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Norms Impact

US paid $32m to five countries to accept about 300 deportees, report shows

We are paying foreign governments through opaque deals to take deportees the law may protect—then routing people onward anyway—normalizing a shadow deportation system beyond meaningful oversight.

Executive

Feb 13, 2026

Sources

Summary

The US government paid more than $32m to five foreign governments to accept about 300 deportees, including cases costing over $1m per person, and many deportees were later returned to their home countries at additional US expense. The administration is expanding third-country deportations through opaque, transactional arrangements with foreign regimes while the Senate foreign relations committee Democrats report limited oversight of the funds and disputed claims that home countries refused returns. The result is a high-cost removal pipeline that can reroute people with court-ordered protections into indirect returns to places where they may face persecution, while weakening accountability for how public money and foreign policy leverage are used.

Reality Check

This conduct threatens due process by turning third-country transfers into a workaround that can nullify court-ordered protections and conceal who is responsible when people are pushed back into danger. If officials knowingly used third-country removals to evade non-refoulement obligations, the most serious exposure is not a clean criminal fit but a pattern of unlawful executive action under the APA and contempt risk in individual cases where courts ordered protections; the federal district judge’s finding of an apparent effort “to evade” legal obligations is a flashing warning. The money pipeline and “opaque negotiations” also raise acute anti–quid-pro-quo governance concerns—public funds and diplomatic leverage being traded for deportation cooperation without transparent terms, auditing, or accountability. When our government normalizes indirect removals to accomplish what it “cannot do directly,” the precedent is a state that can launder illegality through foreign intermediaries and leave our rights to procedural protections hollow.

Detail

<p>Senate foreign relations committee Democrats released a 30-page investigation stating the Trump administration paid more than $32m to five countries to accept approximately 300 third-country nationals deported from the US. The report cites payments and flight-cost estimates including $7.5m to Rwanda plus about $601,864 in flights for seven people; $7.5m to Equatorial Guinea for 29 people; $7.5m to Palau with no documented flights; $5.1m to Eswatini for 15 people; and at least $4.76m to El Salvador for about 250 people.</p><p>Committee staff said the State Department is pursuing similar agreements with 70 to 80 countries. The investigation found more than 80% of migrants sent to third countries had already returned to their home nations or were in the process of doing so, sometimes on US-funded travel after initial third-country flights. The report describes cases where ICE did not request travel documents from home governments or did not provide sufficient time for processing. It also notes limited evidence of State Department monitoring of transferred funds and describes negotiations involving political concessions or pressure tactics.</p>