<http://www.townhall.com/columnists/joelmowbray/printjm20050304.shtml>

Townhall.com

Consular chief who kept open door for Saudis sticks around
Joel Mowbray (back to web version) | Send

March 4, 2005

In a sign that new Secretary of State Condi Rice is not yet ready to close
the open-door visa policy for Saudis, consular chief Maura Harty was
recently asked to say on indefinitely.

No one was more shocked than Ms. Harty herself, according to officials at
Consular Affairs, and many officials at State regarded the move-or rather,
the lack of one-as an indication that there will be no major "shake up" at
Foggy Bottom.

The surprise renewal of Ms. Harty as head of Consular Affairs delays what
earlier seemed like an imminent appointment for her to be ambassador in
London.  How long she stays is not yet known, but what is clear is that she
will continue to thwart any meaningful reforms at her agency.

A controversial nominee to the post two and a half years ago, Ms. Harty
swayed a reluctant Senate to confirm her by pledging substantial reform at
the agency responsible for improperly issuing legal visas to all of the
9/11 terrorists.  She has not made good on her word.

Her predecessor, Mary Ryan, was fired after nine years at the position in a
bid to mollify angry legislators.  During the drafting of the bill that
created the Department of Homeland Security in 2002, Congress came within a
whisker of stripping the visa authority from State, which would have been a
crushing blow to Foggy Bottom's power and prestige.

Lawmakers were steamed about a program that Ms. Ryan continued operating in
Saudi Arabia for 10 months after 9/11 called Visa Express, which allowed
residents in the country that sent us 15 of 19 hijackers to apply for visas
at private Saudi travel agents.  On the eve of the first committee vote on
taking the visa authority out of State entirely, Colin Powell sacked Ms.
Ryan and Visa Express was shuttered.

But Gen. Powell proved he had no appetite for reform, as he appointed the
protégé and clone of Ms. Ryan, Ms. Harty, as her replacement.  Ms. Harty,
like Ms. Ryan, was a career veteran of the Foreign Service, and was an
enthusiastic supporter of the courtesy culture-putting customer service for
foreign visa applicants ahead of border security-instituted by her
predecessor.

Not only that, but Ms. Harty was a top deputy to Ms. Ryan when many of the
9/11 terrorists received their visas, and she was involved when the agency
was developing Visa Express.

Ms. Harty unintentionally indicated to Congress that she had no real intent
to reform Consular Affairs when she conceded that she had never looked at
the readily-available visa applications of the 9/11 terrorists. 
(Applications of four of the terrorists had been destroyed.) 

 Had she done so, she would have seen that at least 15 of the hijackers
actually did not meet the legal qualifications for a visa, and in fact, the
only reason they were invited into the United States is because they were
Saudis.  She would have discovered that Visa Express was merely a symptom
of a dangerous policy welcoming all Saudi applicants, no matter how
unqualified under the law.

But she didn't care.

During her tenure, Ms. Harty has stonewalled Congressmen and Senators
pushing for reform.  She has quietly kept alive much of the courtesy
culture and has done little to orient her staff to think of themselves as
the last line of protection in our border security.  Consular training
remains startlingly sparse, with a complete lack of law enforcement-style
techniques to ferret out liars and cheats-or terrorists.

Worst of all, though, is that Ms. Harty has not closed the open door policy
for Saudis seeking visas.  She has, in fact, opened it wider.  The refusal
rates for Saudi nationals wishing to come here has dropped steadily during
her tenure, falling below 10% in Riyadh last year.

Nearly 90% of Saudi nationals applying for visas receive them, even though
the law, particularly a provision known as 214(b), sets out rigorous
requirements before someone can be deemed eligible.  Refusal rates for most
of the Arab world, for example, are three to five times higher than in
Saudi Arabia-and that disparity is likely to grow under Ms. Harty's
leadership.

Saudis' easy access to visas has not gone unnoticed by al Qaeda.  9/11
mastermind Khaled Sheikh Mohammed reportedly told interrogators that the
reason 15 of the terrorists were Saudis was because they had the greatest
ease getting visas. 

 With Maura Harty at the helm, that hasn't changed.  And as long as she
sticks around, nationals of the country that sent us 15 of 19 9/11
terrorists will continue receiving the red carpet treatment.  If that isn't
grounds for firing, what is?




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