U.S.
rubber-stamps 'more than 90%' of 'refugee' applications, Ex-federal agent: 'There are a bunch of them
lying about identities, backgrounds', by Greg Corombos, 11/17/15, WND
A longtime federal
immigration agent confirms there is no good way to vet tens of thousands of
refugees effectively for admission into the United States, and he says history
proves being wrong about just a tiny fraction of them can lead to calamity for
the nation.
Michael Cutler served
for 30 years with the Immigration and Naturalization Service, or INS, the
forerunner to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE. During that time, he
worked as a senior special agent and focused on matters ranging to refugee
arrivals in New York City to combating narcotics trafficking.
Over the
weekend, Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes repeatedly assured
Americans there were guaranteed ways of separating genuine refugees from
those who might try to exploit the crisis to slip into the U.S. and attack the
country. President Obama echoed those comments on Monday at the G-20 Summit in
Turkey. Former House Intelligence Committee Chairman Pete Hoekstra told WND and
Radio America Monday that Rhodes lied to the
American people and that no such system was in place.
Cutler said Hoekstra is
exactly right.
“We do not know who
these people are, and that’s a big problem not only where the Syrian
refugees are concerned,” Cutler said. “How many times can you get burned by the
same match?”
He said the system is
far from foolproof for a very simple reason. “We know that terrorists and
criminals use fraud in their applications for visas, fraud in their applications
for immigration benefits to enter the country and hide themselves,” Cutler
said.
Beyond that, Cutler said
the U.S. would need to have a cooperative relationship with the Assad regime in
Syria. Not only does that not exist, he said Syria may not even have records on
many of these refugee applicants.
“This is a very real
threat. We are in the middle of a war. If our government is going to make
mistakes, it better make mistakes on the side of America,” he added, suggesting
current U.S. policy would seem like lunacy in a previous generation.
“This is as absurd as
thinking back to the Second World War and imagining FDR calling up Adolf
Hitler’s people and asking if refugees coming to America through Germany posed
a threat to our safety,” Cutler said.
What actually is
happening is equally concerning, according to Cutler. He said the current
immigration system is doing little to weed out potential threats.
“The approval
rate for the refugee applications from Syria by our government stands
at more than 90 percent,” he said. “It only takes minutes to approve an
application but days or weeks to deny an application. The pressure is on to
clear the backlog. Every time you hear people say, ‘Yay, the government’s going
to work faster.’ Don’t get excited, folks. What it means is they’re going to
rubber-stamp approvals.” Cutler said even a few
mistakes in reviewing refugee applications could be disastrous for
the country.
“Let’s say we admit
10,000, and only one percent are bad actors,” he said. “We’re talking
about hundreds of terrorists potentially entering the United States.”
Cutler points out that
19 young terrorists killed more people on Sept. 11 than
the Japanese Navy killed at Pearl Harbor. He said the world sees the carnage
inflicted by just a few radicals on a regular basis.
"Only 19 did what
they did," he said. "It took eight terrorists to carry out the
attacks in Paris. It took two terrorists to wreak havoc on the Boston Marathon
just two years ago. How many times? How many times do we have to see history
repeat itself and say there's something terribly wrong with what we're
doing?"
He said the longer Obama
insists there's no threat posed by refugees, the more his credibility suffers. "I
am so tired of the misleading facts, if you want to call them facts, being
paraded by this administration in particular. I'm old enough to remember the (Lyndon)
Johnson administration and his credibility gap when he talked about Vietnam.
Here we have more than a gap. This is a chasm, and it's as big as the Grand
Canyon," said Cutler, a registered Democrat.
Cutler also pushed back
against the notion that his opposition to refugee acceptance is rooted in
xenophobia. He said his early days at the INS prove that's wrong as
America welcomed refugees at the JFK airport.
"For me it was a
privilege, an absolute joy, to admit refugees into the United States,"
Cutler said. "These folks got off the airplane, walked into the
international arrival building, fell to their knees and kissed the floor. I kid
you not. They hugged me. They kissed me on the cheek. They cried. I cried with
them."
He continued, "I
have nothing against refugees, if and only if it doesn't undermine national
security. And this would absolutely do inestimable damage to national
security."
Listen to the WND/Radio
America interview with Michael Cutler:
http://www.wnd.com/2015/11/u-s-rubber-stamps-more-than-90-of-refugee-applications/
http://www.wnd.com/2015/11/u-s-rubber-stamps-more-than-90-of-refugee-applications/
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