Narratives abound about immigrants (legal and illegal), their contributions to the US economy, the cost of deporting them, the loss of GDP and prosperity this might entail and much much more. These narratives are, oddly enough, upheld by both the mainstream left and the mainstream right. Both groups seem to have intersecting interests in the continued inflow of cheap immigrant labor into the United States and the West as a whole.
With an estimated 30+ million illegal immigrants in the United States, and countless other immigrants whom would be desirable to deport, the obvious first question is: would it even be logistically possible to deport such large numbers of people?
The answer is unequivocally yes!
Many people who seek to make the case for the feasibility of deportation look back to the famous Operation Wetback, when the US government deported millions of non-White Hispanics from the country, and this is a good example. The program had remarkably few resources, but a dedicated staff and the mandate to defend the nation.
When Operation Wetback commenced it was staffed by just 750 officers and allocated a mere 300 vehicles, seven planes and handful of boats. Yet, in the course of just a year, some 1.1 million immigration enforcement actions were undertaken. Roughly half of these were ‘hands on’ deportations, or border agents loading illegal immigrants and others into buses, planes and boats. Another 500,000 were illegals departing of their own volition, mostly because they were aware they would be arrested and deported anyway.
Today the Department of Homeland Security (the successor to the Immigration and Nationality Service which undertook Operation Wetback) has more than 260,000 employees. The Federal government owns more than 7,747 buses, with an average capcity of 56 people, and countless more planes and vessels.
As recently as the year 2000 the Federal Government removed or returned 1.8 million illegal aliens and other immigrants from the United States. From 1985-2006 a year with more than 1 million deportations and returns was quite normal, but immigration enforcement has since collapsed.