http://daveinboca.blogspot.com/2007/05/jihadists-swarming-over-mexican-borde
r.html
 

Wednesday, May 23, 2007


Jihadists Swarming Over Mexican Border like Killer Bees? 


Or perhaps they have discovered our porous neighbor to the North? Hugh
<http://hughhewitt.townhall.com/g/66418989-d98c-4761-ab2b-d32ed60fdbd6>
Hewitt has excerpts from San Antonio News Express reporter Todd Bensman's
series on illegal aliens that concern border violaters from the Middle East
and other Muslim countries:


People from 43 so-called "countries of interest" in the Middle East, South
Asia and North Africa are sneaking into the United States, many by way of
Texas, forming a human pipeline that exists largely outside the public
consciousness but that has worried counterterrorism authorities since 9-11.

These immigrants are known as "special-interest aliens." When caught, they
can be subjected to FBI interrogation, detention holds that can last for
months and, in rare instances, federal prison terms.

The perceived danger is that they can evade being screened through
terror-watch lists.

The 43 countries of interest are singled out because terrorist groups
operate there. Special-interest immigrants are coming all the time, from
countries where U.S. military personnel are battling radical Islamist
movements, such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and the Philippines. They come
from countries where organized Islamic extremists have bombed U.S.
interests, such as Kenya, Tanzania and Lebanon. They come from
U.S.-designated state sponsors of terror, such as Iran, Syria and Sudan.

And they come from Saudi Arabia, the nation that spawned most of the 9-11
hijackers. 


The rule of thumb is that you catch one out of ten terrorist suspects, given
the porous nature of our borders and special planning that trained
operatives might have received. Some more snippets to keep you from sleeping
soundly:


Though most who cross America's borders are economic migrants, the
government has labeled some terrorists. Their ranks include:

Mahmoud Kourani, convicted in Detroit as a leader of the terrorist group
Hezbollah. Using a visa obtained by bribing a Mexican official in Beirut,
the Lebanese national sneaked over the Mexican border in 2001 in the trunk
of a car.

Nabel Al-Marahb, a reputed al-Qaida operative who was No. 27 on the FBI's
most wanted terrorist list in the months after 9-11, crossed the Canadian
border in the sleeper cab of a long-haul truck.

When Iraq war refugee Aamr Bahnan Boles crossed the Rio Grande, authorities
assumed the worst about him. In the current climate of uncertainty and fear,
they had little choice. For Boles, it was literally a test of faith.

Farida Goolam Mahammed, a South African woman captured in 2004 as she
carried into the McAllen airport cash and clothes still wet from the Rio
Grande. Though the government characterized her merely as a border jumper,
U.S. sources now say she was a smuggler who ferried people with terrorist
connections. One report credits her arrest with spurring a major
international terror investigation that stopped an al-Qaida attack on New
York.

The government has accused other border jumpers of connections to outlawed
terrorist organizations, some that help al-Qaida, including reputed members
of the deadly Tamil Tigers caught in California after crossing the Mexican
border in 2005 on their way to Canada.

One U.S.-bound Pakistani apparently captured in Mexico drew such suspicion
that he ended up in front of a military tribunal at Guantanamo Bay.

"They are not all economic migrants," said attorney Janice Kephart, who
served as legal counsel for the 9-11 Commission and co-wrote its final staff
report. "I do get frustrated when people who live in Washington or Illinois
say we don't have any evidence that terrorists are coming across. But there
is evidence."

According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection apprehension numbers, agents
along both borders have caught more than 5,700 special-interest immigrants
since 2001. But as many as 20,000 to 60,000 others are presumed to have
slipped through, based on rule-of-thumb estimates typically used by homeland
security agencies.

"You'd like to think at least you're catching one out of 10," McCraw said.
"But that's not good in baseball and it's certainly not good in
counterterrorism." 


There is a persistent rumor that a major terror event in the USA had been
scheduled in 2005 by Osama, but somehow was nixed---or postponed---by Dr.
Zawahiri, the Dr. Moriarty that we haven't found the Sherlock to toss over
the falls. But the assets may be in place in a sleeper-cell mode, probably
in the Detroit area, just across the river from indulgent Canada, which
allows "political asylum" to whomever claims they need it. The Millenium
Bomb Plot to blow up LAX was thwarted only by an alert US border patrol
agent---her suspicions were aroused by the nervous behavior of the
Canadian-based terrorist. And it's not just the border patrol that nabs
Middle East Border jumping potential perps:


Other federal agencies besides the Border Patrol have caught thousands more
of the crossers inland after it was discovered they were in the country
illegally, including 34,000 detainees from Syria, Iran, Sudan and Libya
between 2001 and 2005, according to a homeland security audit last year of
U.S. detention centers for immigrants. Then there is an unknown number
caught by Mexico - an inveterate partner, as it turns out.

Texas accounts for a third of all the special-interest immigrants caught by
the Border Patrol since 9-11, including 250 apprehended between March 2006
and February.

Efforts to stop the traffic are, in some ways, beyond U.S. control. Corrupt
foreign officials and bureaucrats in Latin American consulates and in the
Middle East have sold visas. Others hand them out without taking U.S.
security concerns into account.

Anti-U.S. sentiments run deep in nations across the globe, creating
steppingstones to America for those whose illicit travel plans sometimes are
abetted with delight. 



You have to read the entire
<http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/nation/stories/MYSA052007.01A.SIA_Main_Par
tOne_Jump1.8761b17c.html> series to discover why Todd Bensman should be
nominated for a Pulitzer for a story that took six months to put together.
But the Pulitzers are in the domain of the Columbia School of Journalism, an
institution that has become a byword for shoddy ethics and ultra-left bias.

Let's hope that Todd gets national recognition for a job well done.


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