Trump says lax migration policies are top national security threat after National Guard members shot

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Wednesday's "heinous assault" ontwo National Guardmembers near the White House proves that lax migration policies are "the single greatest national security threat facing our nation."

"No country can tolerate such a risk to our very survival," he said.

Trump's remarks, released in a video on social media, underscores his intention to reshape the country's immigration system and increase scrutiny of migrants who are already here. With aggressive deportation efforts already underway, his response to the shooting showed that his focus will not waver.

The suspect in the shooting is believed to be an Afghan national, according to Trump and two law enforcement officials. He entered the United States in September 2021, after thechaotic collapseof the government in Kabul, when Americans were frantically evacuating people as the Taliban took control.

The 29-year-old suspect was part of Operation Allies Welcome, the Biden-era program that resettled tens of thousands of Afghans after the U.S. withdrawal from the country, officials said. The initiative brought roughly 76,000 Afghans to the United States, many of whom hadworked alongside American troopsand diplomats as interpreters and translators.

It has since faced intense scrutiny from Trump and his allies, congressional Republicans and some government watchdogs over gaps in the vetting process and the speed of admissions, even as advocates say it offered a lifeline to people at risk of Taliban reprisals.

Trump described Afghanistan as "a hellhole on earth," and he said his administration would review everyone who entered from the country under President Joe Biden — a measure his administration hadalready been planningbefore the incident.

During his remarks, Trump also swung his focus to Minnesota, where he complained about "hundreds of thousands of Somalians" who are "ripping apart that once-great state."

Minnesota has the country'slargest Somali community, roughly 87,000 people. Many came as refugees over the years.

The reference to immigrants with no connection to Wednesday's developments was a reminder of the scope of Trump's ambitions to rein in migration.

Administration officials have been ramping up deportations of people in the country illegally, as well as clamping down on refugee admissions. The focus has involved the realignment of resources at federal agencies,stirring concernabout potentially undermining other law enforcement priorities.

However, Trump's remarks were a signal that scrutiny of migrants and the nation's borders will only increase. He said he wants to remove anyone "who does not belong here or does not add benefit to our country."

"If they can't love our country, we don't want them," Trump added.

Afterward, the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services announced it would indefinitely stop processing all immigration requests for Afghan nationals pending a review of security and vetting protocols.

Supporters of Afghan evacueessaid they feared that people who escaped danger from the Taliban would now face renewed suspicion and scrutiny.

"I don't want people to leverage this tragedy into a political ploy," said Shawn VanDiver, president of #AfghanEvac.

He said Wednesday's shooting should not shed a negative light on thetens of thousands of Afghan nationalswho have gone through the various legal pathways to resettling in the U.S. and those who await in the pipeline.

Under Operation Allies Welcome, tens of thousands of Afghans were first brought to U.S. military bases around the country, where they completed immigration processing and medical evaluations before settling into the country. Four years later, there are still scores of Afghans who were evacuated at transit points in the Middle East and Europe as part of the program.

Those in countries like Qatar and Albania, who have undergone the rigorous process, have been left in limbo since Trump entered his second term and paused the program as part of his series of executive actions cracking down on immigration.

Vice President JD Vance, writing on social media, criticized Biden for "opening the floodgate to unvetted Afghan refugees," adding that "they shouldn't have been in our country."

"Already some voices in corporate media chirp that our immigration policies are too harsh," he said. "Tonight is a reminder of why they're wrong."

Amiri reported from New York. Associated Press writer Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this report.

Trump says lax migration policies are top national security threat after National Guard members shot

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Trump sent National Guard troops to Washington in August. Some are armed. Some have cleaned parks

The two members of theWest Virginia National Guard who were shotin Washington on Wednesday were among more than 2,000 troops deployed to the nation's capital as part of President Donald Trump'scrime-fighting missionthat involved taking over the local police department. The president quickly ordered 500 more National Guard members to the city after the shooting.

The members were shot about two blocks from the White House. Officials said they were hospitalized in critical condition. Washington's mayor said they were victims of a "targeted shooting."

Here's a look at theNational Guard'spresence in Washington:

Trump declared a public safety emergency but officials say crime was already falling

Trump launched the deployment on Aug. 11 when hedeclared a public safety emergencyand said his administration also would be removing homeless encampments.

He said he aimed to reduce crime. But the city's attorney general said violent crime in the district reached 30-year lows last year and was down an additional 26% this year.

West Virginia among several states with guardsmen in the district

There were 2,188 troops assigned to the joint task force that took over the city's policing, according to the government's latest update.

As of early November, the D.C. National Guard had the largest number on the ground with 949. West Virginia was next with 416 guardsmen.

Last week, at least 160 West Virginia troops volunteered to extend their deployment to Dec. 31. The others returned to West Virginia on Nov. 17.

Other states with forces in Washington early this month were Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama.

Officials withseveral of the statestold The Associated Press they planned to end their deployments by Nov. 30 but indicated that also depended on whether they received orders to extend their stay.

The D.C. National Guard has had their deployment order renewed throughthe end of February.

Military presence and landscaping

Some troops have been armed and provided a military presence in public spaces, especially in federal parks, subway stations andUnion Station. Others have done yard work,removed graffiti and cleaned parks.

In early October, the joint task force said troops cleared 1,150 bags of trash, spread 1,045 cubic yards (0.8 cubic meters) of mulch, removed 50 truckloads of plant waste, cleared 7.9 miles (12.7 kilometers) of roadway, painted 270 feet (82 meters) of fencing and pruned 400 trees.

Since then, most task force daily updates offered only new troop figures and no summaries of beautification efforts.

Their presence has unnerved some residents, who see it as presidential overreach on law enforcement. Others say they approve, particularly of a contingent of National Guard troops focused on community improvement efforts.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat whose city budget and laws are determined by Congress, haswalked a fine linebetween appeasing Trump and pushing back on the deployment. She has acknowledged that the campaign has helped push down crime, while arguing that the out-of-state National Guard deployment has not been "an efficient use of those resources."

Carrying handguns and rifles

Some National Guard troopshave been armedsince late August.

The military said some units on certain missions would have handguns and others would have rifles. These missions would include units on patrol throughout the capital.

All units with firearms were trained and operating under strict rules for use of force, the military said.

The joint task force said the military's rules allowed force to be used "only as a last resort and solely in response to an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm." It said troops were committed to protecting "the safety and wellbeing" of Washington's residents.

Court battles

On Nov. 20, afederal judge orderedthe Trump administration to end the deployment, saying it illegally intruded on local officials' authority to direct law enforcement in the district. U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb put her order on hold for 21 days to allow for an appeal.

The District of Columbia had challenged the deployment,saying it was an illegal use of the military for domestic law enforcement. The lawsuit said it violated Washington'sHome Rule Act, signed by President Richard Nixon in 1973, and wrongly asserted federal control over units from other states.

Cobb found that while the president does have authority to protect federal functions and property, he can't unilaterally deploy the D.C. National Guard to help with crime control as he sees fit or call in troops from other states.

Trump sent National Guard troops to Washington in August. Some are armed. Some have cleaned parks

The two members of theWest Virginia National Guard who were shotin Washington on Wednesday were among more than 2,000 tro...
Zac Efron's 'Back to Normal' Face Has Everyone Talking As Expert Weighs In On What Happened

Zac Efron, who arrived atDancing with the Starsto support his brotherDylanduring their latest taping, has unexpectedly become the center of a renewed public debate after a photo of him went viral for reasons that hadnothing to do with the show.

The image spread across social platforms shortly after, where Zac attended with his younger sister Olivia. The actor had spent the night cheering every time Dylan appeared on camera.

But the online reaction quickly zeroed in onZac's face, with thousands of viewers saying he finally looked "normal" again.

"People don't understand that jaw surgery completely morphs your face… I get so annoyed when people say he got botched filler or implants. The man literally had to get his face put back together," one fan wrote.

Zac Efron's fans believe his appearance has finally gone "back to normal" after he attendedDancing with the Stars

Image credits:Samir Hussein/WireImage|Steve Granitz/FilmMagic

In the hours after the photo went viral, fans split into two camps.

Some defended Zac, echoing the long-standing explanation that his altered appearance traced back to the 2013 accident in which he shattered his jaw after slipping and hitting a granite fountain.

"He almost di*d because of the accident," one supporter said. "Do not assume every person in Hollywood gets surgery for vanity reasons."

"He's finally back to normal," another celebrated.

Image credits:Joe Scarnici/Getty Images|Netflix

Others, however, were far more skeptical. They pushed the narrative that Efron had undergone cosmetic procedures that ended up hurting his image.

"If you undergo cosmetic surgery for vanity, then you're responsible for whatever mean words and depression follow," a critic wrote.

Image credits:Instagram / @zacdowntoearth

The divide became sharper when another commenter questioned the official timeline entirely:

"The jaw injury happened in 2013. But his face completely changed in 2021, eight years later. It had nothing to do with the injury; it was a cosmetic change done years later," the user said.

Using this photo every time I see a "wHaT dId ZaC eFrOn Do To HiS fAcE?!¿¡?!¿¡" post!#dwtspic.twitter.com/WVQ2nmzfoc

— Jenna Colbert ✭ (@j_colbertt)November 19, 2025

Image credits:emkenobi

This isn't the first time this argument has been brought up in online debates surrounding Efron's appearance.

Critics insist that no reconstructive swelling or muscle imbalance would appear nearly a decade after the injury. Supporters argue the opposite, defending Efron's version of events.

Efron said that his jaw muscles grew over the years as the result of a 2013 fracture

Image credits:DWTS / Entertainment Tonight

To understand whether the timeline is legitimate, it's necessary to turn to Efron's own recorded comments.

In 2022, the actor explained that after the 2013 fracture, the muscles in his jaw and face began overcompensating to stabilize the injury.

His masseter muscles, he said, grew disproportionately large as a result. When he briefly stopped physical therapy while filming abroad, the imbalance intensified, creating the dramatically widened jawline that went viral in 2021.

"The masseters just grew… really, really big," Efron said at the time.

Image credits:DWTS / Entertainment Tonight

Experts in maxillofacial surgery support the plausibility of this.

According to a2025 studyby the Shanghai Jiao Tong University, long-term swelling, nerve disruption, compensatory muscle hypertrophy, and asymmetry can take months or years to resolve, and can even reappear when rehab lapses.

Some patients require continuous therapy to manage the effects.

Despite this, cosmetic speculation has only grown louder. Plastic surgeons have listed every possibility from fillers to implants to jaw contouring.

Plastic surgeons believe the truth lies somewhere in the middle, with Efron trying to "fix" his jaw with cosmetic procedures

Image credits:Instagram / Dylan Efron

In 2023, celebrity facial plastic surgeon Dr. Sam Rizk toldThe New York Postthat, in his opinion, Zac Efron's explanation does not fully account for the extent of the changes.

"He probably took the opportunity, in addition to correcting it, to do something better," Rizk said.

Image credits:Instagram / Zac Efron

According to him, the actor's jawline shows signs of additional procedures.

"He might have had jaw advancements where they pull the chin a little bit more forward because his chin looks a little bit more prominent. Or a chin implant or mandibular angle implants in the lower jaw."

Image credits:GettyImages | DWTS / Entertainment Tonight

Rizk also pointed to changes around Efron's eyes and brows.

"He always had a straight eyebrow, and now they have more of an arch," he said. "His eyebrow is a little bit higher, which indicates he had some type of brow lift or he had Botox."

Rizk said he also noticed fuller cheeks.

"Cheeks don't get fuller as you age," he explained. "You lose volume in the cheeks when you age. When he was younger he had a flatter cheek."

While he did not believe Efron had cheek implants, he said the actor "most likely" received filler.

"Be nice." Efron's fans pushed back against criticism of the actor's looks

Zac Efron’s ‘Back to Normal’ Face Has Everyone Talking As Expert Weighs In On What Happened

Zac Efron, who arrived atDancing with the Starsto support his brotherDylanduring their latest taping, has unexpectedly be...

 

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