-Caveat Lector-

http://www.humanevents.org/articles/10-08-01/barnett.html




U.S. Law Says Membership in Terrorist Group,Or Advocacy of Terror, No Bar
to Immigration

BY JAMES BARONET
THE WEEK OF OCTOBER 8, 2001


A 1990 U.S. immigration law, http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/8/1182.html
,sponsored by Sen. Ted Kennedy (D.-Mass.), instructs State Department
employees that "mere" membership in a terrorist organization or advocacy of
acts of terrorism should not exclude foreigners from receiving U.S.
immigration visas.

Under the law , http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/8/1182.html ,as it is
written, someone who belongs to a Middle Eastern terrorist group and has
publicly stated a desire that the World Trade Center towers be blown up
cannot, on those grounds alone, be denied permission to legally enter the
United States as a prospective citizen.

In such a case, the ultimate decision of whether to grant an immigration
visa is up to a State Department official s subjective evaluation of a
person s knowledge and intent.

According to the official foreign affairs manual,
http://www.foia.state.gov/masterdocs/09fam/0940032N.pdf , posted on the
State Department website, the immigration law requires that a foreigner
must
be denied a visa if he or she has "indicated intention to cause death or
serious bodily harm, and/or incited terrorist activity."

The department defines "incitement" as "the making of utterances, written
or
oral, which are intended to arouse, urge, provoke, stir up, instigate,
persuade, or move another person to commit an act of terrorism."

But merely "advocating" terrorism, or belonging to a group that engages in
terrorism, cannot be used as grounds for exclusion. "Only statements that
directly further or abet the commission of a terrorist act may properly
constitute a basis for denying a visa," says the manual.

A spokesmen for the State Department confirmed that if an individual
generally advocates terrorism, but does not intend to further a terrorist
attack, that individual is "not automatically ineligible for a visa." Also,
the spokesman confirmed, membership in a terrorist organization is not
grounds for exclusion unless the individual in question "knew or should
have
known" that the group he belonged to was involved in terrorist activities.

"It has to do with intent," says the spokesman. "If you look at the
regulation, it says, "incitement is the making of utterances written or
oral, which are intended to move another person to commit another act of
terrorism." If I am a student in France, and I hate the United States and
I'm sitting in my dorm room with five other people with me, and I say, 'We
ought to blow up the U.S. embassy in Paris.' Is that actually intended? Do
you think somebody would do it?"

The regulations actually contain these words: "[S]tatements approving a
specific terrorist act, and asserting that such acts should be repeated, do
not render an applicant ineligible."

Old Exclusions

Most of the visa section of the foreign affairs manual is based on the
Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1990, which lowered the national
security standards for granting immigration visas.

Prior to that, under the 1952 immigration act, aliens could be excluded if
there was reason to believe they would engage in activities against the
public interest or the security of the United States. Aliens also could be
excluded for advocating anarchism, the assault or murder of U.S. government
officials, the unlawful damage of property, or for publishing or possessing
material advocating such activities.

The term "mere membership" in a terrorist organization was not defined by
Congress in the 1990 act, so the State Department had to devise its own
policy. The manuals that include the State Department instructions are sent
to every U.S. embassy and consulate in the world to assist consular
officers in admitting aliens into the country. Certain consular offices in
unfriendly states have special instructions on processing visas for foreign
nationals.

But every alien must go through a name check, and nationals from unfriendly
regimes go through a more intensive check.

In 1990, a blind Egyptian sheik named Omar Abdel-Rahman, who was later
convicted as a conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombings, was
admitted to the United States with a visa issued by the embassy in the
Sudan, even though his name appeared on the State Department s list of
undesirables. This watch list consists of 5.5 million people who may be
inadmissible to the United States for various reasons, including criminal
histories and terrorist links as wells as lack of funds or infectious
diseases.

Senators Ted Kennedy (D.-Mass.) and Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D.-N.Y.)
pushed the new legislation through the Senate during the 1990 Persian Gulf
crisis.

The legislation was also promoted by some Irish-American groups.

On October 26 of that year, Kennedy explained on the Senate floor: "The
exclusion categories are reformed and updated to end outdated ideological,
medical and communicable disease provisions."

________________
Mr. Barnett, an intern with the National Journalism Center, is at George
Mason University, Fairfax, Va.

c) HUMAN EVENTS, 2001


----------------------------------------------------------------------
JIHAD IN AMERICA - ONLINE VIDEO A Time to Choose

The New York Post reported on Monday that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon has asked that the United States formally include Hamas, Islamic
Jihad and Hezbollah on its list of targeted terrorist groups in the wake of
the September 11 attacks in New York and Washington. Such a step would
establish that the governments of Iran, Syria and Lebanon and the
Palestinian Authority (PA) -- all of whom "harbor or support" one or more
of these groups -- would be deemed to be "hostile regimes."

Colin Powell's State Department is adamantly resisting this step, however.
In fact, it is actively seeking to enlist the aforementioned (among other
unsavory regimes, such as those of Sudan, Cuba and Algeria) as members of
the anti-terrorism coalition. Just last Friday, Secretary Powell wrote
members of the U.S. Senate opposing draft legislation aimed at imposing
sanctions on the Palestinian Authority's access to weapons if it does not
meet its commitments to fight terrorism. His letter claimed that, "The
Palestinian compliance legislation...would be counterproductive to our
coalition-building and peace process efforts and we would like to see it
withdrawn." In other words, even if you are not "with us," you can continue
to benefit from American legitimation and assistance.



================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

   FROM THE DESK OF:

           *Michael Spitzer* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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