Arocha also encourages U.S. agencies to collaborate with law enforcement in Chile, Argentina, Peru and other countries with experience of TDA, to understand what they have learned.

“We have to continue targeting command structures to totally dismantle TDA,” Arocha said. “And not only see them as criminals. Of course, we have to chase criminals outside from the street. But we also have to look for the command structures.

“And we have to put all the pieces together to have the big picture instead of the local one. And then I’m very sure that we are going to realize the missing and the main link is in Caracas.”
BBC reported Tocorón prison, when Maduro ordered it raided in 2023, was more like a well-fortified gated community than a prison compound.
bbc.com/news/world-lat…Image
The controversial NIC memo 🧵👇🏼
Read 7 tweets
May 29
🔥🧵/1 TREN DE ARAGUA’S TIES TO THE MADURO REGIME

An FBI Intelligence Assessment titled “Venezuelan Government Officials Use Tren de Aragua to Undermine Public Safety” has been unsealed.

The New York Times reports this memo pits the FBI “against other intelligence agencies in a heated dispute” over evidence connecting TdA to Venezuela’s government.

The 13-page FBI memo, dated January 23, was submitted by the Trump administration to a federal court in Texas considering a challenge to the administration’s use of the Alien Enemies Act.Image
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🧵/2 President Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelans swiftly as “alien enemies” hinges on evidence that Venezuela’s government controls TdA.

The Alien Enemies Act provides, “whenever there shall be any invasion or predatory incursion perpetrated … against the territory of the United States, by any foreign nation or government, all natives, citizens, denizens or subjects of the hostile nation … shall be liable to be apprehended, restrained, secured and removed, as alien enemies.”Image
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🧵/3 Other U.S. intelligence agencies have rejected the FBI’s conclusions, dismissing evidence of collusion between Tren de Aragua (TdA) and the Maduro regime. A controversial assessment by the National Intelligence Council (NIC) dated April 7, 2025 released earlier this month expressed skepticism, concluding that “the Maduro regime probably does not have a policy of cooperating with TdA and is not directing TdA movement to and operations in the United States.”
Read 15 tweets
May 8
🧵/1 House Intel Committee Democrats Jim Himes of Connecticut and Joaquin Castro of Texas accuse Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard of “misrepresenting intelligence in public” concerning Tren de Aragua’s links to the Maduro regime. Image
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🧵/2 The National Intelligence Council on April 7 put out a “sense of the community memorandum” titled

Venezuela: Examining Regime Ties to Tren de Aragua.

A redacted version of the memo discusses TDA’s origin in a prison in Aragua State, Venezuela. “In 2023,” the memo reads, “the Venezuelan regime cleared TDA from Tocoron Prison, although the group’s leaders were able to escape in the operation, possibly assisted by low-level Venezuelan military and political leaders, judging from DHS reporting.”

The memo notes that TDA “and other Venezuelan organized crime groups” have spread to other countries using the larger body of Venezuelan migrants as cover.

TDA has a presence in Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Trinidad and Tobago, and the United States.

“From 2021 to 2024 there was a spike in Venezuelan encounters at the US-Mexico border, in which some TDA members could have been present as they have generally moved with Venezuelan migrant communities and profit from human trafficking and migrant smuggling.”

(Photo credit: @Michael_Yon)Image
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🧵/3 The NIC memo speculates that the Maduro regime “probably maintains ad hoc links to some criminal groups in Venezuela,” citing evidence of prior instances of regime officials’ cooperation with armed criminal groups reportedly motivated by “desire for help controlling territory or deterring a perceived threat of invasion, or for individual financial gain.”

The memo describes a harmonious coexistence of the Venezuelan regime with “illegal armed and criminal groups.” The relationship is characterized as “cooperating with armed groups for insight and control” over territory, reasoning that the regime might prefer to cooperate rather than contest armed groups because “combatting such groups often results in personnel losses.”Image
Read 11 tweets
Apr 29
UNCENSORED TESTIMONY

Pelosi and House Democrats Refused to Hear From Experts in 2022 about How the United Nations, Non-Profit Advocacy Groups and Criminal Human Smuggling Cartels COLLABORATED to OVERRUN U.S. BORDER

In February 2022, the House Freedom Caucus held a panel to hear bombshell testimony about the growing mass migration crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Caucus chair Scott Perry explained that the House Speaker, Nancy Pelosi, had refused to green-light an official hearing and had even refused to allow the caucus to use a Congressional hearing room to hold the panel.

Todd Bensman, Senior National Security Fellow for the Center for Immigration Studies, detailed his investigation into the United Nations’ activities on the migration trail, and he shared evidence of how UN agencies appeared to be colluding with non-governmental organizations and human smuggling gangs.

Bensman testified the UN was offering cash handouts, pre-paid debit cards, and even legal and psychological counseling to coach “migrants” in how to answer immigration authorities’ questions about persecution in their home countries.

Part of the audio from Bensman’s testimony has been censored or corrupted, but I have reconstructed the missing segment [italicized] from his written notes.

Bensman testified:

“I have interviewed hundreds of the immigrants, most recently on an eight-day fact-finding journey to the Guatemala-Mexico border city of Tapachula. From my vantage point, I can confidently report that there is but one root cause that they — the immigrating foreign nationals — most often cite for coming now.

“It is that President Joe Biden opened the American southern border wide to them.

“They see, over their cell phone social media, many hundreds of thousands who have gone before secure quick releases and resettlement into America.

“And they decide to also gamble huge smuggling fee investments that criminal smuggling gangs will get them in to stay, too.

“With such an enticing, motivating return on smuggling investment, no thinking person should wonder why this global migration hit the all-time national record of nearly two million border patrol apprehensions in a single year. With probably 500,000 more gotaways, and that’s an undercount.

“But the Caucus should also know that ‘non-profit advocacy groups — and more notably the United Nations — appear to be working side-by-side with the criminal smuggling organizations on the very same mission.

“United Nations agencies such as the International [Organization for] Migration (IOM) and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) are providing hard cash, food, shelter, legal services, psychological services — all along the migrant trails.

“Which also materially facilitate journeys that everyone involved very well knows, despite any protestations to the contrary, always lead to an illegal American border-crossing.

“In whatever small or large way, the United Nations and the non-profits it funnels money to can reasonably be said to contribute to the current mass migration crisis.

“I found my first clue on a Rio Grande riverbank, on the Mexican side: A discarded UNHCR-stamped booket advising in great detail how migrants can and should travel north for the greatest chance of safety and success. Later, in Reynosa, Mexico, I witnessed the United Nations grantee, the IOM, hand out cash debit cards to migrants in long, snaking lines. The workers handing them out said they give $400 every 15 days to families of four, renewable every two weeks.

“The UN tells me only the most vulnerable get this cash. But in Reynosa and again most recently in Tapachula, Mexico, where I saw the same long lines at the UNHCR office, nothing about them indicated acute vulnerability. They were regular family units of the sort crossing by the tens of thousands right now. Some showed me their debit cards there, too, and said were it not for this money they might have to leave the migrant trail and go home.

“Further inquiry showed the cards are just part of a vast and sharply escalating UN program called ‘Cash-Based Interventions’ all along the migrant trail through Latin America.

“According to the UN documents and migrants, these include the unrestricted, unconditionally useable plastic cash cards, and also cash-filled envelopes in some areas (never a good look — cash filled envelopes), money transfers for lodging, pharmaceutical prescriptions, and for something called ‘movement assistance’, which means transportation money to move forward when camps empty and reform further north.

“Credible reporting shows that the UN is providing these forms of assistance all along the migrant trail, from South America to Texas. On a Cúcuta to Bogotá, Colombia segment, the UN was seen handing out food, clothing, and necessities worth an estimated $200 to $300 a day per migrant.

“And then there’s important non-cash assistance keeping migrants on the U.S. trail.

“In Tapachula, approval for Mexican asylum these days is important for permission to move legally beyond the southern provinces (where I was) — always to the U.S. border, of course. But many coming in from Guatemala innocently tell Mexican immigration they’re going for U.S. jobs — which is not an eligible asylum claim, so they get denied.

“But I found a UN-funded solution recently. The manager of a UN-funded migrant advocacy center told me a full-time staff of certified psychologists helps these migrants recover ‘repressed memories’ of more eligible government persecution. This manager told me in a recorded conversation that his group also trains migrants on the front end of the process how to pass muster with Mexican asylum interviewers the first time around.

“He said these operations produce a 90 percent success rate for thousands a year. Other UN-funded psychologists offer what sounds like similar work. If this is all true, the UNHCR in Mexico has found another way to keep thousands more on the trail over the American border.

“Many can, and, will defend this UN assistance as lifesaving, but others who learn of it reasonably interpret it — [*SEE BELOW FOR CONTINUATION OF THE WRITTEN STATEMENT] — in a very different way, and they want to know more, of course.

“However Americans want to interpret this assistance to migrants they undoubtedly know they are joining an historic mass migration. All Americans deserve to know the full extent of it, because the United States is the UN’s largest donor and the U.S. Congress appropriates a huge amount of money to the UN every year.

“I also would mention that the border is a national security concern. Just recently I was able to report that a Venezuelan crossed the Rio Grande from Matamoros to Brownsville, and that the FBI wanted that FBI-watchlisted individual held, and that ICE headquarters here in Washington, DC, intervened and demanded that, ordered that he be cut loose because he might get Covid in detention. That individual is now living freely, pursuing an asylum claim in Detroit. Thank you.”

*[WHAT FOLLOWS IS THE WRITTEN STATEMENT PUBLISHED ON MR. BENSMAN’S WEBSITE ToddBensman dot com]

“— as material support for mass illegal migration.

“However Americans interpret UN assistance in the new context of a historic mass migration event, public debate in the American square is necessary because the United States is the UN’s largest donor. In 2019, the last year in which expenditures are fully known, the executive branch and Congress separately allocated $11 billion, $5.5 billion of which filled accounts that fund migration and refugee support activities, Congressional Research Services recently reported.

“It’s unclear what the U.S. will contribute in 2022. The Biden administration proposes $3.7 billion, and it remains to be seen what Congress will want to appropriate separately.”

For FY 2025 CONGRESS MUST CUT FUNDING TO THE STATE DEPARTMENT BUREAU OF POPULATION, REFUGEES AND MIGRATION (PRM) which funds “migration and refugee assistance” programs including IOM and UNHCR.
Read 7 tweets

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