US Lawmakers Propose to Tighten US Border with Mexico 

By Jim Malone 
VOA NEWS
Washington
08 June 2005

Some members of Congress are pressing the Bush
administration to shore up the U.S. border with
Mexico, warning it could become a transit point for
terrorists.


Ever since the 2001 terrorist attacks, the Bush
administration and members of Congress from both major
political parties have focused on the southern border
with Mexico as a potential weak link in keeping
terrorists out of the United States.

Earlier this year, FBI Director Robert Mueller warned
lawmakers that immigrants with ties to al-Qaida could
easily enter the United States illegally from Mexico
using false identities.

In recent months, some members of the president's
majority Republican Party have stepped up pressure on
the administration to do more to crack down on illegal
immigration.

Arizona Republican John Kyl, a member of a Senate
subcommittee that deals with immigration issues,
expressed concern about the continuing influx of
illegal immigrants coming across the southern border
during a recent hearing.

"Many of these aliens, incidentally, are not from
Mexico, but they come from countries all over the
world, usually flying into Mexico and then sneaking
across the border on foot," he said. "Many do not have
authentic identity documents. Many do not carry
documents at all. We do not even know who many of them
are. We do not know whether they intend to simply find
work or whether they plan to engage in acts of terror
in the United States or are here to commit crimes in
our society."

There are an estimated 11 million undocumented
immigrants in the United States. But federal
immigration officials insist they are making progress
in stemming the influx.

Border Patrol Chief David Aguilar recently briefed a
Senate subcommittee on immigration about his agency's
efforts since last October.

"The Border Patrol as a whole has apprehended over
800,000 illegal aliens, interdicted 886,000 pounds of
marijuana and 7,400 pounds of cocaine. Our objective
is nothing less than a border under operational
control," he said.

But with that success have come other problems. State
and federal officials complain they are running out of
room to detain illegal immigrants suspected of
criminal intentions or from so-called countries of
special interest, which are known to have links with
terrorist organizations.

Immigration officials have instituted a limited
expedited removal program that detains the most
suspicious illegal aliens and usually results in them
being deported in about a month's time.

Large numbers of other illegal aliens who are not
deemed a threat are often released inside the United
States and told to appear in court at a later date to
determine whether they are eligible to remain. A large
number of them never make their court appearances. 

Texas Republican Senator John Cornyn is joining forces
with Senator Kyl to sponsor a bill that would double
the size of the Border Patrol over the next five
years.

"We cannot continue to ignore our border security or
at least fail to provide the resources necessary to
let our hard working men and women who are given that
assignment and who have graciously accepted it, to be
successful," he said.

If approved, the Cornyn-Kyl bill would authorize
10,000 new Border Patrol agents to the current total
of 11,000. It would also offer a version of a
temporary guest worker program similar to that
proposed by President Bush last year.

The president's plan would allow unauthorized
immigrants currently living in the United States to
apply for legal status to work and would impose new
penalties on companies that knowingly hire illegal
workers.

Stewart Verdery is a consultant on immigration issues
and a former official in the Homeland Security
Department. He told lawmakers that the creation of a
guest worker program is an important part of helping
law enforcement focus on terrorist and criminal
threats coming across the border.

"Providing those who want to work have no prior
criminal or terrorism record a means to enter the
country legally through ports of entry will make it
much more likely that the Border Patrol will be able
to locate and arrest criminals and terrorists who will
lose their cloak of invisibility that the current
situation offers," he said.

But the guest worker proposals have drawn criticism
from across the political spectrum.

Immigration opponents are worried about the
government's ability to administer a massive new
program while immigration advocacy groups are
concerned that the plan will not do enough to protect
the rights of temporary workers. 




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