December 26, 2002
Michelle Malkin’s Immigration Reporter Of The Year
By
Michelle Malkin
A young, tenacious
journalist did our country a great service this year by
refusing to accept conventional wisdom and the status
quo. He blew the whistle on powerful figures of
authority, exposed deceit and forced change. But you
won't see him celebrated on the cover of
Time magazine.
That's because Joel
Mowbray, a Townhall.com
columnist and reporter for
National Review magazine and its online
counterpart, is too politically incorrect and fearlessly
skeptical of official lies to be embraced by the media
elite.
Mowbray, 26, hammered the
State Department and scooped the jaded Beltway press
corps with story after story exposing the bureaucratic
foul-ups and diplomatic sellouts that led to national
security nightmares.
Mowbray first targeted
Visa Express, a corner-cutting gift program created
by the State Department that allowed wealthy Saudi
Arabian tourists to obtain visas through travel
agencies. Among the recipients: three of the September
11 terrorists.
It took relentless
questioning from Mowbray before the Bush administration
killed the craven program—ten months after the terrorist
attacks.
State tried to punish the
messenger. In mid-July, Mowbray was physically detained.
Not in Beijing or Baghdad, mind you, but in our own
nation's capital. Government security guards prevented
him from leaving the State Department building after a
daily press briefing. Officials leaned on Mowbray to
produce a classified memo he had obtained. He refused.
Here was a clear act of
government intimidation of the press. Shamefully, not a
single reporter in the State Department media herd
criticized these bullying tactics against a fellow
journalist. But Mowbray remained undaunted.
He investigated State's
Consular Affairs chief Mary Ryan, a Clinton holdover,
who "wanted to eliminate the interview requirement
for visa applicants wherever possible." Ryan was
forced to
resign as a result of Mowbray's whistleblowing. (Mowbray
later reported that Ryan received a $5,000
cash bonus, perhaps to soothe the veteran
bureaucrat's bruised ego.)
Mowbray charged that Ryan
"knowingly deceived Congress" by telling
lawmakers "that there was nothing State could have
done to prevent the terrorists from obtaining visas."
He debunked Ryan's bald lie in an exhaustive Oct. 28
cover story for National Review. One of the most
underappreciated pieces of journalism of the year,
Mowbray's "Visas for Terrorists" article laid out
how the State Department violated its own laws
repeatedly in allowing at least 15 of the 19 September
11 terrorists to obtain visas.
Their applications forms,
obtained exclusively by Mowbray, were a deadly mess.
Only one of the 15
provided an actual address as required by law—and that
was only because his first application was refused.
"The rest listed only general locations—including
'California,' 'New York,' 'Hotel D.C.,' and 'Hotel.' One
terrorist amazingly listed his U.S. destination as
simply 'No.' Even more amazingly, he got a visa,"
Mowbray reported. Another terrorist listed his
occupation as "teater" and his travel destination
as "Wasantwn."
Consular officials ignored
a basic provision of immigration law known as 214(b),
which holds that almost all non-immigrant visa
applicants are presumed to be would-be immigrants and
must prove to interviewers that they won't break the
terms of their visas.
Mowbray concluded:
"[I]f
the law had been enforced, most of the 9/11 terrorists
never would have entered the United States. Most of them
were young, single men with no demonstrated means of
support, and with few or no ties to their home
country—meaning that they were classic 'overstay'
candidates. Given that visa applicants have the burden
of proving their eligibility, this raises the question:
How did they clear the hurdles the law is intended to
put in their path when they were already saddled with
forms that could generously be described as sloppy?"
Countless red flags in the
visa application process were negligently overlooked—at
the expense of 3,000 innocent people. Both the General
Accounting Office and the
State Department's Inspector General have come to
similar conclusions in lengthy reports. State's
"existing policies," the Inspector General noted
just last week, "remain inadequate."
Gutsy and tireless, Mowbray has only just begun. His
unyielding pursuit of the truth in the interest of
national security may be bad news for the State
Department.
But it's welcome news for all Americans who prefer
pit-bull journalism to the passive puppy act so common
in the media today.
[Cynical VDARE.COM
comment: We
congratulate young Mr. Mowbray but advise him not to
turn his back on the
jealous Beltway
girly-boys at the
Goldberg Review.]
Michelle Malkin 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.
COPYRIGHT 2002
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.