Good morning. Today’s newsletter covers three major developments — a bold immigration overhaul that could put ICE in the airline business, a high-stakes deportation fight involving an unexpected third-country agreement, and a growing naval alliance between two American adversaries.
Noem Wants ICE to Fly Its Own Deportation Airline
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is proposing what would be a historic shift in immigration enforcement: the creation of a government-owned airline dedicated to deporting illegal immigrants.
ICE currently relies on private charters to carry out removals — a costly and inefficient system, often costing up to $200,000 per flight. But thanks to the Trump administration’s new funding package, ICE has access to $30 billion specifically earmarked for deportation efforts.
With that cash, Noem is pushing ICE to buy up to 30 aircraft, build out its own fleet, and take full control of the process — allowing the agency to potentially double or triple deportations, aiming for 30,000–35,000 per month.
Critics see the proposal as a dangerous escalation. Supporters argue it’s a long-overdue fix to an overwhelmed system. Even former Biden ICE officials admitted this was the next logical step if mass removals are the goal.
Deportation to Uganda? Third-Country Deal Sparks Outcry
U.S. immigration officials are attempting to deport Salvadoran national Kilmar Abrego Garcia — not to his home country, but to Uganda.
The move isn’t random. It stems from a recent agreement between the Trump administration and the Ugandan government, which allows the U.S. to send certain deportees to Uganda as a third-country relocation destination.
His legal team calls the move retaliatory, following his refusal of a plea deal that would have required jail time and resettlement in Costa Rica.
His lawyers argue that the charges — stemming from a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee in which he was linked to human trafficking operations — are a pretext to punish him for previously challenging his original deportation, which had already been overturned by court order earlier this year.
Legal experts say the case could become a key test of the limits of third-country deportation agreements.
Russia and China Begin Joint Naval Patrols in Asia-Pacific
Meanwhile, on the geopolitical front, Russia and China have launched a new round of joint naval patrols in the Asia-Pacific, underscoring deepening military cooperation between the two powers.
The patrol — which includes Russia’s Admiral Tributs and China’s destroyer Shaoxing — follows this month’s Maritime Interaction 2025 exercise with the goal of “monitoring maritime areas and protecting economic activity,” according to their defense ministries.
Joint patrols like this have taken place annually since 2021, but this year’s iteration takes on new weight amid increasing global instability, military posturing in Taiwan, and a the relationship between China, Russia, and the West intensifying.
The ships are currently operating in strategically sensitive waters in and around exclusive economic zones, though both countries insist the operation is within international norms.
Analysts see the drills as a clear message to Washington — that Moscow and Beijing are not only coordinating diplomatically but also operationally.
READ NEXT: Trump Admin Moves To Deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia To Uganda After Failed Plea Deal
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There is definitely enough evidence to show he is here illegally. That is jail time. If there is enough evidence to do State time and Federal time for the trafficking, then that could be served non concurrently. After that which might be more than a decade, he could be deported permanently. Do not understand why some members of the judicial branch are so interested in someone being able to continue committing the crimes they were committing? Are there ulterior motives involved? I know that a criminal has the right to a defense, but this carte blanche attitude is simply not how the law was intended to be enforced.