Dramatic illustration of counterterrorism chief Joe Kent testifying on 18,000 suspected terrorists entering the U.S., with charts, Afghan evacuations, and border crossings.
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Counterterrorism chief says about 18,000 known or suspected terrorists entered U.S. under Biden

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Joe Kent, director of the National Counterterrorism Center, told the House Homeland Security Committee that roughly 18,000 people he described as known or suspected terrorists entered the United States during the Biden administration, including about 2,000 Afghans admitted under Operation Allies Welcome following the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. Kent said the estimate does not include an unknown number of people who crossed the southern border illegally and criticized what he called inadequate vetting, citing a recent deadly shooting in Washington, D.C.

During testimony Thursday before the House Homeland Security Committee, Joe Kent, director of the National Counterterrorism Center under President Donald Trump, said that U.S. authorities have identified roughly 18,000 people as known or suspected terrorists who entered the United States during the Biden administration.

According to a report by the Daily Wire, Kent told lawmakers that of those 18,000 individuals, about 2,000 were Afghans who came to the United States under Operation Allies Welcome, the Biden-era program that brought tens of thousands of Afghans to the country after the 2021 troop withdrawal from Afghanistan, and that the remaining roughly 16,000 entered through other channels.

The Daily Wire article, which cited video of the hearing, quoted Kent as saying his office is working closely with the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI to account for these individuals. “We’re working right now hand in hand with DHS and with the FBI to run down this 2,000 — the Afghans that came here under Operation Allies Welcome who have ties to terrorist organizations, and additionally the other 16,000 individuals with ties to terrorist organizations that Biden let into our country,” he said, according to the outlet.

Kent characterized this as “probably the top terrorist threat that we face right now” and said his estimate does not include people who entered the country illegally across the southern border, a figure he described as “alarmingly” unknown, the Daily Wire reported.

He pointed to the case of an Afghan man accused of shooting two National Guard soldiers in Washington, D.C., shortly before Thanksgiving, killing one and wounding the other, as an example of what he views as failures in the vetting process. The Daily Wire reported that Kent asserted the Biden administration used a “ruse” to allow the man into the United States despite what he described as links to jihadist groups.

“These are individuals who under normal circumstances would never be allowed to enter our country because of their ties to jihadi groups like ISIS and Al-Qaeda, yet the Biden administration not only let them into the country and in many cases facilitated their entry into the country, just like the entry of the Afghan terrorist who committed the terrorist attack here just before Thanksgiving, killing one of our National Guard members and wounding another,” Kent said in the testimony excerpt published by the Daily Wire.

He further argued that Afghans brought to the United States during the evacuation were not vetted to the standards typically applied to immigrants or refugees. “These individuals, despite what has been reported, were not vetted properly to come into the United States,” he said, according to the outlet.

At the time of Kent’s testimony, major U.S. news organizations and official government releases had not independently published a full breakdown of the 18,000 figure or the claim that about 2,000 Afghan evacuees admitted under Operation Allies Welcome have ties to terrorist organizations. The Biden administration has previously said that Afghan evacuees underwent multi-layered security screening involving intelligence, law enforcement and counterterrorism databases, and it has not publicly confirmed Kent’s specific numbers or characterization of the threat.

Kent’s comments reflect the Trump administration’s broader argument that Biden-era immigration and refugee policies allowed dangerous individuals into the United States. The underlying intelligence assessments that produced the 18,000 estimate have not been made public, and independent verification of the precise numbers and alleged organizational ties remains limited to what was presented in the committee hearing and reported by partisan outlets.

Ano ang sinasabi ng mga tao

X discussions react strongly to NCTC Director Joe Kent's testimony claiming 18,000 known or suspected terrorists entered the US under Biden, mainly via Afghan evacuations and borders. Sentiments are overwhelmingly negative, with users calling it treason, a national security catastrophe, and demanding deportations. High-engagement posts from conservative commentators and officials amplify outrage over vetting failures. No significant positive or skeptical voices found; focus on alarm and Biden admin criticism.

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Dramatic illustration of National Guard shooting near White House, overlaid with World Relief's criticism of Trump vetting order.
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World Relief Criticizes Trump Vetting Order One Day Before Afghan National’s Attack Near White House

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Divisions among Republicans are widening over President Trump's expanded limits on Afghan immigration following a fatal Washington, D.C., shooting, with several GOP lawmakers urging more tailored vetting measures to protect Afghan allies who aided U.S. forces.

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The Trump administration has intensified its mass deportation efforts, arresting over 595,000 illegal immigrants and deporting around 605,000 since Inauguration Day. These operations have brought attention to several high-profile cases involving serious crimes by undocumented individuals. Officials describe these as examples of the 'worst of the worst' among those in the country illegally.

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Germany's Federal Police recorded about 62,500 illegal entries at its borders in 2025, halving the figure from 2023. Since border controls were introduced in September 2024 and intensified in May 2025, thousands have been turned away. The measures aim to curb migration more effectively.

The U.S. military says it conducted strikes on three boats accused of smuggling drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean on December 15, 2025, killing eight people it described as members of designated terrorist organizations. The operation, part of a broader Trump administration campaign against drug cartels, has intensified concerns in Congress over transparency and the legal basis for the use of force.

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Following the fatal shooting of U.S. citizen Alex Pretti during a Border Patrol operation—detailed in prior coverage—White House border czar Tom Homan arrived in Minneapolis to redirect immigration enforcement toward serious criminals, amid backlash against aggressive tactics by DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and reassigned Border Patrol chief Gregory Bovino.

 

 

 

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