From: *Travis*
Date: Sat, Jul 11, 2009
Subject:  Risking Israel's ire, US takes 1,350 Palestinian refugees





 As if the US were concerned about Israel!  Of course as Muslims and
Palestinians (2 strikes) they are all terrorists or terrorist supporters.



B



Just what we need. Wonder how many terrorists will be among them?


jhf

*
Risking Israel's ire, US takes 1,350 Palestinian refugees*

The US is generally reluctant to resettle Palestinians, but these are
refugees from Iraq who have been targeted since the invasion.
By Patrik Jonsson

The Christian Science Monitor, July 7, 2009

http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0708/p02s04-usgn.html

Atlanta -- The State Department confirmed today that as many as 1,350
Iraqi Palestinians – once the well-treated guests of Saddam Hussein and
now at outs with much of Iraqi society – will be resettled in the US,
mostly in southern California, starting this fall.

It will be the largest-ever resettlement of Palestinian refugees into the
US – and welcome news to the Palestinians who fled to Iraq after 1948 but
who have had a tough time since Mr. Hussein was deposed in 2003. Targeted
by Iraqi Shiites, the mostly-Sunni Palestinians have spent recent years in
one of the region's roughest refugee camps, Al Waleed, near Iraq's border
with Syria.

'Really for the first time, the United States is recognizing a Palestinian
refugee population that could be admitted to the US as part of a
resettlement program,' says Bill Frelick, refugee policy director at Human
Rights Watch in Washington.

Given the US's past reluctance to resettle Palestinians – it accepted just
seven Palestinians in 2007 and nine in 2008 – the effort could ruffle some
diplomatic feathers.

For many in the State Department and international community, the
resettlement is part of a moral imperative the US has to clean up the
refugee crisis created by invading Iraq. The US has already stepped up
resettlement of Iraqis, some who have struggled to adjust to life in
America.

The resettlement of Iraqi Palestinians is 'an important gesture for the
United States to demonstrate that we're not heartless,' says Alon
Ben-Meir, a professor of international relations and Middle Eastern
studies at New York University.

But some critics say the State Department is sloughing off its problems
onto American cities, especially since in this case the Palestinians were
sympathizers of Hussein, who was deposed by the US.

'This is politically a real hot potato,' says Mark Krikorian, director of
the conservative Center for Immigration Studies in Washington, adding,
'[A]merica has become a dumping ground for the State Department's problems
– they're tossing their problems over their head into Harrisburg, Pa., or
Omaha, Neb.'

Saddam's guests

Palestinian refugees came to Iraq in successive waves over several
decades, first in 1948, then in 1967, and in 1991. They were treated well
under Hussein but were also used to attack Israeli policies, and their
presence was resented by many Iraqis.

After Hussein was deposed in 2003, many of these Palestinians were driven
out of their homes and now live 'at the mercy of the weather' in rough
camps along the Syrian and Jordanian border, says Mr. Ben-Meir. The number
of Palestinians in Iraq has fallen from around 34,000 to an estimated
15,000, with about 2,773 living in camps, according to the State
Department.

The US, which takes in about 80,000 refugees annually, hopes to bring
17,000 Iraqi refugees this year.

Categorized as Iraqi refugees

While the US generally doesn't accept Palestinians, Todd Pierce, a
spokesman for the State Department's Bureau of Population, Refugees and
Migration, says that the Iraqi population of Palestinians falls under a
different category from those in Gaza and the West Bank. Each applicant
will be carefully scrutinized for terrorist ties, he adds.

The US reluctance to accept Palestinians is because it 'doesn't want the
refugee program to become an issue in its relationship with Israel,' says
a diplomat in the region, who requested anonymity because he is not
cleared to talk to the press. But these Palestinians, he says, will be
processed as refugees from Iraq.

Mr. Krikorian says the US should be the last refuge for those fleeing
persecution. Only Jordan of all the Arab countries routinely grants
citizenship to Palestinian refugees, he notes. More recently, says Mr.
Frelick, Jordan has also shut its borders to Palestinians coming from
Iraq.

Frelick, who has visited a camp on the Jordanian border, said the Iraqi
Palestinians are 'apolitical,' and 'basically desperate, scared,
miserable, and ready to just get out of Iraq.'




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