December 16, 2003
Saddam Down, But Homeland Security Still Out To
Lunch
By
Michelle Malkin
The world is a better place now
that the tyrant from Tikrit has been hoisted out of his
fetid little hole.
Our president, intelligence
officers, and
brave men and women in uniform deserve the highest
praise and prayers for a job well done.
But the euphoria over Saddam
Hussein’s capture abroad must be tempered by the
lingering reality of national security deficiencies here
at home.
Yes, we are safer now that Hussein
is in custody. But we could and should be a lot safer
still.
A little-noticed report released
this week by the federal homeland security commission
cautioned that anti-terrorism "momentum appears to
have waned" and efforts are often hampered by
"the lack of a clear, articulated vision from the
federal level." Chaired by former GOP Virginia
governor James Gilmore, the nonpartisan panel warned of
the nation’s vulnerability to agroterrorism, among other
weaknesses, and outlined continuing problems with
intelligence and information-sharing between the feds
and local and state law enforcement agencies.
[Classified
Look at U.S. Biodefense Nearly Finished, By Ceci
Connolly, Washington Post, December 16, 2003]
Indeed, the
Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s
promise to expand immigration-related data being given
to state and local police agencies (including data on
felons, foreigners in the country who have registered
through the
National Security Entry-Exit Registration System,
immigration-law violators, and aliens with outstanding
criminal warrants) is proceeding at a
“snail's pace," according to Republican Senators
Jeff Sessions of Alabama, John Cornyn of Texas and
Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, and Sen. Zell Miller,
Georgia Democrat.
More than two years after the
September 11 terrorist attacks, the federal government
is only now getting around to comprehensively assessing
its biodefense spending priorities. The Washington
Post reports that a classified report cataloguing
gaps in the nation's safeguards against biological
attack is “nearly finished” and that “first
steps” toward reducing the bioterror threat are
finally being taken. The 2001
anthrax attacks remain
unsolved.
Airport security remains hostage to
Norm Mineta’s politically-correct handcuffs, the
travel industry’s profiteers, and
immigration corruptocrats.
On Monday, former INS official
Maximiano Ramos was
sentenced to three years in prison for his role in a
ring that
smuggled illegal aliens from the Philippines into
the United States through Los Angeles International
Airport. Ramos admitted conspiring to exploit loopholes
in the federal
Transit Without a Visa program, which allowed people
from certain countries—including the Philippines and
several other countries with a significant al Qaeda
presence—to stop briefly in the United States while
waiting for a connecting flight to another country. The
ring smuggled in at least 40 people between 1996 and
1999, and continued to operate until last June.
As I’ve reported previously, this
same loophole has been exploited by illegal aliens from
the Middle East suspected of terrorism, many of whom
walked out of the Los Angeles airport never to be seen
again. The program was closed temporarily this summer
after intelligence indicated that al Qaeda might be
planning to use the program to send new teams of
terrorist hijackers into the U.S. But the Transit
Without a Visa program is being revived thanks to
industry lobbying. Last month, Alfonso Martinez-Fonts
Jr., special assistant to Department of Homeland
Security Secretary Tom Ridge, told the Albuquerque
Journal: “The program was stopped on Aug. 2, but
we've met with airport and airline officials and hope to
bring the program back in the next 60 to 120 days.”
From homeland security personnel, I
continue to hear open-borders horror stories. A Border
Patrol agent who works along the northern border reports
that
federal immigration judges in his area are
subverting the deportation process by refusing to issue
arrest warrants for illegal alien
absconders (fugitives who have been
ordered deported but never showed up for their
hearings). A special agent notes that
San Diego supervisors continue to discourage
interior immigration enforcement near the
southern border. And countless rank-and-file
immigration enforcement officers have written to express
disgust at Washington’s
bipartisan talk of “amnesty”
for millions of immigration law-breakers whose presence
makes a mockery of homeland defense.
What good is it, they wonder, to
send American soldiers to defend other countries’
borders if we’re not
willing to defend our own?
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.
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