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rangerrebew

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US Officials Admit Concern Over Syrian Refugee Effort
« on: February 18, 2015, 11:31:35 am »
 

US Officials Admit Concern Over Syrian Refugee Effort

By JUSTIN FISHEL AND MIKE LEVINE

 Top U.S. counterterrorism officials say they worry a potential terrorist could be hiding among refugees who are looking to come to the United States after escaping the brutal war in Syria.

"It's clearly a population of concern,??? the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, Nicholas Rasmussen, told the House Homeland Security Committee on Wednesday.

Committee Chairman Mike McCaul, R-Texas, went further, saying it would be a ???huge mistake??? to bring refugees from the conflict to the U.S. ??? even as an estimated 4 million children, women and men have been forced to flee Syria and another 7 million have been displaced from their homes there, unable to leave.

Senior officials leading the State Department???s refugee efforts say the U.S. government has a long history of caring for the innocent victims of war.

???It???s not a matter of should we do it, it???s really a matter of how we do it,??? Larry Bartlett, the State Department???s director of Refugee Admission for the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration, told ABC News. ???One of the fundamental principles of our country is that we care about others. We will help others.???





Bartlett insisted every refugee is vetted through an ???intensive??? system, drawing on information and expertise from several U.S. intelligence agencies, including the Defense Department.

???We have a very slow process of moving refugees through our pipeline, and part of it is because of the security vetting component,??? Bartlett said.

Homeland security officials also testified Wednesday that any potential refugees from Syria would receive ???the most rigorous screening.???



"Any tasking we're given ... will be as thorough as we can make it," said Francis Taylor, the head of the Department of Homeland Security???s intelligence office.

Yet that???s not reassurance enough for McCaul and other leading Republicans, who recently penned a letter to National Security Advisor Susan Rice cautioning that the U.S. government???s ability to screen refugees from Syria might not be sufficient.

???The continued civil war and destabilization in Syria undeniably make it more difficult to acquire the information needed to conduct reliable threat assessments on specific refugees,??? they wrote in the letter two weeks ago.

With tens of thousands of Syrians joining groups in the region like the Islamic State, the U.S. government ???cannot allow the refugee process to become a backdoor for jihadists,??? they added.

At the hearing Wednesday, an FBI official also questioned whether the U.S. intelligence community ??? with few assets on the ground in Syria and little insight into the country from elsewhere ??? can provide authorities with the information they need to properly determine whether any refugee could pose a threat.

"You have to have information to vet,??? said FBI Assistant Director Michael Steinbach, who heads the bureau???s counterterrorism division. ???Databases don't [have] the information on those individuals, and that's the concern.???

Still, Rasmussen vowed ???the full weight of the U.S. intelligence community??? would be employed to "unearth" any concerning information about potential refugees. And Bartlett and other State Department officials say the U.S. is far from opening the flood gates.

Of the 7 million of Syrians seeking refuge, only about 500 have been let in the United States. Compare that with Syria???s neighbor, Jordan, whose Foreign Minister recently said they???ve let in over 80,000 Syrians -- a figure that represents nearly 21 percent of Jordan???s total population. Or compare it to the response to the Iraq war, with the U.S. admitting over 120,000 Iraqis.

So far Germany and Sweden are leading the charge when it comes to accepting Syrians. Germany has let in nearly 12,000 refugees, not including those who have sought asylum there.

Officials at the State Department were quick to report that overall the U.S. accepts more refugees than the rest of the world combined. Bartlett and others also say they expect the U.S. to steadily increase the number of Syrians it accepts as applications at the United Nations continue to pile up.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/officials-fear-syrian-refugees-pose-threat-us/story?id=28930114&singlePage=true
« Last Edit: February 18, 2015, 11:32:36 am by rangerrebew »

rangerrebew

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Re: US Officials Admit Concern Over Syrian Refugee Effort
« Reply #1 on: February 18, 2015, 11:35:05 am »
U.S. Expects to Quadruple the Number of Syrian Refugees Brought Here



February 17, 2015 - 7:04 AM
 
By Susan Jones

 

(CNSNews.com) - The United States has "a long tradition of welcoming refugees," and it expects to welcome thousands more of them from Syria in 2015 and 2016, despite concerns about foreign fighters, the State Department said.

"The United States has admitted 524 Syrians since 2011. We’re likely to admit 1,000 to 2,000 Syrian refugees for permanent resettlement in Fiscal Year 2015 and a somewhat higher number, though still in the low thousands, in Fiscal Year 2016," spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters on Friday.

But at a hearing of the House Homeland Security Committee last week, Chairman Mike McCaul (R-Texas) said it would be a "huge mistake" to bring refugees from Syria and Turkey into the United States where they "could potentially be radicalized."

Psaki told reporters on Friday that national security "is absolutely a priority" in the decision to admit refugees.

[video:1]

"That’s why the process can take months, if not longer. And we have a lot of experience with this with Afghanistan, with Iraq, with Somalia, and other places where the United States has taken refugees in from.

"Refugees are the most carefully vetted of all travelers to the United States," Psaki continued.

"Every refugee under consideration for admission to the United States undergoes the same intensive security screening involving multiple federal intelligence, security, and law enforcement agencies. These include the NCTC, the Terrorist Screening Center, the Department of Defense, the FBI. This process includes a lengthy overseas in-person refugee determination and security screening interview conducted by...specially trained DHS officers.

Psaki repeated that "one of our values is bringing in and welcoming refugees who have fled horrors around the world, and that continues to be central to what we believe in."

In response to a question, Psaki said she's aware of only "two incidents" involving "two Iraqis" who were admitted to Kentucky and were later accused of trying to send weapons and money to al Qaida in Iraq.

"Additional measures were activated as a result of evidence that came in on two Iraqis after they were admitted to Kentucky. Those measures are now applied to all refugees. So we always evaluate and use information as it becomes available," Psaki said.

At the Feb. 11 hearing, McCaul said he's written a letter to National Security Adviser Susan Rice expressing his concern about refugees from Syria and Turkey:

"I've been over there and I've seen them. Yeah, most of them are women and children, but there are male actors that concern me. I think this would be a huge mistake if we bring in these (refugees) into the United States that could potentially be radicalized...We're not only trying to keep these guys, the foreign fighters, out, but under this would be a -- a federally sanctioned welcome party, if you will, to potential terrorists in the United States."

[video:2]

Nicholas Rasmussen, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, told McCaul that the Syrian refugees are "clearly a population of concern."

Rasmussen and two other witnesses told the committee that a rigorous vetting and screening process is applied to all refugees in an attempt to identify possible connections to foreign terrorist groups.

 
 
Source URL: http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/susan-jones/us-expects-quadruple-number-syrian-refugees-brought-here

rangerrebew

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Re: US Officials Admit Concern Over Syrian Refugee Effort
« Reply #2 on: February 18, 2015, 11:39:21 am »
"Refugees are the most carefully vetted of all travelers to the United States," Psaki continued.

Like the fine job they did with the train riders from Mexico and Central America?