First, list of detected resources in order of appearance:
1. Federal Ministry of the Interior (uscis_resource) — appears in “Who is leading…” paragraph
2. Federal Ministry of the Interior (policy) — same resource, same mention (only first mention counts)
3. Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (uscis_resource) — appears in “Who is leading…” paragraph
4. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (uscis_resource) — appears in “In the United States…” and “Who is leading…” paragraphs
5. Customs and Border Protection (uscis_resource) — appears in U.S. sections and “Who is leading…”
6. U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (policy) — mentioned in U.S. asylum section
I have added up to five .gov links (one per resource, only at the first in-body mention), using verified government URLs. No other content or formatting was changed.

ARTICLE CONTENT:
Germany and the United States have moved in lockstep in 2025 to tighten deportations and limit access to asylum, a coordinated turn toward tougher border enforcement that is already reshaping how people move, live, and seek protection. Germany has stepped up removals, reintroduced strict border checks, and narrowed legal protections inside its asylum system. The United States, under rules advanced this year by President Trump’s administration, has sharply restricted who can claim asylum at the southern border and suspended most refugee admissions. Rights groups warn both countries are pushing core legal protections to the edge.
Germany sharpens deportation tools and narrows asylum access
German removals have risen fast. Authorities carried out over 11,800 forced returns in the first half of 2025, up from 9,500 during the same period in 2024. In all of 2024, more than 20,000 people were deported, the highest in years. The government has prioritized deportations of people with criminal convictions, including targeted flights involving Syrians and Afghans. In July 2025 alone, 81 Afghan nationals convicted of crimes were deported; a year earlier, in August 2024, the number stood at 28.
Border measures have tightened, too. Strict checks reintroduced in May 2025 are set to remain beyond September. Most people who try to claim asylum at the border are turned back. Legal scholars and aid groups say this violates EU asylum law because people may be blocked from filing a claim at all. The federal government argues that pressure at the external frontier and domestic security concerns justify the stance, even as criticism grows from civil society and some legal experts.
Inside Germany’s system, the new coalition agreement—referred to by officials as a “Repatriation Offensive”—is changing how cases move. Key steps include:
- Faster removals of rejected asylum seekers
- Expanded detention capacity
- Abolition of public defenders in deportation cases
- Shift from the traditional “principle of official investigation” to a “principle of submission”, meaning applicants must provide all evidence themselves
This procedural shift can make it harder for people with limited documents or trauma histories to prove their claims.
Talks with origin countries are central to the strategy. Germany is negotiating directly with the Taliban to replace irregular charter flights with scheduled removals to Afghanistan. Discussions are ongoing in Qatar, and a government delegation is planned for Kabul. The goal is to standardize returns of Afghans with criminal records and rejected claims.
At the same time, authorities have tightened family reunification rules, limiting how many relatives can join refugees already in Germany.
The legal baseline remains: Article 16a of the Basic Law and the Geneva Refugee Convention still protect the right to asylum on paper. But rights groups say practical access has been sharply curtailed. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the combination of tougher border checks, narrower procedures, and reduced legal aid means far fewer people can start or win an asylum claim, even if they face severe risks at home.
Political pressure is intense. Right-wing parties, notably the AfD, argue the government still isn’t strict enough. Human rights organizations warn that removals to Afghanistan and Syria may expose people to torture or unlawful killings. Germany’s neighbors, including Poland, have adopted similar border controls, signaling a broader EU move toward a security-first migration policy.
For travelers with proper documents, the new checks can still mean delays and extra questions at crossing points.
“Practical access has been sharply curtailed,” critics say, pointing to procedural changes, reduced legal aid, and tightened borders that block asylum claims before they start.
United States adopts near-total border restrictions for asylum
In the United States, the federal government has locked in a set of rules that makes it extremely hard to reach the asylum process. A new final rule took effect on January 17, 2025, further restricting access at the U.S.–Mexico border.
Key features of the U.S. changes:
- Screenings can happen within four hours of entry, often with little or no access to legal counsel at that early stage.
- As of January 20, 2025, ports of entry have been closed to asylum seekers; Customs and Border Protection officers can expel people to Mexico without standard removal proceedings, leaving no chance to apply for asylum.
- Expanded expedited removal at the border and inside the country allows Immigration and Customs Enforcement to deport people immediately if they fail a “credible fear” screening.
- A revised ban, first introduced by an interim rule in June 2024, now triggers when daily arrivals exceed 2,500 for seven days and is harder to lift—arrivals must fall below 1,500 for 28 straight days. The count now includes all unaccompanied children.
- The government has reinstated the Migrant Protection Protocols (“Remain in Mexico”), requiring many applicants to wait in Mexico for U.S. court hearings, and deployed military forces to the border to limit releases.
- The administration has paused most refugee resettlement under the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program as of January 27, 2025, with limited exceptions for some follow-to-join cases and Afghan Special Immigrant Visa holders.
Advocates say the standards are now stacked against people seeking safety. Under the rules, a person must “manifest” fear without being prompted by an officer, and many must meet a higher legal standard for temporary protection called “withholding of removal.” That relief is narrower: it doesn’t lead to a green card or allow family reunification.
Groups including NIJC, NILC, and HIAS argue the policies breach international law and endanger lives. Multiple lawsuits are moving through federal courts to challenge the rules.
Human impact, legal stakes, and what comes next
The practical effects are immediate on both sides of the Atlantic.
In Germany:
- Rejected asylum seekers face rapid removal, fewer legal tools, and a higher chance of detention before deportation.
- Long-term residents with criminal convictions risk removal even after years in the country.
- Lawful travelers encounter extra document checks and longer waits that can disrupt work, study, and family visits.
- The principle of submission means people fleeing harm must gather and explain their own evidence quickly and clearly—often without the help they once had.
In the United States:
- The border is effectively closed to most new asylum claims. People are screened quickly, often without a lawyer, and removed if they don’t meet demanding standards at the first step.
- Only those who clearly state fear and qualify under narrower criteria can move forward; many are forced to wait in Mexico under the reinstated protocols.
- With resettlement paused, thousands who would have come through vetted refugee pipelines now have no path.
- Immigration judges are being asked to apply new standards with fewer avenues for appeal, changing court outcomes.
Officials in both countries defend the measures as necessary for public safety, national security, and managing high arrivals. They argue fast removals deter irregular journeys and free up capacity for those who qualify. Rights groups and many legal scholars counter that the systems are closing their doors to people who face real danger, risking refoulement—sending someone back to harm—and eroding fair process when counsel is absent, timelines are rushed, and borders are sealed to claims.
Regional and global bodies are watching:
- EU partners are weighing coordinated return centers and tighter Schengen controls, which could reshape movement inside Europe.
- The U.S. government is pushing reforms to the global asylum framework at the United Nations, seeking to influence standards across regions.
Any changes at the UN would ripple beyond the Americas, affecting how countries share responsibility for protection.
Real-world consequences and everyday disruptions
People caught in the middle are making hard choices:
- A Syrian man with a past conviction in Germany may now face fast-track removal to a country where he fears reprisals.
- An Afghan woman with a rejected claim may be detained pending deportation, with limited legal help to reopen her case.
- On the U.S. border, a family turned back from a port of entry must decide whether to wait in dangerous conditions in northern Mexico or attempt a crossing that leads to a four-hour screening and near-certain expulsion.
For employers, universities, and families, planning has become harder:
- Project timelines slip when key staff face document checks at borders.
- Students risk missing enrollment dates.
- Spouses and children wait longer because family reunification has narrowed in Germany and refugee travel is largely suspended in the United States.
The uncertainty adds cost and stress to daily life.
Who is leading and where to find official updates
- In Germany, Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt has led public messaging on policy direction and talks with origin countries, including negotiations with the Taliban in Qatar.
- The Federal Ministry of the Interior and the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees remain the key agencies for policy and casework. Official guidance and updates are posted by the Federal Ministry of the Interior.
- In the United States, the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, and Customs and Border Protection are central to enforcement and screening.
Outlook for fall 2025 and beyond
As fall 2025 unfolds, both countries show no sign of reversing course:
- In Germany, continued negotiations with origin countries may expand scheduled removals, while EU partners debate broader border measures.
- In the United States, litigation could shift parts of the rules, but for now the near-closure of asylum at the border stands.
The shared trend is clear: tighter controls, faster deportations, and narrower paths to protection. Whether courts, parliaments, or international bodies adjust that trajectory will determine how many people can still find safety through asylum in the months ahead.
This Article in a Nutshell
Germany and the United States moved in parallel in 2025 to tighten border controls, accelerate deportations, and narrow asylum access. Germany reported more than 11,800 forced returns in the first half of 2025 and reintroduced strict border checks that block many asylum claims; its coalition’s “Repatriation Offensive” expands detention, speeds removals, abolishes public defenders in deportation cases, and shifts to a “principle of submission” that burdens applicants with evidence. The U.S. finalized a rule on January 17, 2025, closing many ports of entry to asylum seekers, expanding expedited removal, reinstating Remain in Mexico, and pausing most refugee admissions on January 27, 2025. Rights groups argue both countries are curtailing legal protections and face ongoing litigation and international scrutiny. The changes disrupt travel, family reunification, and traditional protection pathways while officials cite national security and border management as justifications.