The petitioner, Efrain Palma-Mazarie-gos, is a Guatemalan national. He seeks judicial review of a final order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) deny *33 ing his application for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the United Nations Convention Against Torture (CAT), maintaining that the immigration judge (IJ) and the BIA incorrectly found that changed country conditions in Guatemala eliminated any objectively reasonable fear of future prosecution should he be forced to return to his native land. We conclude that the record contains substantial evidence to support both (i) the determination that country conditions have changed and (ii) the BIA’s holding that those changed conditions adequately rebut the petitioner’s asserted fear of future persecution. Consequently, we deny the petition for review.
Certain background facts are matters of record. The petitioner entered the United States without proper documentation on December 15, 1991. He filed an application for asylum and withholding of removal with the Immigration and Naturalization Sexwice (INS) a few months later. 1 Nothing happened.
After approximately eight years, the INS placed the petitioner in removal proceedings. The petitioner conceded remov-ability and cross-applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under CAT.
The IJ held an evidentiary hearing on October 6, 2003. Because he found the petitioner credible, we accept as true the petitioner’s testimony about the historical facts.
See Bocova v. Gonzales,
The petitioner was born and raised in Guatemala — a country plagued for decades by civil strife. In 1991, the petitioner, then sixteen years of age, encountered an armed guerilla faction in the hills near his village. The guerillas attempted to recruit him into their ranks (this was a familiar tactic of the guerillas, who believed that young men were easily led). They threatened the lives of the petitioner and his family in the event that he resisted their blandishments.
The petitioner felt that he was trapped between a rock and a hard place. He had no desire to join the guerillas, but he knew of young men who had been killed when they rebuffed the guerillas’ overtures. Rather than casting his lot with the guerillas or, alternatively, reporting the encounter to the government, the petitioner elected to flee. Within days, he and his five brothers left Guatemala for the United States, where he has resided ever since. Even though his parents and two sisters remain in the village in which he was raised, they have warned him not to return.
The petitioner also testified about his three uncles, all of whom died from gunshot wounds. One shooting occurred in 1974 (before the petitioner was born); the other two shootings occurred after the petitioner had fled the country. Although the petitioner speculated that the guerillas had committed all three murders, the record contains no supporting facts and the responsible parties have never been apprehended.
Moving from the past to the future, the petitioner stated that he fears that the guerillas will kill him if he returns to Guatemala. He premised this fear on the past actions of the guerillas, the warnings received from his family, and the prospect of retaliation because he had resisted the guerillas’ efforts to enlist him in their cause.
*34 The IJ denied the application for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under CAT (although he did grant a request for voluntary departure). Without making any finding as to whether the petitioner had established past persecution, the IJ went directly to the issue of future persecution and concluded that the petitioner lacked a well-founded fear of future persecution because conditions in Guatemala had changed dramatically since 1991. The IJ based his conclusion largely on the United States Department of State Country Report on Human Rights Conditions for the Country of Guatemala for the year 2002 (the Country Conditions Report). Among other things, that report took the position that peace accords signed in 1996 had brought down the final curtain on the armed conflict between the Guatemalan government and the guerillas.
The petitioner prosecuted a timely appeal before the BIA. In it, he claimed that the IJ’s rulings were arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion. On February 28, 2005, the BIA summarily affirmed the decision. This timeous petition for judicial review followed. We have jurisdiction under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b).
When the BIA summarily affirms an IJ’s decision, we “review directly the IJ’s decision as if it were the decision of the BIA.”
Jupiter v. Ashcroft,
Against this backdrop, we turn to the petitioner’s asylum claim. To qualify for asylum, an alien must establish that he is a refugee within the meaning of the Immigration and Nationality Act (the Act).
See Negeya v. Gonzales,
When the IJ makes a finding of past persecution, a presumption of future persecution arises and the burden shifts to the government to rebut that presumption.
See id.
In such a situation, the government must show by a preponderance of the evidence either (i) that “[t]here has been a fundamental change in circumstances such that the applicant no longer has a well-founded fear of persecution in the applicant’s country of nationality” or (ii) that “the applicant could avoid future persecution by relocating to another part of the applicant’s country, and ... it would be reasonable to expect the applicant to do so.” 8 C.F.R. § 208.13(b)(l)(i)(A)-(B);
see Quevedo v. Ashcroft,
If the IJ does not find past persecution, the asylum seeker must affirmatively demonstrate a well-founded fear of
*35
future persecution, unaided by any presumption.
See Negeya,
In the case at hand, the IJ intentionally bypassed a key element of the analysis: a finding on the issue of past persecution. The IJ stated that:
Even if the Court were able to reach the conclusion that the respondent had suffered past persecution ... [it] would be compelled to find that the circumstances have changed within the country of Guatemala such that the respondent no longer has a well-founded fear of future persecution.
The existence vel non of past persecution determines which party must carry the devoir of persuasion on the issue of future persecution.
Compare, e.g., Quevedo,
Risky or not, such a shortcut often is permissible. In some
cases
— Za
rouite
is a good example — the issue of future persecution is close, so the allocation of the burden of proof matters. In other cases, however, the issue of future persecution is so clear-cut that the allocation of the burden of proof does not matter.
See, e.g., Yatskin v. INS,
The most-persuasive evidence that rebuts the presumption of future persecution in this case is the Country Conditions Report. The petitioner argues that abstract evidence of generalized changes in country conditions, without more, cannot rebut a presumption of a well-founded fear of future persecution. We agree with that premise: to be effective, evidence of changed country conditions must negate a petitioner’s
particular
fear.
See Quevedo,
The evidence here passes muster under that standard. The petitioner testified that he fears- death at the hands of the guerillas should he return home. The Country Conditions Report addresses this allegation directly: it documents the signing of the 1996 peace accords and verifies that those accords not only ended the civil war but also resulted in the assimilation of the guerillas into the government. Because the guerillas are no longer a *36 separate, out-of-power faction in Guatemala, they no longer need to engage in militant activities — and there is no evidence that militant activities (and, specifically, forced recruitment practices) persist. What evidence there is points in the opposite direction; for example, the Country Conditions Report explicitly states that no documented instances of politically motivated disappearances took place in Guatemala in the year in question (2002).
The petitioner nonetheless mounts a two-pronged attack on the IJ’s use of the Country Conditions Report. First, he posits that, as a matter of law, the IJ erred in relying upon the report at all. ' Second, he asseverates that, as a matter of fact, the report demonstrates that conditions have not changed in such a way as to palliate his fear of future persecution. We address each prong of his attack separately.
The petitioner’s first argument relies exclusively on a line of Ninth Circuit cases, which he says hold that a country conditions report can never supply the individualized analysis required for a showing of changed country conditions.
See, e.g., Mo-linar-Estrada v. INS,
The State Department has widely acknowledged expertise in discerning the conditions that prevail in foreign lands.
See Negeya,
In this instance, the petitioner was very specific in stating that he feared retaliation by the guerillas because he had frustrated their recruitment efforts. The Country Conditions Report addressed this issue head-on. It explained that the peace accords had ended the civil war and that, from and after 1996, there was no credible evidence that the guerillas had continued their militant activities. Because this information is both reliable and focused — it addresses the precise subject matter of the petitioner’s claimed fear — it suffices, if credited by the factfinder and not effectively offset by other evidence, to rebut any presumption of future persecution at *37 the hands of the guerillas. 2 Consequently, the IJ did not err as a matter of law in giving decretory significance to the Country Conditions Report.
The petitioner’s fallback position is that the IJ erred in his reading of the Country Conditions Report. This argument relies on the sad fact, made manifest by the Country Conditions Report, that human rights abuses still abound in Guatemala. Whatever superficial appeal such an argument may possess, it misinterprets the meaning of “persecution.”
Although the Act does not formally define the term “persecution,” we have held that persecution requires more than a showing of either episodic violence or sporadic abuse.
See, e.g., Bocova,
Those requirements are not satisfied here. While the Country Conditions Report acknowledges that violence and human rights abuses still occur in Guatemala, it also attests that the threat of violence afflicts all Guatemalans to a roughly equal extent, regardless of their membership in a particular group or class. Accordingly, that threat will not support a finding of a well-founded fear of future persecution.
See Quevedo,
That ends this aspect of the matter. With sufficient evidence of changed country conditions and no error in the IJ’s reliance on or interpretation of the Country Conditions Report, there is no principled basis for upsetting the denial of asylum.
What we have written to this point also disposes of the petitioner’s withholding of, removal claim. That claim places a “more stringent burden of proof on an alien than does a counterpart claim for asylum.”
Rodriguez-Ramirez,
We need go no further. 3 On the basis of the foregoing, the BIA’s order is unim-pugnable.
The petition for judicial review is denied.
Notes
. The Homeland Security Act of 2002, Pub.L. No. 107-296, § 471, 116 Stat. 2135, 2205 (codified as amended at 6 U.S.C. § 291(a)), abolished the INS and transferred its duties to the Department of Homeland Security.
See Lattab v. Ashcroft,
. We note that the other information in the record, taken in its totality, helps to rebut the presumption that persecution by the guerillas is a reality in Guatemala today. For example, the fourteen-year time lapse since the petitioner's single confrontation with the guerillas works against the presumption of future persecution; it is questionable whether members of the guerilla group would even recognize the young man who, on only one occasion, declined their invitation.
. The petitioner’s brief contains no developed argumentation anent his CAT claim. Therefore, we deem that claim abandoned.
See Nikijuluw v. Gonzales,
