November 16, 2005
Homeland Security: Red Alert
By Michelle
Malkin
Things are going from bad to worse at the Bush Department of Homeland Security.
Do not be fooled by DHS chief Michael Chertoff's tough-sounding rhetoric. While
the Washington muckety-mucks pay lip service to reforming the nation's broken
detention and deportation system, catch-and-release of immigration lawbreakers
remains the order of the day -- not only at the border, but all across the country's
interior.
The rudderless and overwhelmed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency
still does not have a new chief. Which is just as well since Bush nominee Julie
Myers (a nice Bush lawyer with virtually no immigration or customs enforcement
experience who happens to be the niece of recently retired chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Richard Myers/wife of Chertoff's chief of staff/former employee
of Chertoff and former colleague of outgoing ICE head Michael Garcia) would
provide as much leadership and morale-boosting ability as a pair of junior high
pom-poms. Her nomination is still pending.
Meanwhile, as illegal immigration continues unabated, the White House has seen
fit to honor the chief of the Border Patrol, David Aguilar, with a presidential
"Meritorious Executive" award, which comes with a cash bonus, for his outstanding
performance. I kid you not.
It's not much better over at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services,
which administers all immigration benefits, from citizenship applications to
asylum requests to work permits, and is responsible for overseeing all amnesty,
student visa and marriage visa applicants. The head of the agency, a nice banker
named Eduardo Aguirre whose only experience in immigration law was his own personal
background as a Cuban refugee, left in June after two years in office to become
ambassador to Spain. Aguirre's biography says that under his "leadership," CIS
"made significant and measurable progress towards eliminating the immigration
benefit application backlog, improving customer service, and enhancing national
security."
Mission accomplished? Don't make me laugh.
A new report by the DHS inspector general's office showed that Aguirre's agency
has failed miserably to crack down on the estimated 4 million to 8 million foreigners
who have overstayed their visas -- a supposed priority in the wake of the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks, which highlighted how lax enforcement against visa overstayers
has enabled many al Qaeda operatives to stay in the country.
Of the 301,046 leads the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency received
in 2004 on possible visa violators, the inspector general found, only 4,164
were formally pursued, resulting in just 671 apprehensions -- few of which will
actually result in deportation.
In these trying times for conservatives in Washington, you'd think the last
thing the Bush administration might do is send up yet another crony/diversity
nominee to fill a sensitive post. But Aguirre's proposed replacement, Emilio
T. Gonzalez, is just such an embarrassment. He appeared before the Senate Judiciary
Committee recently and was endorsed by two Florida Republicans -- Sen. Mel Martinez
and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, who said Gonzalez would "bring an understanding
of national security and my own personal immigration experience to bear."
Gonzalez is a Cuban refugee who arrived in the U.S. at the age of 4, achieved
the American dream, and served honorably in the Army for 26 years. This makes
him a remarkable success story. It does not make him a good candidate to head
the Citizenship and Immigration Services agency in a time of war.
Scouring his resume, one finds no immigration law expertise whatsoever outside
his personal experience.
No indication that he has any clue about how to curtail rampant asylum fraud.
No indication that he has any idea how to deal with those massive numbers of
visa overstayers and immigration benefit fraudsters, let alone root out terrorist
operatives among them.
And no indication that he would have the ability or willingness to ensure that
the millions of "guest workers" under Bush's proposed amnesty plan would be
competently screened, registered and deported after their "guest" terms are
up.
Zip. Nada. None.
This has been the Bush plan on immigration enforcement and border security:
Recruit the clueless. Reward the failures. Those who abide by the law lose.
The con artists, the criminals, the ideological border saboteurs and the terrorists
win.
Copyright 2005 Creators Syndicate
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/Commentary/com-11_16_05_MM.html