Posted on 08/27/2004 5:44:17 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
If al Qaeda wants to strike on U.S. soil before the elections, it still has available to it a gaping loophole it exploited pre-9/11: Saudis easy access to U.S. visas.
Despite supposed reforms implemented by the U.S. State Department, current statisticsobtained exclusively by this columnistreveal that nearly 90% of all Saudi visa applicants get approved. To put this in perspective, applicants in most other Arab nationsthe ones that didnt send us 15 of 19 9/11 hijackersare refused visas three to five times more often than Saudis. (State refused multiple requests for comment.)
September 11 mastermind Khaled Sheikh Mohammed reportedly told U.S. interrogators that the reason 15 of the 19 hijackers were Saudis was because they had by far the easiest time getting visas. According to the 9/11 Commission, KSM personally discovered how true this was when he obtained a visa (using an alias) in July 2001 through a program known as Visa Express, which allowed all Saudis to apply for visas at travel agencies.
As troubling as Visa Express was, though, it was used by just three of the terrorists, since the program was only open for three months before the attack. Far more disturbing is the fact that Visa Express didnt lower the standards for Saudis to get visas; they couldnt have gotten any lower.
The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, found in an October 2002 report that consular officers in Saudi Arabia issued visas to most Saudi applicants without interviewing them, requiring them to complete their applications, or providing supporting documentation. Even before Visa Express started, 99% of all Saudi nationals were approved.
Following a public outcry, State shuttered Visa Express in July 2002, and also canned consular chief Mary Ryan in the same week. Congress even came close to stripping the visa power from Statean amendment failed by a single vote in committeebut the diplomats department staved off those efforts by pledging reform. Lots of it.
State has made some progress, such as doubling the number of names on the watchlist and breathing more life into pre-9/11 programs to identify non-watchlisted individuals who should be barred from the U.S.
What State has neglected to do, however, is enforce the law in Saudi Arabia.
Because of a provision in the law known as 214(b), all applicants are presumed ineligible for a visa until they establish their eligibility. This is supposed to be a high bar to clear, and in most countries, it is. Just not for Saudis. Thats why nearly 90% who apply still get approved.
Eight of KSMs 27 handpicked operatives were prevented from entering the United States because of 214(b). Yet the same law that kept out almost one-third of the original 9/11 cell was not applied in Saudi Arabiaand it still isnt today.
If State wanted to get tough on Saudi visa applicants, they would have unfettered discretion to do so. Denials made by a consular officer are not appealable, which means a visa could be denied simply because a Saudi is young, single, and unemployedthe profile of the person least likely to qualify under 214(b) and the most likely to be a terrorist.
State, however, has shown no willingness to put security first. It vehemently opposed Congressional attempts to tighten Saudis access to visas, and it only closed Visa Express under duress. Late last yearas originally reported here this Januarythe U.S. Embassy in Riyadh sent a cable to Washington advocating a re-loosening of restrictions on Saudi visas.
With 15 of the 19 hijackers and continued al Qaeda bombings and beheadings, the question must be asked: what additional evidence does State need before deciding to enforce the law?
If they're applying for visas, and we know they're coming... we'll know who they are, what they're doing here, where they're staying, and if the deviate... we'll be all over them.
I don't share the confidence of the State Department that we'll be able to do that though, so yes... please... restrict visas in the Middle East until well after our election... at least.
I don't see any excuse to give priveleged access to the US to the Saudis. I see plenty of reason to turn back every one at the airport!
I don't see any excuse for not having fixed this problem, either. If another set of Saudis stage another 9/11, what will the government say then?
Transfer visa issuance and processing duties to the Homeland Security Department. National security is too important to be left in the hands of striped pants diplomats.
They waltzed in through our wide-open southern border and brought their toys with them.
And Tom Tancredo can't get the RNC to have a strong immigration plank in the convention platform.
So sad!
There's people gonna die because of this ridiculous attitude.
Just hope it ain't me!
Quote: "...nearly 90% of all Saudi visa applicants get approved. To put this in perspective, applicants in most other Arab nationsthe ones that didnt send us 15 of 19 9/11 hijackersare refused visas three to five times more often than Saudis."
Numerically, the overwhelming majority of these taliturds/terrorturds came from Saudi. This entire situation is madness. Is there lead in the drinking water in the Beltway? Looks like we have the Don Quixote syndrome going on here.
Sometimes I wonder if Foggy Bottom has been significantly infiltrated and compromised by the Left. In the 80's they were partial to Romanian dictator Nikolai Ceausescu (check out this book: "Pinstripes and Reds by Richard Funderburk). Maybe some elements at State are also partial to terrorism? (in addition to waxing poetic on the virtues of their former communist best friends?) It is not surprising that calls were not returned. Bush should examine this loophole very closely and, more importantly, WHY it is still there.... A covert task force should be assembled to ID every single loophole that the terrorists could potentially exploit and quietly shut every single one down, behind the scenes, despite the incoherent ramblings and gesticulations of the liberal (read: terrorist enablers) and promulgators of said loopholes.
Maybe the Pentagon should assume all of the duties in this area? It's a "modest proposal", but worth putting on the table...... That would stir up a veritable bees nest and turf battle for certain, yet enhance our security immeasurably.
Visas that Should Have Been Denied
A look at 9/11 terrorists visa applications. http://www.nationalreview.com/mowbray/mowbray100902.asp
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