February 21, 2006
They Are All Profilers Now
By
Michelle Malkin
For the past several years, I've
been condemned as an "extremist" for advocating
nationality profiling—unapologetically applying
stricter scrutiny to terror-sponsoring and
terror-sympathizing countries in our entrance,
immigration and security policies.
Now,
mirabile dictu, some of the same Democrats who
have routinely lambasted such profiling are rushing to
the floors of Congress and in front of TV cameras
espousing these very same policies. The impetus: the
White House's boneheaded insistence on ramming through a
$7 billion deal giving United Arab Emirates-owned Dubai
Ports World control over significant operations at six
major American ports in New York, New Jersey, New
Orleans, Baltimore, Philadelphia and Miami.
Make no mistake. I stand with
critics on both sides of the aisle who want to stop the
secretive deal transferring operations of our ports to
the
UAE—a Middle Eastern government with a spotty record
of fighting terrorist plots and terrorist financing. The
issue is not whether day-to-day, on-the-ground
conditions at the ports would change. The issues are
whether we should grant the demonstrably unreliable UAE
access to sensitive information and management plans
about our key U.S. ports, which are plenty insecure
enough without adding new risks, and whether the
decision process was thorough and free from conflicts of
interest.
From every angle—political, safety
and sovereignty-wise—Dubai Ports World's business
transaction (made possible by an
unprecedented $3.5 billion Islamic financing
instrument called a "sukuk"
that upholds
sharia law)
looks bad and smells worse.
But there is a teachable moment
here that shouldn't be missed. The
tone-deafness of the White House is bad. The craven
political opportunism of the Democrats is worse.
Listen to
Sen. Evan Bayh, Indiana Democrat: "I think we've
got to look into this company. I think we've got to
ensure ourselves that the American people's
national-security interests are going to be protected.
And frankly, I think the threshold ought to be a little
higher for a foreign firm."
And
Sen. Barbara Boxer, California Democrat: "It is
ridiculous to say you're taking secret steps to make
sure that it's OK for a nation that had ties to 9/11,
(to) take over part of our port operations in many of
our largest ports. This has to stop."
And Sen. Hillary Clinton, New York
Democrat: "Our port security is too important to
place in the hands of foreign governments. I will be
working with [New Jersey] Senator [Robert] Menendez to
introduce legislation that will prohibit the sale of
ports to foreign governments."
And Sen. Charles Schumer, New York
Democrat, who said the Dubai company's involvement
"is enough to raise a flag—at least to do a thorough
review, at minimum."
I wish these politicians luck in
their quest to block the UAE transfer, shed light on the
process led by the shadowy Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States, and join with
congressional Republicans to put American security
interests first. But as they attempt to do their best
Pat Buchanan impressions, let's not forget:
It was Democrats who tried to block Bush
administration efforts to impose common-sense
citizenship requirements on airport security workers in
the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.
It was Democrats who attacked the
Bush Justice Department after the September 11
attacks for fingerprinting young male temporary visa
holders traveling from terror-sponsoring and
terror-friendly nations; temporarily detaining asylum
seekers from high-risk countries for background
screening; and sending undercover agents to investigate
mosques suspected of supporting terrorism.
It was Democrats who secretly attempted to remove
funding for the National Security Exit-Entry
Registration System—the Justice Department program that
helped nab at least 330 known foreign criminals, 15
illegal-alien felons and three known terrorists who
attempted to enter the country.
And just one week ago, it was
failed Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore who was
in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, attacking the Bush
administration's
profiling and immigration enforcement against
illegal aliens from terror-friendly countries as
"terrible abuses."
Perhaps the UAE will be hiring Gore
to condemn the "abusive" practices now being
championed by his fire-breathing extremist Democrat
colleagues?
After all, they are all red
flag-raising, threshold-hiking, thorough
review-espousing, foreign ownership-banning profilers
now.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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