People left perplexed at what they spot ICE agents doing in airport video

People left perplexed at what they spot ICE agents doing in airport video
Source: Newsweek

A video showing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents handing out bottled water to airline passengers at U.S. airports has sparked confusion and criticism online.

A Threads post shared by Juan Delgado (@juanch0panza), a self-described "political junkie" who has shared posts critical of the Trump administration, questioned the logic behind agents handing out water to travelers at U.S. airports has gone viral, racking up almost half a million views.

Delgado shared a video Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents distributing bottled water to people waiting in long airport lines, writing: "I want to know who the genius was that came up with the idea to have ICE hand out water to people waiting in line. Did they think this through? How does this help TSA?"

The post struck a chord with users across Threads, many of whom echoed confusion over why ICE -- an agency primarily focused on immigration enforcement -- was involved in a task typically associated with the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which runs airport security checkpoints.

The clip Delgado was responding to was originally shared by the White House on X on March 24. "Huge thanks to our ICE agents deployed at airports nationwide, helping keep TSA lines moving so Americans can fly safe and on time! True patriots," the White House wrote alongside the video, which shows ICE personnel handing water bottles to travelers waiting in security lines.

The government has deployed ICE agents to assist TSA workers amid the ongoing partial government shutdown, leading to staff shortages and ongoing delays.

Lauren Bis, acting assistant secretary for public affairs at the DHS, told Newsweek on Monday: "President Trump is taking action to deploy hundreds of ICE officers, that are currently funded by Congress, to airports being adversely impacted. This will help bolster TSA efforts to keep our skies safe and minimize air travel disruptions." Bis added that, "for operational security reasons, we are not going to confirm the locations of our officers."

An ICE official told Newsweek on Monday that ICE agents will "hate" being sent to assist airport security operations. But critics quickly questioned what tangible impact the gesture could have, particularly given TSA's long‑standing liquid restrictions.

On Thursday, Newsweek reached out to the White House and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for comment via email.

One Threads user, posting under the name quarkedcharm, who describes themselves as "left of Dems, right of 'The Left,'" captured that contradiction with a blunt joke: "ICE agent: here's some water. ICE agent 5 minutes later: you need to pour that water out."

TSA prohibits passengers from bringing liquids larger than 3.4 ounces through security checkpoints, often forcing travelers to discard full bottles before screening.

Another Threads user, environmental activist David Harrison Greis, criticized the move as political theater, writing: "they turned this into a PR stunt, that's terrifying and absolutely pointless."

ICE and TSA are both housed within the Department of Homeland Security but serve distinct roles. TSA oversees passenger screening and airport security operations, while ICE focuses on immigration enforcement, detention, and removal. ICE does not traditionally manage passenger flow or airport security queues.