April
2, 2005
Facing Up to the Border Problem with the Right Solutions
By Jon
Kyl
WASHINGTON, D.C. - There has been a lot of publicity
about the so-called "Minutemen," private citizens organizing
at the Mexican border to stand guard against illegal immigration.
Less publicized, but more significant, are new efforts by the
Department of Homeland Security to deal with the problem more
comprehensively.
Phase II of the Arizona Border Control (ABC) initiative,
announced last Wednesday, will significantly increase Border Patrol
personnel, aerial support and the use of "smart border"
technologies as well as strengthen partnerships with state, tribal
and local law enforcement. More than 530 additional Border Patrol
agents will be permanently assigned to the Arizona border, an
increase of nearly 25 percent, and processes further streamlined
for deporting illegal aliens, particularly those with criminal
records.
The original ABC initiative, launched last year,
was a large-scale multi-agency initiative aimed at controlling
the Arizona-Mexico border, combating alien smuggling, and reducing
the violent crime and need for social services associated with
illegal immigration. It made Tucson the "most enforced sector
in the country" for the Border Patrol, and resulted in the
apprehension of 384,954 individuals, a 42 percent increase over
2003. Border deaths were dramatically reduced, and more than 14,000
illegal aliens were repatriated into the interior of Mexico through
a pilot program negotiated with the Mexican government. Agents
also seized thousands of tons of illegal narcotics, and prosecutors
indicted 340 dangerous human smugglers for a variety of crimes
including money laundering, kidnapping, narcotics smuggling and
weapons charges.
When complete, Phase II will raise bring operational
manpower for the Tucson Sector to more than 2,300 permanent CBP
Border Patrol agents, as well as tighten controls at all Arizona
ports of entry to thwart alien smuggling. The new aircraft will
include 16 "A-Star" helicopters, 4 UH-60 Black Hawk
helicopters and 3 fixed-wing aircraft.
These new resources won't solve the problem overnight.
But they represent real, concrete steps forward in dealing with
a large and complex problem.
Certainly, they stand in market contrast to some
profoundly unhelpful remarks of late by Mexican President Vicente
Fox, who has publicly scoffed at U.S. objections to illegal immigration
and called efforts to enforce the border, such as the "triple
fence" planned for San Diego, "discriminatory"
and "against freedom."
The United States is a sovereign nation that has
every right to protect its borders, as other countries do, without
baseless accusations of 'discrimination'. The process for entering
the United States legally is straightforward and not terribly
difficult - it seems painfully obvious that deterrence measures
like walls only 'discriminate' against those who intend to break
the law.
What make Fox's statements particularly galling
are reports that Mexico consistently violates the rights of illegal
immigrants crossing its own southern border from Central and South
America. The State Department's February Human Rights Practices
report cites abuses at all levels of the Mexican government, and
charges that Mexican police and immigration officials not only
abuse illegal immigrants, but actually participate in trafficking
them.
If President Fox is serious about helping to reduce
illegal immigration and its various related problems, he should
look in his own back yard. Another good step would be to acknowledge
the United States' right to defend its borders and demonstrate
perhaps a little less disdain for the rule of law north of the
border.
Senator
Kyl sits on the Senate's Finance and Judiciary committees
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