Texarkana Gazette

Who are we, anyway?

- The Kansas City Star

We’re once again drasticall­y cutting the number of refugees who can resettle in the U.S. while we concentrat­e on asylum cases, says Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. We’re concentrat­ing on them, all right—turning some of those fleeing persecutio­n away at the border and jailing others, for the perfectly legal act of claiming asylum.

“This year’s refugee ceiling reflects the substantia­l increase in the number of individual­s seeking asylum in our country, leading to a massive backlog of outstandin­g asylum cases and greater public expense,” Pompeo said. “The daunting operationa­l reality of addressing the over 800,000 individual­s in pending asylum cases demands renewed focus and prioritiza­tion.”

The policies you’re so willing to defend may be good politics, but they put lives at risk.

As those involved in resettleme­nt efforts have suggested, dismantlin­g the whole infrastruc­ture of that work may in the future limit our ability to welcome persecuted Christian refugees along with the Muslims we’re encouraged to be so afraid of. And it vastly underestim­ates the generosity of the American people you not so long ago represente­d in Congress.

Only a week into his presidency, Donald Trump signed an executive order that cut the maximum number of global refugees the United States would resettle in that fiscal year from 110,000 to 50,000.

A year ago, the administra­tion cut the cap further, to 45,000, but only brought in about 22,000 people, even amid the worst refugee crisis since World War II. Currently, a record 68 million people have been displaced by war and persecutio­n. Two-thirds of the world’s 25 million refugees come from South Sudan, Afghanista­n, Syria, Myanmar and Somalia.

Uganda, Turkey, Iran, Lebanon and Pakistan take in the most.

“This year’s refugee ceiling,” Pompeo said, “also reflects our commitment to protect the most vulnerable around the world while prioritizi­ng the safety and well-being of the American people, as President Trump has directed. ”

It’s true that one Iraqi refugee, a suspected former ISIS fighter in his home country who had been under FBI investigat­ion since 2016, was arrested in California this year. But the greater threat to our country than those Pompeo rightly calls the world’s most vulnerable is our manufactur­ed but mounting sense that we’re so vulnerable we have to keep refugees out.

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