





In a shocking turn of events, a deadly attack near the White House has prompted the Trump administration to slam the brakes on millions of asylum cases, signaling a hard pivot toward tighter immigration controls.
The incident, involving an Afghan asylee fatally shooting a National Guard member and critically injuring another on Thanksgiving eve, has sparked a sweeping response from the Department of Homeland Security, including a pause on 2.2 million pending asylum cases and a review of over 720,000 green-card holders from 19 designated high-risk nations.
The tragedy unfolded when Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a 29-year-old Afghan granted asylum earlier this year after aiding the CIA in Afghanistan, opened fire near the White House, claiming the life of 20-year-old Sarah Beckstrom and leaving 24-year-old Andrew Wolfe in critical condition.
Lakanwal, evacuated from Afghanistan in 2001 and legally recognized as an asylee just months ago, was on track for a green card next year—until this horrifying act flipped the script on his status and ignited a national security firestorm.
In response, the Department of Homeland Security announced late on a Friday night that all 2.2 million pending asylum cases would be halted, while U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) confirmed a complete stop to asylum decisions until enhanced vetting measures are in place.
The State Department didn’t waste time either, suspending visa issuance for Afghan passport holders that same day, a clear signal that trust in certain migration pathways has been shattered.
Yet, the fallout for those already in the system remains murky—will new arrivals claiming persecution at the border be turned away, and what happens to those with looming court dates before immigration judges?
On top of this, the Trump administration has ordered a deep dive into the status of more than 720,000 green-card holders from 19 “countries of concern,” a list that includes nations like Cuba, Afghanistan, Venezuela, Haiti, and Iran, among others, with significant permanent resident populations.
USCIS Director Joseph Edlow, speaking on a Thursday, declared, “At the direction of [President Trump], I have directed a full-scale, rigorous reexamination of every Green Card for every alien from every country of concern.” Well, that’s a bold promise, but with details still “under discussion,” as a senior White House official noted, one wonders if this massive undertaking will bog down an already strained system.
Among the scrutinized, Cuba tops the list with over 335,000 green cards issued in recent fiscal years, while Afghanistan follows with more than 123,000, and smaller numbers from places like Yemen, Somalia, and Eritrea round out a diverse but targeted group.
President Trump himself weighed in with characteristic bluntness on Truth Social, stating, “Only REVERSE MIGRATION can fully cure this situation.” It’s a provocative stance, sure to rile up critics who see legal immigration as a cornerstone of American values, but it underscores a deep frustration with current policies.
This crackdown on legal pathways comes on the heels of Trump’s broader push against unauthorized border crossings, a stark reversal of the previous administration’s mass-parole approaches that saw southern border encounters skyrocket before a recent decline.
With roughly 12.8 million green-card holders in the U.S.—many tied to family, work, or humanitarian relief—the question looms: how do you balance national security without painting entire communities with a broad brush of suspicion?
Supporters of the administration argue these measures are a necessary reset after years of lax oversight, while opponents worry about the chilling effect on those who’ve played by the rules, dreaming of citizenship after their five-year wait.
Ultimately, as the nation mourns Sarah Beckstrom and prays for Andrew Wolfe’s recovery, the debate over immigration policy has never felt more urgent—or more divisive. The Trump administration’s latest moves may be a gut punch to progressive ideals, but they reflect a raw, unapologetic demand for safety first. Only time will tell if this hardline stance can deliver security without sacrificing the promise of a nation built on second chances.



