ALERT: FBI Defies Obama’s White House, Issues DIRE Warning About
This Obama Plan for 2016
(PJ Media) – Homeland
Security Secretary Jeh Johnson told USA Today yesterday that
the wave of Syrian refugees that will be admitted into the U.S. in the coming
year will be subjected to “extensive, thorough background checks.”
But just last week,
testifying before the House Judiciary Committee, FBI Director James
Comey said exactly the opposite. When asked about
criticisms made by Donald Trump about the administration’s immigration policies
and about concerns that ISIS may embed themselves among Syrian refugees as a
“Trojan horse,” Johnson replied:
Well, in terms of the
level of effort of security review that we will apply and we have applied it
will be and it is extensive. Both law enforcement and homeland security
have improved the process from the days when we admitted a lot of Iraqi
refugees. We now do a better job
of connecting the dots, consulting all the right databases and
systems that we have available to us, and the refugee review process is
probably one of the most if not the most extensive thorough background
checks that someone seeking to enter this country goes through.
Now we’ve made this
commitment for 10,000 Syrian refugees in FY2016. It is a commitment that the
United States as a global leader should and will meet.
But during a House
Judiciary hearing last Thursday, Comey was asked by Rep. Louie Gohmert about
the database the U.S. government maintained to screen Iraqi refugees, including
an IED fingerprint database in addition to other intelligence obtained by U.S.
forces and the Iraqi government. Despite the extensive database screening
Iraqi refugees, U.S. authorities have admitted that possibly dozens of
terrorists were admitted into the U.S. under that program, including two
Iraqi terrorists living in Bowling Green, Kentucky, who were
convicted of attempting to send weapons and money to Iraqi terrorists.
When asked further
about the nature of intelligence available to screen Syrian refugees, Comey
admitted, contrary to Secretary Johnson, that the Iraqi database –
which possibly admitted dozens of terrorists — was much more extensive than
anything they have for Syria.
Rep. Gohmert pressed
further about the ability to screen refugees: Gohmert: Well,
without a good fingerprint database, without good identification, how can you
be sure that anyone is who they say they are if they don’t have fingerprints to
go against?
Comey: The only
thing we can query is information that we have. So, if we have no information
on someone, they’ve never crossed our radar screen, they’ve never been a ripple
in the pond, there will be no record of them there and so it will be
challenging.
The exchange between
Rep. Gohmert and Director Comey on the Syrian refugee issue can be seen at
about 2:05 in the video below:
The contrast between
Johnson’s confidence and Comey’s concern is striking. This confusion comes on
the heels of the White House announcing last month that it will admit
10,000 Syrian refugees in the new fiscal year, more than five times the number
admitted this year. Adding to the mixed messages coming from the
administration, White House spokesman Josh Earnest touted the “robust”
databases during the announcement:
Refugees go through
the most robust security process of anybody who’s contemplating travel to the
United States. Refugees have to be screened by the National Counter Terrorism
Center, by the FBI Terrorist Screening Center. They go through databases that
are maintained by DHS, the Department of Defense and the intelligence
community. There is biographical and biometric information that is collected
about these individuals.
To recap: twice, the
Obama administration appealed to the effectiveness of the screening databases to justifying
the safety of allowing a dramatic increase in Syrian refugees.
But in a third
statement, the only one of the three given under oath, the administration
admitted the screening is inadequate.
Meanwhile, Secretary
of State John Kerry has announced that the U.S. will accept 85,000
refugees overall in 2016 and 100,000 in 2017, up from 70,000 in the current
year.
And Congressional Democrats have sent a letter to Obama asking him
to admit another 65,000 Syrian refugees, and former Obama and Bush officials have
asked that he authorize an additional 100,000 Syrian refugees over and
above the 70,000 worldwide ceiling for the current year.
http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2015/10/28/homeland-security-fbi-cant-get-story-straight-on-screening-syrian-refugees/
http://www.teaparty.org/alert-fbi-defies-obamas-white-house-issues-dire-warning-obama-plan-2016-127092/
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