True Security Requires Vetting for Ideology, Not
Passport
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Originally
published under the title "How Trump Can Use Travel Ban Win to Fix
Vetting of Immigrants."
The Trump
administration has an opportunity to implement a better system for
keeping out the bad apples.
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In a ruling that
came as a surprise to many, the Supreme Court of the United States upheld key elements of the Trump
administration's so-called travel ban. President Trump is claiming the ruling is "a clear
victory for our national security." But is a temporary travel pause
from six countries a true national security victory?
The president
went from an unconstitutional, unacceptable, unworkable, and
un-strategic "Muslim ban" to an evolving "travel
ban" aimed not at Muslims, but at people from seven (and then six)
Muslim-majority countries. While a number of people originating from the
countries affected by the travel ban have been arrested on terror-related charges over
the years, his measure wouldn't have kept out those responsible for the most deadly acts of terrorism in the
U.S. The travel ban is also merely temporary.
Lost in all this
is that a major national security triumph is within Trump's grasp if his
administration follows its own stated logic for a temporary ban — to
create space for a review of our immigrant vetting
procedures. This is a worthy goal that has thus far gone unfulfilled.
It is the ideology of entry-seekers we
should be worried about, not their passports.
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Even theocratic
countries with many radicals, such as Iran, have pro-democracy activists who should be
free to come to the United States if they wish. It is the ideology, not
the passport, we should be worried about.
Updating our
immigration vetting procedures to reflect this reality, with new
procedures to identify and exclude Islamists, has never been more
critical.
Excluding
immigrants who harbor ideologies hostile to the United States is not new.
Anarchists were excluded from entering the United States
in the aftermath of the 1901 assassination of President William McKinley,
and laws aimed at excluding Communists remain on the books, specifically
excluding "Any immigrant who is or has been a member of or
affiliated with the Communist or any other totalitarian party," or
others who seek to overthrow the government.
But these laws
have not been updated in ways that meet the current threat from radical
Islam. Our laws already disallow anyone affiliated with terrorist organizations
from immigrating here. However, recent events such as the San Bernardino
massacre and numerous attacks in Europe demonstrate that formal
association with a terrorist organization is not necessary to inflict
massive damage.
Their dedication
to a totalitarian, theocratic version of Islam, not a formal association
with a terrorist group, is the real problem. ISIS and other terrorist
organizations realize this, and thus seek to indoctrinate individuals who are not
formally associated with the group to carry out attacks.
Our laws should
be updated to deal with this threat, excluding those with beliefs that
are fundamentally at odds with the Constitution and would reject it as
the supreme governing authority in America. This would exclude Islamists,
who are by nature theocrats, while allowing moderate Muslims who believe
in the separation of mosque and state.
Polite questioning can be very
effective in ferreting out Islamists pretending to be moderates.
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New citizens are
already required to pledge support for the Constitution;
there is no good reason to allow immigrants who are hostile to its
principles.
Of course, people can lie about their beliefs when seeking
entry to the U.S., and extremists are more likely than most to lie to
achieve their goals. But polite interrogation by immigration staff
trained in directing questioning to expose
inconsistencies, together with simultaneous electronic screening of their
social media and internet activity, can be very effective in ferreting
out Islamists pretending to be moderates.
Setting all this
up won't be easy, and the path forward will undoubtedly include mistakes.
But ignoring this poisonous Islamist ideology when vetting immigrants
leads to disillusionment, balkanization, and terrorism. The best way to
protect Americans, including moderate Muslims who would like to become
Americans, is to ensure radicals are excluded.
Clifford Smith is director of the Middle
East Forum's Washington Project.
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