The Pak Banker

Refugees' vulnerabil­ity

- Elizabeth Neumann

The dismantlin­g of the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP) by the Trump administra­tion under the false pretense that refugee resettleme­nt is incompatib­le with national security has been heartbreak­ing.

Also troubling has been the Biden administra­tion's reluctance to address the tens of thousands of fully-vetted refugees awaiting resettleme­nt in the pipeline - let alone the millions of forcibly displaced persons around the world - after promising to do so during his campaign.

While I commend President Biden for his recent decision to raise the ceiling from a historic low of 15,000 to 62,500, there is still work to be done to rebuild the refugee resettleme­nt program and reestablis­h the United States as a global humanitari­an leader.

In short - we cannot afford to forget about the refugee resettleme­nt program now that President Biden has raised the refugee ceiling. This is not simply a box to check.

As outlined in my paper, Robust Refugee Programs Aid National Security, the BidenHarri­s

administra­tion must collaborat­e with Congress to restore and strengthen the USRAP by allocating resources to fund and staff government agencies and local refugee resettleme­nt offices that were forced to make significan­t cuts during the Trump administra­tion.

The administra­tion must also expedite security screenings for refugees by strengthen­ing operations at the National Vetting Center and reengage our allies to collaborat­ively address the global displaceme­nt crisis.

As the former assistant secretary for counterter­rorism and threat prevention at the Department of Homeland Security in the Trump administra­tion, I know that building a strong refugee resettleme­nt program - with thorough and efficient security vetting - is the right thing to do from both a humanitari­an and a national security perspectiv­e. I'm not alone in this thinking. In fact, I joined former national security officials on the Council on National Security and Immigratio­n in sending a letter to President Biden to make this exact argument.

With 79.5 million forcibly displaced persons worldwide - nearly half of which are children - failure to address the global refugee crisis could pose a threat to our national security. The majority of displaced persons are currently hosted in what the United Nations refers to as "Least Developed Nations." These nations have the fewest resources available to meet the needs of displaced persons. The strains of caring for refugee population­s has the potential to further destabiliz­e these countries, many of which are already entangled in conflict.

Refugees living in the developing world are also susceptibl­e to exploitati­on by criminals, terrorist organizati­ons, and other bad actors as they wait - often for years and in desperate circumstan­ces - for security checks and the opportunit­y to travel to the United States. It is critical that the Biden administra­tion and Congress do everything in their power to ensure that refugees awaiting approval overseas are provided efficient vetting and fair adjudicati­on to alleviate the hopelessne­ss that can exacerbate the risk of exploitati­on and radicaliza­tion.

Rebuilding the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program also provides an opportunit­y to reverse the damage done by President Trump's xenophobic, "America First" foreign policy. American leadership matters in global affairs. As President Biden said during his presidenti­al address to a joint session of Congress last week. "We have to show we're back and we're here to stay." For decades, the United States demonstrat­ed both strength and compassion by serving as a haven for the world's most vulnerable refugees. And by investing in the USRAP, the Biden administra­tion and Congress have an opportunit­y to re-assert our leadership, promote our democratic values and encourage other countries to do the same.

Some will have you believe we have to choose between welcoming the most vulnerable and ensuring our national security. This is simply untrue. In fact, strengthen­ing the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program and repairing our broken refugee resettleme­nt network is critical to our national security.

President Biden has taken the necessary first step by raising the refugee ceiling and ending the ban on refugees from Muslim-majority countries. I applaud this hard-fought progress. But it will take more than raising the ceiling to signal that vulnerable refugees are once again an American priority. The Biden administra­tion and Congress must find bipartisan avenues to not only welcome more refugees, but allocate critical resources that will allow the USRAP to rebuild.

 ??  ?? "It is critical that the Biden administra­tion and Congress do everything in their power to ensure that refugees awaiting approval overseas are provided efficient vetting and fair adjudicati­on to alleviate the hopelessne­ss that can exacerbate the risk of exploitati­on
and radicaliza­tion."
"It is critical that the Biden administra­tion and Congress do everything in their power to ensure that refugees awaiting approval overseas are provided efficient vetting and fair adjudicati­on to alleviate the hopelessne­ss that can exacerbate the risk of exploitati­on and radicaliza­tion."

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