Germany Signals Major Immigration Crackdown as Reports Claim Hundreds of Thousands Could Face Deportation Amid Political Shift

The Great Reversal: Germany’s Shocking Plan to Expel 800,000 Signals the End of an Era

Đức sắp trục xuất 800.000 người Hồi giáo… Kỷ nguyên nhập cư chính thức kết thúc - YouTube
BERLIN — In the shadow of the Brandenburg Gate, a political earthquake has just leveled the landscape of European democracy. The country that for a decade defined the world’s “welcome culture” has just signed its own death warrant. In a move that has sent shockwaves from Washington to Riyadh, Germany has officially declared the end of the migration era. The numbers are not just startling; they are historic. Berlin is preparing to send 800,000 people back to a homeland many haven’t seen in a decade. The message is loud, clear, and utterly ruthless: The experiment is over.

For ten years, the world watched as Germany transformed itself into the moral laboratory of the West. It was a wager of biblical proportions. Under former Chancellor Angela Merkel, the nation opened its borders to over a million souls fleeing the wreckage of the Syrian Civil War. “Wir schaffen das”—”We can manage this”—became the mantra of a continent. But on March 30, 2026, that mantra was officially buried under the weight of a new, harder reality.

Inside the Berlin Chancellery, the current Chancellor, Friedrich Merz, stood shoulder-to-shoulder with a man who, until recently, had a $10 million U.S. bounty on his head. Ahmed al-Shara, the face of the post-Assad Syrian transitional government, wasn’t there for a courtesy call. He was there to sign a deal that would dismantle the lives of nearly a million people.

“Within three years,” Merz told a stunned press corps, “around 80% of all Syrians currently living in Germany should return home.”

The figure—800,000—hit the room like a physical blow. This wasn’t a suggestion. This wasn’t “voluntary return.” This was a state-mandated reversal of a decade of policy. It was the “Sledgehammer of Berlin,” and it has officially ended the century-long dream of a borderless, harmonious Europe.

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The Rise and Fall of ‘Muti’s’ Dream
To understand why Germany is currently tearing itself apart, one must go back to the summer of 2015. Pictures of a three-year-old boy, Alan Kurdi, washed up on a Turkish beach, had paralyzed the global conscience. Germany, still haunted by the ghosts of its 20th-century history, saw an opportunity for redemption. Angela Merkel, the pastor’s daughter often called “Muti” (Mommy), decided that Germany would not just host refugees; it would absorb them.

For a few months, it was a fairy tale. German citizens handed out water bottles and teddy bears at train stations. The international press hailed Merkel as the “Chancellor of the Free World.” But behind the scenes, the machinery was already breaking.

The bureaucracy was drowning. Asylum offices were running at 300% capacity. Local mayors were begging for funds that didn’t exist. And in the dark corners of the internet, a small, fringe nationalist party called the Alternative for Germany (AfD) began to grow. Every housing shortage, every school strain, and every headline about “foreign crime” fed the AfD’s fire. By 2026, that fire has become an inferno.

The Integration Illusion
On paper, the “Merkel Wager” looked like it might actually pay off. Recent data from Germany’s Institute for Employment Research (IAB) showed that by the seven-year mark, nearly 61% of Syrian refugees were employed. Among men, that number was 73%. They were the orderlies in German hospitals, the drivers delivering packages, the construction workers building the new Germany.

In 2024, Germany saw a record 291,955 naturalizations. The single largest group? Syrians. Over 83,000 people traded their refugee status for a German passport in a single year. They weren’t “migrants” anymore; they were citizens, voters, and neighbors.

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But integration is a long-term game played on a short-term political clock. While the economists were looking at spreadsheets, the voters were looking at their rent checks. A study from the RWI Leibniz Institute for Economic Research found that the influx caused rental prices to spike in major cities like Berlin and Munich. The housing crisis became the match that lit the fuse of the far-right.

The Breaking Point: Cologne and the Firewall
The turning point wasn’t economic; it was visceral. On New Year’s Eve 2015, hundreds of women were sexually assaulted in coordinated attacks around Cologne’s main train station. The suspects were overwhelmingly men of North African and Middle Eastern origin. The “welcome culture” died that night.

The AfD, which sat at 5% in the polls when the borders opened, began a meteoric rise. By early 2026, they were polling at a staggering 27%—three points ahead of the country’s traditional governing parties. In eastern states like Saxony-Anhalt, they were approaching 40%.

Mainstream politicians panicked. To survive, they had to break the “Firewall”—the unwritten rule that no democratic party would ever work with the far-right. In January 2025, Friedrich Merz did exactly that, passing a migration motion with AfD votes. The firewall had crumbled. The new government, a coalition between Merz’s center-right and the collapsing center-left, was built on a single, grim mandate: Control.

The 800,000: A Calculated Threat or a Legal Impossible?
The announcement of the “800,000 Return” was designed to be a political shock-and-awe campaign. Merz framed it as a humanitarian “reconstruction partnership.” Germany would pledge €200 million for Syrian water supplies and hospitals, and in exchange, Syria would take its people back.

Việc Phần Lan và Đức tiếp nhận những người tị nạn dễ bị tổn thương là đáng khen ngợi, nhưng cần phải làm nhiều hơn nữa.

But the moment the cameras turned off, the legal reality set in. Germany’s Residence Act and the European Convention on Human Rights prohibit deporting people to zones where they face serious risk. Under German law, ending refugee protection requires proving that conditions in the home country have “fundamentally and sustainably” improved—a process that must be done case-by-case, person-by-person.

“The lawyers in the Chancellery know something the cameras don’t,” said one legal analyst. “If you try to deport 800,000 people, the court appeals alone would last for thirty years. We don’t have the planes, we don’t have the police, and we certainly don’t have the legal authority to do this in mass numbers.”

The numbers tell a different story than the headlines. In 2025, deportations rose by 45%, yet only 19,538 people were actually sent back. Meanwhile, the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) reviewed 16,000 Syrian cases and found only 552—less than 4%—where protection could actually be revoked.

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The Future Scenario: A Continent Transformed
What happens when a government makes a promise it can’t legally keep?

By 2029, the deadline set by Merz, Germany will be a different country. If the government attempts to force these deportations, it will lead to scenes unseen on the continent since the 1940s: families being dragged from their homes, children who speak only German being put on planes to a war-torn desert.

However, the real goal isn’t the physical removal of 800,000 people. It’s the “Great Tightening.” Germany is signaling to the world that the door is bolted shut. They are suspending family reunifications, pushing back boats at the border, and linking foreign aid to deportation cooperation.

Across Europe, the “Germany Pivot” is being mirrored. Denmark has already declared parts of Syria “safe.” Italy is negotiating deals with North African warlords. The Netherlands has joined Germany in recognizing the post-Assad transition as grounds for stripping status.

The immigration era isn’t ending because the people have left; it’s ending because the “Welcome” has been replaced by “Get Out.” The moral anchor of Europe has cut its line, and the continent is now drifting into much darker, colder waters.