Today we take a closer look at a turning point in the international debate on migration policy. With the release of the United States’ National Security Strategy in November 2025, Washington states something that many policymakers in the West have been reluctant to say out loud: the era of mass migration is over. This is not a political slogan. It is a strategic, geopolitical and cultural shift that will shape the way Western nations think about borders, integration, and national identity for years to come. And it directly affects Europe.
The key sentence in the U.S. document is simple and decisive: “Who a country admits into its borders will inevitably define the future of that nation.” For decades, this principle—fundamental to state sovereignty—was pushed to the margins of public debate, replaced by the idea that mobility was an unlimited right and that societies could absorb almost anything without consequences. Reality has disproven this assumption. Social tensions have increased, cohesion has weakened, and a growing number of citizens feel that public authorities no longer control the dynamics shaping their communities.
The American strategy goes further by addressing the situation in Europe with unusual clarity. It warns that the continent is facing not only economic and institutional fragility, but a genuine risk of civilizational erosion—a loss of cultural continuity accelerated by demographic decline, uncontrolled migration, and a growing inability to defend shared values. Whether one agrees with the tone or not, the diagnosis highlights trends visible across European cities: parallel communities, rising insecurity, weakened integration frameworks, and political fragmentation.
This is precisely where the paradigm of “Integration or ReImmigration” enters the conversation. It offers a structured response to a problem that has too often been addressed with ideology instead of realism. Integration, in this model, is not a courtesy extended by the host country—it is a mutual obligation, a pact. It requires effort, responsibility and measurable results: learning the language, working legally, respecting the law, contributing to social stability. When these conditions are not met, when an individual shows no willingness or capacity to integrate, the system must provide a transparent pathway for ReImmigration, meaning an orderly and dignified return to the country of origin.
This is not punishment. It is a functional tool that protects both the host society and migrants who genuinely want to build a future in their new country. Europe, with its demographic challenges and overstretched welfare systems, cannot afford a migration policy based on hope alone. It needs a framework that distinguishes between sustainable integration and uncontrolled inflows that exceed its capacity.
What makes the U.S. strategy so relevant is that it reframes migration as a national security issue, not merely a social or humanitarian matter. Security in this context includes cultural security, social trust, and the stability of democratic institutions. These are the foundations upon which successful integration is built. Without them, every society—regardless of its values—runs the risk of fragmentation.
“Integration or ReImmigration” aligns with this broader shift. It recognizes that openness and responsibility must coexist. Those who invest in integration should be supported. Those who refuse it should follow a lawful and supervised return pathway. This is how a society protects its identity, ensures fairness, and maintains public support for immigration policies.
The U.S. declaration that the era of mass migration has ended is not a prophecy. It is a recognition of current global dynamics. Countries that adapt quickly—to demographic pressures, labour needs, cultural cohesion and security requirements—will remain stable. Those that cling to outdated paradigms will face growing internal tensions.
Europe, and Italy in particular, now face a choice. Continue with unstructured, reactive migration policies, or embrace a framework that balances integration, responsibility and sovereignty. “Integration or ReImmigration” is not a divisive formula. It is a practical pathway designed for a world where migration must be governed, not endured.
This podcast exists to articulate that vision clearly: integration is an opportunity for those who embrace it; ReImmigration is the natural conclusion for those who do not. Only in this way can immigration become a sustainable, stable and positive component of Western societies.
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