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And that number understates the full scope. Assistant Secretary of State Dylan Johnson said the 20,000 figure does not account for the many Americans who have safely relocated to other countries or those who have departed the Middle East but are still in transit back to the United States.
In other words, the actual number of Americans moved out of harm's way is considerably higher than the headline figure.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio directed his department Thursday to coordinate charter flight and ground transportation operations and to continue to ramp them up with additional flights and ground transports. The machinery of evacuation is not winding down. It is scaling up.
The State Department also created a Crisis Intake Form for U.S. citizens in six countries: Bahrain, Israel, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates. The form allows Americans in those nations to directly receive information about upcoming charter flights and ground transportation options, cutting through bureaucratic noise and getting actionable logistics into the hands of people who need them.
Johnson said the department's 24/7 Task Force has assisted over 10,000 U.S. citizens abroad, including offering security guidance and travel assistance, and will continue such efforts, according to Just the News.
That's two data points worth sitting with. Nearly 20,000 returned home. Over 10,000 were directly assisted by the Task Force. All within days of a shooting war breaking out.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Wednesday that U.S. citizens in the region were given prior warnings to evacuate. This matters because it speaks to preparation. The administration did not wait for missiles to fly and then scramble. Americans were told to move before the strikes began Saturday, and the infrastructure to help them do so was already being assembled.
This is what competent crisis management looks like. Warn early. Build capacity. Execute fast. Then keep ramping up for those still in transit.
Some critics of the evacuation say the Trump administration has not made it a priority. Who these critics are, and what evidence they're working from, remains conveniently unspecified. It's the kind of charge that floats through Washington like smoke: no source, no substance, but enough to generate a headline for outlets looking for one.
The numbers tell a different story. Twenty thousand Americans are home in a matter of days. A 24/7 Task Force handling over 10,000 individual cases. Charter flights are being coordinated and expanded. A Crisis Intake Form is deployed across six countries. If this isn't a priority, the word has lost all meaning.
The State Department's posture is forward-leaning. Rubio's directive Thursday wasn't a status update; it was an order to accelerate. More flights. More ground transport. More capacity for Americans still trying to get out.
Wars create chaos. Evacuations are messy by nature. But the measure of a government in crisis is not whether everything goes perfectly. It's whether the machinery moves, whether the people in charge are pushing resources toward the problem, and whether citizens on the ground have a clear path to safety.
By every metric available in the source material, that is exactly what is happening. Nearly 20,000 Americans are home. Thousands more are on the way. The task force is running around the clock.
The operation speaks for itself.


