Petitioner Wensheng Yan, a native and citizen of China, seeks review of the August 4, 2004 order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) affirming the May 8, 2003 decision of Immigration Judge (“IJ”) Michael W. Straus denying petitioner’s application for asylum, withholding of removal, and relief under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”). In re Wensheng Yan, No. A79 431 371 (B.I.A. Aug. 4, 2004), aff'g No. A79 431 371 (Immig. Ct. Hartford May 8, 2003). Yan argues that the IJ’s adverse credibility finding was not supported by substantial evidence in the record. Specifically, Yan takes issue with the IJ’s finding that his story was inherently implausible, asserting that the actions found to be implausible did not go to the heart of his asylum claim. He also argues that the IJ failed to explain why those actions were implausible and that the IJ impermissibly interpreted those actions from his own point of view. We conclude that the IJ’s finding of inherent implausibility is supported by substantial evidence in the record.
I. Background
Yan entered the United States in December 2001 after fleeing from China. He was served with a notice to appear in January 2002, and at an April 2002 hearing before an IJ he conceded removability and filed an application for asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT relief. Yan’s application for relief asserted that he feared that he would be persecuted if he returned to China because he had violated China’s family planning policy and had been threatened with forced sterilization. He explained that in October 1999, after the birth of his and his wife’s first child, local government officials had forcibly inserted into his wife an intrauterine device (“IUD”) which she later had removed by a *65 private doctor. Thereafter, he claimed, his wife became pregnant again, and local authorities forcibly aborted the pregnancy. The local officials then imposed a 10,000 yuan fine on Yan and his wife and ordered Yan to be sterilized. He refused to submit to sterilization. 1 Yan claimed that the local officials reported his refusal to his employer, and his employer “strictly criticized [him]” and urged him to pay the fine and to submit to sterilization. Add. to 1-589. Faced with these threats, he asserted, he had no option but to leave China.
At a May 2003 hearing before IJ Straus, Yan’s testimony on direct examination was consistent with the events described in his application. He elaborated in his testimony that after his wife’s abortion on July 17, 2001, she was very tired and bleeding, and he took ten days off of work and stayed with her at their home. After direct and cross-examination, the government attorney and the IJ questioned Yan about the Chinese passport he had submitted into evidence, which was issued to Yan on June 15, 2001. Yan confirmed that he had gotten the passport before his wife’s abortion because he planned to travel to Thailand. He also testified that he was earning 800 yuan per month before he left China and that he had no other job. Yan stated that on July 4, 2001, he applied for a visa to go to Thailand because he “[w]ant[ed] to go to Thailand for traveling,” and that he was able to pay for the 2,900-yuan cost of the trip out of his father’s retirement savings. 5/8/03 Tr. at 60. Yan repeated that the purpose of the Thailand trip, which lasted four days — from July 28, 2001, to August 1, 2001 — was “[j]ust travel for vacation with the tour group.” Id. at 61. When the IJ asked why he would go on a vacation after his wife had just had an abortion, Yan explained: “We have to pay in advance to buy the ticket to pay for the trip. Arrangement was made a long time ahead, so I had to go.” Id. The IJ commented, “if my wife was sick in bed, I wouldn’t be going traveling to other countries.” Id. at 61-62. Yan countered that the ticket was not refundable.
The IJ then questioned Yan about two trips to Cuba — one only eight days after his return from Thailand and one in October 2001. Yan testified that the first trip cost 5,000 yuan and that he left China on August 9, traveled through France, stayed in Cuba for three days, and returned to China on August 15 at Guangzhou Airport. The IJ asked Yan why, if he was afraid the government was going to sterilize him, he returned to China. Yan explained that he had to return to China because he ran out of money. Yan also testified that he went to Cuba again in October for a month so that he could try to apply for asylum in the United States, but he returned to China through the Guangzhou Airport because his plan fell through. Yan later claimed that the purpose for the first trip to Cuba was “travel reasons” and not to seek asylum.
In an oral decision after the hearing, the IJ found Yan’s testimony not credible for the following reasons: (1) it was improbable that Yan would take the July vacation trip to Thailand that cost him 2,900 yuan, which was the equivalent of over three *66 months’ salary, and the August vacation trip to Cuba that cost him 5,000 yuan, which was the equivalent of over six months’ salary; (2) Yan’s behavior&emdash;trav-eling to Thailand ten days after the abortion, when his wife was weak and bleeding, simply because he had paid for the trip in advance&emdash;was “inconsistent with the fact that his wife had a forced abortion”; (3) it was inconsistent with the circumstances (“out of character”) that Yan’s first trip to Cuba in August, which Yan testified was for “travel reasons,” occurred after he had received a letter threatening sterilization and a 10,000-yuan fine; (4) Yan’s asylum application stated that he had gone into hiding after he had received the threatening letter, yet he spent a large amount of time outside the country on trips; (5) Yan’s multiple return trips to China took him through Guangzhou Airport, where his identity would likely be checked; (6) Yan testified that he had no problems with his employer, yet his employer’s dismissal notice was predicated on Yan’s failure to undergo sterilization and pay a fine; and (7) the 2002 State Department Report was inconsistent with Yan’s testimony that many individuals from Fujian Province were able to have extra children if they paid a fine. In re Wensheng Yan, No. A79 431 371 (Immig. Ct. Hartford May 8, 2003). The BIA affirmed the IJ’s decision without opinion. In re Wensheng Yan, No. A79 431 371 (B.I.A. Aug. 4, 2004).
Yan petitions for review of the BIA’s order.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
Where, as here, the BIA affirms an IJ’s decision without issuing an opinion,
see
8 C.F.R. § 1003.1(e)(4), this Court reviews the IJ’s decision as the final agency determination.
See, e.g., Timm v. INS,
B. Inherently Implausible Testimony
It is well settled that, in assessing the credibility of an asylum applicant’s testimony, an IJ is entitled to consider whether the applicant’s story is inherently implausible.
See Ming Xia Chen v. BIA,
In the somewhat similar context of reviewing bench trial findings of a district judge under the clearly erroneous standard, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), we have been authoritatively instructed to uphold a finding unless we are left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.
Here, Yan asserts that the IJ failed to provide an adequate explanation for the implausibility finding, impermissibly evaluated Yan’s testimony from the IJ’s own point of view, and found Yan’s entire claim implausible based on actions not directly related to the claim of persecution. We disagree.
First, the IJ’s explanation here was more than adequate. The IJ explained in detail which of Yan’s actions (and explanations for his actions) caused the IJ to find the testimony as a whole improbable. The IJ was not required to explain in precise detail what made each identified act implausible.
Cf. Poradisova v. Gonzales,
Second, this inconsistency refutes any indication that the IJ impermissibly imposed his own mores on Yan’s behavior. We read the IJ’s isolated comment at the hearing that he would not travel to other countries if his wife were sick in bed as no more than an expression of his incredulity at the story Yan was telling him. Any reasonable person would understand why the IJ here concluded that it is implausible that a man whose wife had just undergone the physical and emotional trauma of a forced abortion would, only days later,
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travel alone to another country to participate in a vacation with a tour group for no asserted purpose other than pleasure.
See Siewe,
Finally, the IJ’s finding of inherent implausibility does bear a legitimate nexus to the conclusion that Yan’s claim of persecution as a whole was not credible.
See Secaida-Rosales v. INS,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the petition for review is denied. Petitioner’s pending *69 motion for a stay of removal is dismissed as moot.
Notes
. This Court’s decision in
Shi Liang Lin v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
. No specific evidence of coordination between Chinese customs and birth control officials was required to allow the IJ to conclude that it was implausible that a person seeking to flee from repression that could result in his sterilization would have repeatedly put himself in situations where he encountered legal authorities checking his identity and, possibly, his illegal status.
. In finding Yan's testimony incredible, the IJ did identify two discrepancies that might well have been reconciled upon further inquiry: (1) a purported inconsistency between Yan’s testimony that he had no problems with his employer regarding family planning policies and an employer letter referencing past criticism on this subject; and (2) a purported discrepancy between a State Department Report and Yan’s testimony as to the possibility of individuals from Fujian Province paying a fine in order to have two children. Because we are confident that the IJ would have rejected Yan's testimony as implausible even without these discrepancies, we can confidently conclude that a remand on these points would not yield any different result.
See Cao He Lin,
