human smuggling remaining rampant as well. they are chasing a human smuggler, illegal immigrants bail out and black bags on their backs. they were filled with meth. texas dps caught and arrested driver and recovered the bags full of meth. the driver a u.s. citizen from houston. another human smuggling bust to show you. texas dps arresting a female ukrainian national who they caught smuggling multiple illegal immigrants with her boyfriend. they had several of them in the vehicle and then if we can pull up a text message she sent. look at this. this is what she told her boyfriend. i m currently picking up illegal mexicans and taking them back to san antonio. i get paid $1500 per person? want to come help? back out here live i m told cbp has 28,500 migrants in federal
look at this other piece of video from el paso. 3:00 a.m. this morning another group of several hundred migrants who crossed illegally into el paso s lower valley, the border is blowing up across every sector right now. numbers we have never seen before and title 42 has not even dropped yet. lastly in the meantime human smuggling remains rampant. dash cam showing troopers going after human smugglers, illegal immigrants bailing out of a vehicle. the black bags on the illegal immigrants back. they were filled with meth. this was a bail-out. you can see the meth in the bags. taking the human smuggler into custody and he was a u.s. citizen from houston. the sort of thing that happens day in and day out down here on the southern border. back out here live cpb sources confirmed to me that as of this morning we have 28,500 migrants in cbp custody.
umbrella that the u.s. offers to the allies needed to be strengthened in this particular case because of the nuclear threat that pyongyang was showing to the world and to its closest neighbor. so what he has gone to washington to get effectively is a reassurance. a reassurance that the united states will be there in a time of crisis if necessary. u.s. officials and experts would argue that they already have that deterrence that they have 28,500 u.s. soldiers based here in south korea and hundreds of thousands of americans based here in south korea, so they are here for the long haul. as you say, that has been an increasing call for south korea to have its nuclear weapons program. ten years ago, this was a fringe argument and you never spoke about it with much credibility and i certainly wouldn t be talking about it on air, but now it is a very real possibility.
and there s a shortage in the workforce. they ve been offered 5% for 2022/23. the battle lines have been well and truly drawn today outside hospitals across the country and across the airwaves. tonight we want to try to move on what has now become a familiar argument we ve gathered players from all sides and in a few minutes we ll ask if there s a way forward and any common ground. first, how disruptive could today s action be? kate s been looking at the data. health secretary steve barclay has previously accused unions of making a conscious decision to inflict harm on patients by going ahead with industrial action for nhs workers. the exact impact of the junior doctors strike though is quite difficult to quantify. in mid march when junior doctors from several unions last walked out, around 28,500 staff in england missed work due to strike action each day. and with that constrained capacity the nhs have made plans
deterrence commitment including conventional, nuclear and missile defense capabilities. austin stopped short of offering deploy u.s. tactical nukes in south korea where the u.s. has 28,500 troops based but promised they would use strategic weapons like the b-1 bombers that participated in joint exercises. president trump halted the exercises hoping to negotiate with kim jong-un. last year kim jong-un test fired icbms that could reach the u.s. the u.s. first deployed tactical nukes in 1958 but pulled them out in 1991 vowing to extend the nuclear umbrella to defend south korea. the u.s. and south korea wanted