President Donald Trump said on Feb. 1 that Venezuela has agreed to receive all Venezuelan illegal immigrants arrested inside the United States and provide for their transportation to their home country.
His comment came after the U.S. special envoy, Richard Grenell, met with Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro on Jan. 31 and brought back six American citizens formerly detained in Venezuela, according to photos that he posted on social media.
Trump’s Feb. 1 post also made reference to the six Americans, saying that “it is so good to have the Venezuela Hostages back home.”
“We are in the process of removing record numbers of illegal aliens from all Countries, and all Countries have agreed to accept these illegal aliens back,” Trump also wrote on Feb. 1. “Furthermore, record numbers of criminals are being removed from our Country, and the Border numbers are the strongest they have been since the First Term of the Trump Administration!”
Mass deportations of illegal immigrants from the United States were a major campaign promise during Trump’s successful presidential campaign in 2024.
After taking office on Jan. 20, the president has signed a number of immigration- and border-related executive orders, including an attempt to end birthright citizenship that was later paused by a judge, declaring a national emergency at the border, ending an app used by illegal immigrants to schedule appointments with federal officials, initiating immigration raids in multiple major cities, and more.
Trump on Jan. 29 said in a press conference that his administration is now planning to send the “worst criminal aliens” to the Guantanamo Bay naval base and detention facility. He ordered the Pentagon to prepare to hold up to 30,000 criminal aliens, saying some of them can’t be trusted to stay in their home countries once they are sent back.
“Some of them are so bad that we don’t even trust the countries to hold them because we don’t want them coming back, so we’re gonna send them out to Guantanamo,” Trump said.