WASHINGTON: The Trump administration last week ordered US diplomats abroad to lobby against pro-migration policies and raise concerns over what it says are migrant populations committing violent crimes, according to a State Department cable seen by Reuters.
The cable, sent on Friday to dozens of US embassies across Europe, Canada and Australia, argues that crime and human rights abuses linked to mass migration and “individuals of a migration background” were a significant concern in Europe and the West. It says these incidents threaten public safety and social cohesion around the world.
It instructs US missions to report to Washington on such crimes and abuses and to provide analysis of how the host country reacts, while pushing the governments to reform migration policies and limit any programs that enable mass migration.
“We encourage your government to ensure that policies protect your citizens from the negative social impacts of mass migration, including displacement, sexual assault, and the breakdown of law and order,” reads one of more than a dozen talking points the State Department provided to US diplomats in the cable, which was first reported by the New York Times.
Anti-immigration was a major part of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. After taking office, he launched an aggressive enforcement campaign, surging troops to the southern border and pledging to deport millions of immigrants who were in the US illegally.
The Republican president has repeatedly blamed migrants in the US illegally for fueling violent crime, although studies show immigrants are not more likely to commit crimes.
The administration has also worked to internationalize its restrictive approach. In September, top officials urged other nations to join a global campaign to roll back asylum protections, a major shift that would seek to reshape the post-World War Two framework around humanitarian migration.
Late last month Trump slashed the limit on refugee admissions for fiscal 2026 to a record low 7,500 from the 100,000 who entered under then-President Joe Biden in fiscal 2024. Trump said his administration would focus on bringing in white South Africans of Afrikaner ethnicity.
A State Department spokesperson, asked for comment on the cable, said mass migration was a human rights issue and that it regularly led to a rise in violent crimes. The spokesperson did not provide any data to support the assertion.
The cable, which quotes Trump as saying that “a nation without borders is not a nation,” also asks governments to resist practices that “disproportionately favor migrant populations at the expense of local communities, including displacement, legal consequences for criticizing mass migration.”
US diplomats ordered to raise concerns over migrant populations
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US diplomats ordered to raise concerns over migrant populations
- Trump administration sees mass migration as linked to crime, rights abuses
- Trump unveiled aggressive anti-immigration agenda
Thai military plane crash kills two pilots
BANGKOK: A military plane crashed in a forested area of northern Thailand during a training flight on Thursday, killing the two pilots on board, the air force said.
“Two pilots died in an aircraft accident involving a light attack aircraft AT-6TH this morning during training,” air force spokesman Jackkrit Thammanvichai said.
The two-seater plane crashed in Chiang Mai province at around 10:20 am (0320 GMT) during a combat search and rescue training mission, the air force said in a statement.
The crash “did not affect local residents or cause damage to civilian property,” the statement said.
Authorities were investigating the cause of the crash and had deployed to the scene, it added.
Six Thai police officers were killed in April last year when a small plane crashed into the sea during a parachute training drill near a resort town south of the capital Bangkok.
“Two pilots died in an aircraft accident involving a light attack aircraft AT-6TH this morning during training,” air force spokesman Jackkrit Thammanvichai said.
The two-seater plane crashed in Chiang Mai province at around 10:20 am (0320 GMT) during a combat search and rescue training mission, the air force said in a statement.
The crash “did not affect local residents or cause damage to civilian property,” the statement said.
Authorities were investigating the cause of the crash and had deployed to the scene, it added.
Six Thai police officers were killed in April last year when a small plane crashed into the sea during a parachute training drill near a resort town south of the capital Bangkok.
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