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Refugees are already vetted. I vetted them.

- By Natasha Hall Washington Post Hall has worked with refugees and on conflict for more than 10 years, specializi­ng in the Middle East. She currently works on humanitari­an efforts in Syria and lives in Istanbul, Turkey.

Iconducted one of my last interviews as an immigratio­n officer with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in Istanbul with Mahmoud and his 8-yearold son from Aleppo, Syria. His son had lost his legs in the explosion that killed Mahmoud’s wife, sister and other children. It was supposed to be his son’s first day at school in two years. Instead, they were here in my office, reliving the worst experience­s of their lives to come to the United States. Mahmoud trembled as he spoke about returning to his home from work one day and digging his family members out of the rubble.

I had never been both so sad and proud that this boy would be able to come to the United States and start school and a new life. Now I imagine them, four years after leaving Syria and three after registerin­g as refugees and being told to go back. Go back where?

This is precisely what President Donald Trump’s executive order issued last Friday did. The order bans entry for citizens of seven countries for 90 days, suspends all refugee admission for 120 days, halves the total number of refugees allowed into the United States this year, and halts refugees from Syria indefinite­ly. The order demands “a program ... to identify individual­s seeking to enter the United States on a fraudulent basis with the intent to cause harm, or who are at risk of causing harm.” It calls for “standard screening and procedure,” “questions aimed at identifyin­g fraudulent answers and malicious intent,” “a mechanism to ensure that the applicant is who the applicant claims to be,” and “a mechanism to assess whether the applicant has the intent to commit criminal or terrorist acts.”

Whoever wrote this order is evidently not aware that these screenings, procedures and questions already exist.

During nearly four years as an immigratio­n officer with Homeland Security, I conducted in-person interviews with hundreds of refugees in 10 countries from 20 different nationalit­ies. I have had countless refugees break down crying in my interview room because of the length and severity of the vetting process. From that experience and numerous security briefings, I can affirm that whoever wrote Trump’s executive order blocking refugees from the United States is wholly unfamiliar with the U.S. immigratio­n system, U.S. laws, internatio­nal law and the security threats facing our nation. I can’t speak for all refugee and asylum officers, but I can say that those who have been working in immigratio­n for years from opposite ends of the political spectrum are appalled by these new policies.

Several years ago, Berivan left her home in the relative safety of Northeast Syria to go to the capital Damascus to help people organize peacefully. She ended up being persecuted by the Syrian government and armed extremist groups, and was trapped in an area under siege by the Syrian regime. She paid the price for her pursuit of freedom in too many horrifying ways to mention.

She finally escaped and fled with her husband to Turkey, where she put her English and Arabic fluency to work with humanitari­an organizati­ons. When I met her last year, she mentioned that she had applied for resettleme­nt to the United States. Several months later, she called me after her resettleme­nt interview, depressed and agitated. For someone like Berivan, who was severely traumatize­d by the war, the probing interview for resettleme­nt had been brutal. She was called back for another interview, but she couldn’t take anymore and did not believe that the United States would reunite her with her husband. So she risked her life and got on a rickety boat to reach Europe. They are now rebuilding their lives in Germany. I suppose she made the right choice, but the United States lost a hero.

I was saddened by this story, but I was not surprised. The process for any citizen of a Middle Eastern or majority Muslim country to get into the United States is tortuous and has become more so every year for the past 15 years, with additional screenings, interviews and other background checks. When I started, DHS officers interviewe­d four Syrian or Iraqi refugee cases per day; they now interview only two per day to accommodat­e the range of questions and additional checks that have been added to the process. While the average wait time for refugee resettleme­nt is 18 to 24 months, Iraqis and Syrians typically wait several years.

The process starts with the United Nations’ refugee agency (UNHCR). The UNHCR conducts a series of interviews and screenings, including home country reference checks and a biological screening such as iris scans. Then UNHCR has to decide if a case is suitable for resettleme­nt and which country an applicant can apply to. (Out of more than 65 million refugees worldwide, about 0.01 percent were resettled to the United States last year.) Another internatio­nal organizati­on assists with resettleme­nt processing by collecting documents and conducting more interviews with the families, looking carefully for discrepanc­ies.

By the time Homeland Security steps in to conduct an interview, the officer already has a stack of biographic­al informatio­n on the refugee. Ironically, Iraqis, Syrians

and Iranians, who are all now barred from entering the United States, are far and away the most well-documented refugees we interview. I typically had to review a stack of high school degrees, baptismal certificat­es, marriage and birth certificat­es, honors and awards, photos with U.S. service personnel, recommenda­tions from American military members, and conscripti­on booklets or cards, which every man in those countries had to carry. Since the United States has been in Iraq for more than 10 years, the government has a plethora of informatio­n on Iraqis — in many cases, terrorists, criminals and persecutor­s are recognizab­le and denied. In one instance, because we had this informatio­n, I knew that a man had worked with Saddam Hussein’s intelligen­ce agency for years and potentiall­y tortured people and, because of checks already in place, that person’s applicatio­n was denied.

The officer then conducts a detailed interview. We record every word to match it up with other documentat­ion and past interviews. Some refugees were so fearful of forgetting some detail of their lives that they brought notes to the interview to remember everything exactly. Applicants have been reprimande­d or denied for having those notes because of concerns that they are fixing their script. Every detail of their case is pored over and exhaustive­ly analyzed. In one instance, while reviewing a case, I came across a report of a refugee who had handed someone a piece of fruit at a checkpoint. The incident was thoroughly investigat­ed to see if the person had provided material support to a potential terrorist organizati­on.

Our government then performs its own intensive screening. The refugee applicants’ informatio­n and fingerprin­ts (also taken by Homeland Security officers) are run through the databases of nine law enforcemen­t, intelligen­ce and security agencies and matched against criminal databases and biographic­al informatio­n such as past visa applicatio­ns. Behind the scenes, officers and supervisor­s of varying political stripes debate and discuss each case endlessly. At U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services headquarte­rs, officers conduct more research, reconcilin­g multiple interview notes, country conditions and background checks. They are trained to spot “red flags” or issues that might make someone inadmissib­le. If a national security threat emerged, certain nationalit­ies were placed under tighter scrutiny.

If you’re bored by now just reading about the process, imagine a refugee waiting years in a camp, freezing in tents and unable to put their children in school. Some continue to receive threats — and some of our applicants were killed while waiting.

Supporters of Trump’s order argue that this ban is temporary, but they do not understand the consequenc­es of this stoppage for refugees. Before the war in Syria began, I met Laith, an Iraqi refugee, who had fled Iraq to Syria when members of a militia group attacked him and his family. But he still was not safe. Someone claiming to be with the Syrian government threatened him. He was forced to move from house to house for months to escape death until the United States resettled him. If the Trump ban had been in place, even temporaril­y, Laith would have likely been killed.

Aside from the imminent danger many applicants face, this stop on refugee resettleme­nt presents another issue: These security checks expire, which means that, if delayed, applicants will have to begin the process again. That will, in turn, delay the process for incoming applicants, creating a huge backlog in the system. About 60 percent of the 11,000 Syrians resettled last year in the States were children. The forthcomin­g delays could consume entire childhoods. Those who had been approved have likely sold all their belongings in preparatio­n to move to the United States.

Even before this extreme vetting process was establishe­d, refugee resettleme­nt did not represent a huge threat to Americans’ safety. According to a report recently released by the conservati­ve CATO Institute, out of millions of refugees resettled to the United States over several decades, just 20 have committed or attempted attacks. They only managed to kill three people — all in the late 1970s before the creation of the modern screening system. The annual chance of being killed in a terrorist attack committed by refugees is 1 in 3.6 billion a year. Not only does the executive order provide no logical benefit to national security, such policies feed into the extremist narrative that America hates all Muslims and actually hurt national security, as argued by Michael Hayden, former CIA director during the George W. Bush administra­tion, and other government officials.

All this informatio­n is available to Trump. The only explanatio­n for this order is that refugees are being used by the president to appeal to his base at the expense of U.S. security. Such a move is not only despicable and devastatin­g to the people who desperatel­y crave the safety of our country — it erodes the American legal system by turning it into a political tool.

 ?? Craig Ruttle / Associated Press ?? The Department of Homeland Security and other agencies already conduct a lengthy and severe vetting process on refugees. President Donald Trump should have known this before implementi­ng his ban.
Craig Ruttle / Associated Press The Department of Homeland Security and other agencies already conduct a lengthy and severe vetting process on refugees. President Donald Trump should have known this before implementi­ng his ban.
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 ?? Genna Martin / Associated Press ??
Genna Martin / Associated Press
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