Elon Musk says ‘the groundwork is being laid for something far worse than 9/11’ after Biden administration ADMITTED flying 320K unvetted migrants into the US has national security ‘vulnerabilities’

Elon Musk has slammed the Biden administration after they admitted to flying 320,000 unvetted migrants into the US.

Musk took to his platform

“It is very likely that the groundwork is being laid for something much worse than 9/11. It’s only a matter of time,” Musk said as he reposted a story from DailyMail.com.

Tesla’s makers are commenting after a secret Biden program emerged in which the administration admitted to flying 320,000 migrants to the US — but officials refuse to say who was flown and where.

Lawyers for the government’s immigration authorities have claimed that revealing the locations of these undocumented aliens could create “vulnerabilities” in national security.

Elon Musk reposted an article from DailyMail.com slamming the Biden administration after they admitted to flying 320,000 unvetted migrants into the US

The program follows controversy in recent years when Biden secretly chartered flights of migrant minors from the U.S.-Mexico border to other U.S. cities.

The program follows controversy in recent years when Biden secretly chartered flights of migrant minors from the U.S.-Mexico border to other U.S. cities.

Lawyers for the government's immigration authorities have claimed that revealing the locations of these undocumented aliens could create

Lawyers for the government’s immigration authorities have claimed that revealing the locations of these undocumented aliens could create “vulnerabilities” in national security.

The admission means that while record numbers of migrants poured across the country’s southern border last year, the Biden White House also transported them directly into the country.

The use of mobile phone apps has allowed migrants to arrive undetected by air, without legal rights to enter the US.

It comes after a controversy over a 2022 transport program in which the government used taxpayer money to transport migrants across the country on night flights.

According to details of a Freedom of Information lawsuit first reported by journalist Todd Bensman, the… Center for Immigration Studies found that the President’s Customs and Border Protection approved the latest secret flights that transported hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants from abroad to at least 43 different U.S. airports from January through December 2023.

The program was part of Biden’s expansion of the CBP One app, which launched early last year.

Under Biden’s expansion, migrants could apply for asylum from their home countries through the app.

The Center for Immigration Studies has noted that transporting these migrants directly to the US is one of the app’s lesser-known uses.

U.S. President Joe Biden greets a member of law enforcement as he receives a briefing at the U.S.-Mexico border in Brownsville, Texas, on February 29.

U.S. President Joe Biden greets a member of law enforcement as he receives a briefing at the U.S.-Mexico border in Brownsville, Texas, on February 29.

The president's Customs and Border Protection approved the latest secret flights that transported hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants from abroad to at least 43 different U.S. airports from January through December 2023.

The president’s Customs and Border Protection approved the latest secret flights that transported hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants from abroad to at least 43 different U.S. airports from January through December 2023.

Aliens who cannot legally enter the US use CBP One to apply for travel authorization and temporary humanitarian release from those airports.

Under this parole, migrants can stay in the U.S. for two years without obtaining legal status and are eligible for a work permit.

The government initially said it would not reveal which airports the undocumented aliens were transported to, citing a “law enforcement exception” in the refusal to hand over information.

But new information from the Center for Immigration Studies A lawsuit alleges the locations were not made public out of fear that “bad actors” would harm public safety or that the information would create vulnerabilities for law enforcement.

CBP attorneys wrote that revealing the airports would “reveal information about the relative numbers of people arriving, and therefore the resources spent at particular airports.”

That, in turn, would “uncover operational vulnerabilities that can be exploited by bad actors who change their behavior patterns, adopt new practices, and take other countermeasures.”

CIS said the secret flights are “legally questionable” and asserted that since CBP will not reveal the locations for fear of “serious” consequences, it is likely not a program that should continue.

Lawyers have also not disclosed the departure locations of foreign airports, making it unclear where these migrants are coming from.

But those eligible for the CBP One applications are citizens of Cuba, Haiti, Venezuela, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia and Ecuador.

The program was part of Biden's expansion of the CBP One app, which launched early last year.  Under Biden's expansion, migrants could apply for asylum from their home countries through the app

The program was part of Biden’s expansion of the CBP One app, which launched early last year. Under Biden’s expansion, migrants could apply for asylum from their home countries through the app

On September 11, Osama Bin Laden orchestrated the hijacking that killed 2,977 people and injured thousands at the World Trace Center, the Pentagon and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

On September 11, Osama Bin Laden orchestrated the hijacking that killed 2,977 people and injured thousands at the World Trace Center, the Pentagon and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

On September 11, Osama Bin Laden orchestrated the hijacking that killed 2,977 people and injured thousands at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

Several foreign-born terrorists entered the country unnoticed, planned and trained for the heinous terrorist attack that shook the country forever.

The terrorists, mainly from Saudi Arabia, were affiliated with the jihadist organization and the first members arrived in the US more than a year before the attacks. Some men had been flagged by officials investigating terrorism, but bureaucratic conflicts led to difficulties in conducting a full investigation into the terrorists.

The attack and the details of the missed opportunities to stop it led to the creation of the Department of Homeland Security.

The federal agency, which is exclusively responsible for the safety of the public, was officially created in 2003 and now, twenty years later, the department unites more than two dozen government agencies working together to protect the US.