This week, Americans came together around overflowing dinner tables and stuffed themselves in celebration of how Native Americans greeted the Pilgrims, who came here as religious refugees from England. Think about that within the context of the current demonization of Muslim refugees from Syria and Iraq.
This week, Americans came together around overflowing dinner tables and stuffed themselves in celebration of how Native Americans greeted the Pilgrims, who came here as religious refugees from England. Think about that within the context of the current demonization of Muslim refugees from Syria and Iraq.
The House last week voted to suspend the federal resettlement program for refugees from that war zone because of fears that the Islamic State salted the human tide — 4 million people and growing — with terrorists targeting the United States. The Senate is expected to take up the bill next month, and President Obama rightly pledged to veto the measure if it gets to his desk.
Given that political posturing is the way House Republicans legislate these days, it would be easy to just shake our heads and move on. But nearly 50 Democrats joined them in last week’s vote, either succumbing to fear or, worse, crassly politicizing the desperate straits of refugees. Facing that likely veto, some in the House want to embed the measure in a must-pass spending bill, setting the stage for a possible government shutdown. This misguided effort requires a forceful and unambiguous response: No.
The measure would suspend resettlement of Syrian and Iraqi refugees until new security checks are in place, and would require the directors of Homeland Security, the FBI and national intelligence to vouch for each person admitted. Under the current resettlement process, potential refugees come almost exclusively through referrals from the office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, which vets their backgrounds before deciding which country to refer them to for resettlement. Those recommended to this country then are scrubbed by U.S. security officers, a process that can take up to two years. …
It’s hard to imagine the Islamic State investing more than two years of a terrorist’s time trying to con refugee officials when a forged passport could gain instant access — especially since getting referred for resettlement to the U.S. is like winning a lottery. The U.N. estimates about 10 percent of the 3.2 million displaced Syrians need resettling, and the Obama administration offered to take a small fraction — up to 10,000 — in the next year. Those are pretty long odds to successfully plant a terrorist.
And the measure pushed by Congress doesn’t address the broader reality that the Paris attackers were overwhelmingly French citizens. Would lawmakers bar the door to European tourists as well?
Times of crisis require level heads and cool reasoning. Now would be a good time for elected leaders to begin showing some.
— Los Angeles Times