[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 15 (Monday, January 30, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S469-S486]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Travel Ban
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, this is the 11th day of the Trump
Presidency. To say that these have been tumultuous days is certainly an
understatement. What happened over this past weekend really was
unsettling to many people all across the United States.
Candidate Trump made it clear that he had strong feelings about
refugees and strong feelings about immigration, but I don't think
anyone anticipated the Executive orders that were issued by the Trump
administration, by the President, on Friday. The net result of that we
saw across the United States at O'Hare International Airport, JFK,
Dulles, many other airports. International travelers, en route, learned
that the laws of the United States were being changed because of
President Trump's Executive order. As a result, there was a lot of
confusion and uncertainty, and hardships were created. Individuals who
were coming to the United States as refugees were being turned away.
For the record, this decision to indefinitely suspend the admission
of Syrian refugees into the United States is not a decision based on
fact. Since 9/11, since the war in Syria began, we have not had a
single--not one--instance of terrorism by a Syrian refugee--not one.
The United States has not stepped up as other countries like Canada
have in admitting Syrian refugees. We have gone to great lengths,
extraordinary lengths, to give background checks that are as consuming
as one can imagine, to verify their identity and their safety to the
United States.
Overwhelmingly, these Syrian refugees are the victims of a deadly war
which has gone on for years, and overwhelmingly they are children with
their mothers. I have met them. I sat down with them in Chicago. It is
heartbreaking to think that they have lived through war, may have been
lucky enough to make it to a refugee camp, and then waited for years--
for years--to be cleared by the United States and be given a chance to
come to this country.
It has to be a heartbreaking process. Through it all, many of them
have endured losses in their families that they will never be able to
forget--injuries and deaths of people whom they love. These are men and
women in Syria escaping a deadly war and the terrorists who have
ravaged that country. They have tried to come to the United States for
safety and security.
The history of refugees in America is one that in modern version is
very admirable, but unfortunately before--during World War II--it was a
sad chapter in our history. Not only did we inter about 120,000
Japanese Americans in camps during the war for fear that they would
betray the United States, but during that war, time and again, the
administration of President Roosevelt as well as Congress refused to
allow those who were escaping the Holocaust in Nazi Germany to come to
the United States.
Here on this Senate floor where I stand, an effort was made by
Senator Robert Wagner of New York to admit 10,000 Jewish children out
of Nazi Germany into the United States so that their parents would have
the peace of mind that they would not be killed by the war or the
Holocaust. That measure was defeated on the floor of this Senate. Prior
to our entry into the war, those who tried to escape Nazi Germany and
come to the United States were turned away by the United States.
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The most notorious example was the SS St. Louis, which sailed from
Germany, came to, first, Havana, Cuba, then to Miami, FL, and was
turned away in both places with about 900 passengers who feared for
their lives because of the anti-Semitism and the killing that was
taking place in Nazi Germany.
They tracked that passenger list. Several hundred of them were
rejected by the United States. They were not given refugee status. They
were forced to return to Germany. Several hundred of them perished in
the Holocaust.
It was after that bitter experience that the United States decided to
try to set an example for the world when it came to compassion and
humanity for refugees. We stepped up time and again to be that place of
security and safety. We can point proudly to the fact that when the
Cubans were fearful of a Communist takeover in their country, fearful
for their lives and their rights and their liberties, they came to the
United States in tens of thousands.
Now Cuban Americans, a proud part of our country not only in Florida
but around our Nation, can point to the U.S. refugee policy as the
means by which they finally made it to the safety of the United States.
Here we were in a Cold War with the Soviet Union; Cuba, 90 miles off
our shore was being taken over by a dictator, Fidel Castro, who was
declaring his loyalty to the Soviet Union. Yet we were readily
receiving tens of thousands of refugees from Cuba in the midst of that
Cold War. Talk about a chance--and taking a chance. Those men and women
who came to the United States were not vetted for months, years, and in
many cases not at all. They were allowed into our country. Thank
goodness we did it. It was the right thing to do.
Time and again, whether it was refugees coming in from Vietnam after
the end of that deadly war or whether it was Soviet Jews, persecuted by
the Soviet Union, trying to escape, coming to the United States, we
opened our doors and said: The United States of America will set an
example for the world when it comes to refugees. That defined who we
were and who we still should be.
Now this new President is ready to walk away from that. If we had one
instance of a Syrian refugee coming into the United States after that
vetting process who caused harm to our citizens or engaged in an act of
terrorism--if we had one--then perhaps this President could start to
make his case.
All he has is fear, unreasoned fear, unproven fear. We recall what
Franklin Roosevelt said to this Nation, standing right out here on the
steps when he was inaugurated in March of 1933: We have nothing to fear
but fear itself. It is fear itself that is motivating this President to
make decisions inconsistent with more than 50 years of American history
and inconsistent with American values.
When you meet these refugees and you hear their heartbreaking
stories, how can you say that there is no room for you in this country?
Yet that is exactly what he said.
Sadly, he not only came up with this Executive order, he did it in a
fashion where the agencies that were supposed to implement the order
really were caught by surprise. Now they are priding themselves on the
fact that they can turn on a dime when given instructions that are
important for national security. But in this case, where national
security was not the motive--political security was the motive; I am
talking in the crassest terms. In those cases, these agencies were
forced to make split-second decisions, and some of them were horrible.
A man who came to the United States from Iraq, from one of the seven
countries designated by President Trump, came from Iraq after having
risked his life for American soldiers. He was rewarded with an
opportunity to come to the United States, was detained at the airport,
questioned at length, threatened to be returned to Iraq, and finally--
after 19 hours--allowed to stay.
There is story after story of families coming to see someone who was
on the deathbed, their last chance to be together, and families who had
gone overseas for what they thought were just casual or really easy
trips who were subject to detention and some turned away. Why? It
certainly was not in the interest of the security of the United States,
and it was not handled in a professional manner. It was impulsive and
not decisive. It was ill conceived instead of wise.
Here we are today. As I stand here at this chair and this desk in the
Senate, across the street thousands have gathered in front of the
Supreme Court to express their outrage over the Executive orders issued
by President Trump. I am happy to report that almost one dozen
Republican Senators have joined us in expressing reservations about
this policy.
It gives me hope that maybe on a bipartisan basis we can rein in some
of the excesses of this administration. God forbid we ignore the basic
constitutional issue that has been raised by these Executive orders. It
is no coincidence that these seven countries are predominately Muslim
countries. It is no coincidence that President Trump went on a
Christian broadcasting station and said preference would be given to
Christians.
The Constitution which we are sworn to uphold and defend, the
Constitution which guides this Nation is one that was written at a time
when religion was a divisive issue that led to people coming to the
United States.
I think in this section, our Founding Fathers probably showed more
wisdom and more understanding of our future than any other on the issue
of religion. They only said three things in the entire Constitution,
three things over 200 years ago. They said that this Congress, this
government, will not establish an official religion. They did that, of
course, many of them having come from England, where they had a
national church. They didn't want that in the United States. Most
importantly, they said each person in America had freedom of religious
belief, to believe what they wished or to believe nothing if they
wished, and that would be an honored freedom under our Bill of Rights.
The third element: Religion could not be used as a litmus test for
public office. That is it.
When you think of all the wars and all the deaths and all the
persecution based on religion, the fact that we have largely escaped it
is because of the wisdom of that document.
Now comes this 45th President of the United States who decides to
rewrite the book, to ignore this basic constitutional direction and
mandate, and to say on the Christian Broadcasting Network: We are going
to favor Christian refugees coming to the United States. That, to me,
is unacceptable and unconstitutional, and inconsistent with who we are,
what we are, and the values we treasure in this country.
My mother was an immigrant to this country. I never knew my
grandmother, who brought her over on the ship from Lithuania. I do have
one thing now in my office upstairs that my grandmother carried with
her to this country. It is a prayer book. We are a Roman Catholic
family. She was a Roman Catholic in Lithuania. The Russian Orthodox
religion was being pushed by the czar, who was dominant when they left
Lithuania, and they banned Catholic prayer books written in Lithuania.
I never knew my grandmother. I wish I had. She risked everything to
bring that Catholic prayer book, that contraband from czarist-
controlled Lithuania into the United States. I have it upstairs. It
means the world to me that this woman with limited formal education but
unlimited courage was willing to risk a lot, bringing three small
children into this country, carrying with her that prayer book which
might have gotten her imprisoned in Lithuania back in her day. So
religion means a lot to our family, not just on a personal basis but
what America means when it comes to religion.
When this President is so casual with the constitutional guarantees
of religion, I don't believe he is serving the United States or
honoring the history that came before him.
There have been so many issues that have come up during the 11 days
of his Presidency, but President Trump's decision to turn away innocent
people fleeing persecution, genocide, and terror and to ban immigrants
on the basis of religion is the worst, in my view. This attack is not
only un-American, it risks alienating 1 billion Muslims around the
world. Some of the most conservative people in this country--I am
certain Republicans--have said over and over again: Don't do this.
There are Muslim countries that are
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allies in fighting terrorism, and if you alienate them, it is going to
lessen our ability to stop the spread of Al Qaeda and ISIS.
Furthermore, this is a recruiting tool. You know what is going to
happen. Those who hate the United States are going to use this action
by President Trump to verify their belief and their credo that the
United States is anti-Muslim.
There was a Republican President, George W. Bush, whom I disagreed
with many times, but thank goodness, after 9/11, he had the wisdom and
showed the leadership to come before the American people to say: We are
not going to condemn the Muslim religion. We are going to go after
those who corrupted it, but we are going to honor it as a religion of
peace.
How different President George W. Bush, that Republican President,
was to President Donald Trump, this Republican President.
Senator Dianne Feinstein is the ranking Democrat on the Senate
Judiciary Committee. She has introduced a resolution, on which I am
proud to be one of the original cosponsors, to repeal and rescind these
reprehensible President Donald Trump Executive orders on refugees and
immigration.
We are in the midst of the worst refugee crisis in the history of the
world. More than 65 million people have been forcibly displaced from
their homes. The brutal Syrian conflict, which is the epicenter of this
humanitarian crisis, has killed hundreds of thousands, injured more
than a million, and displaced half of the population of that country.
In some areas, children literally starve to death in Syria. This
conflict has forced more than 4.7 million refugees to flee. Around 70
percent of them are women and children who are looking for a safe place
in this world. Half of Syrian children today are not in school because
of this conflict and because of the forces that have dispersed them
around the world. Millions in and outside of Syria need humanitarian
assistance.
Last week--the same week President Trump signed this awful Executive
order on refugees--the United Nations issued an appeal for $4.6 billion
to meet the basic needs of Syrian refugees and struggling communities
hosting them in neighboring countries.
Lebanon is a country where I believe half of the children in school
today are Syrian. Jordan, one of our best friends and allies in the
Middle East, has made more sacrifices on behalf of refugees per capita
than any nation on Earth. What message does it send to our friends in
Jordan that while they risk the security and safety and stability of
their nation to absorb these refugees from Syria and around the world,
that as an official policy of President Donald Trump, the United States
no longer will even consider allowing a Syrian refugee to come to the
United States? How can we in good conscience ask the King of Jordan to
risk his monarchy and his country for refugees when President Trump
says they are not allowed in the United States?
Earlier this month, I am happy to report, more than 1,700 Jewish
rabbis called on our government to maintain and strengthen the refugee
program for refugees of all ethnic and religious backgrounds--not to
halt it, pause it, or restrict it. This weekend, I was so proud of the
Catholic cardinal in Chicago, Blase Cupich, who came out and said the
Executive orders of Donald Trump are not consistent with American
values and certainly are not consistent with the beliefs of the
Catholic Church. Religious leaders all across the country are speaking
out. They understand that this is more than a political test; this is a
moral test of who we are as Americans.
Many of the refugees who came to this country were fleeing regimes
that were hostile to the United States. We gave them safety.
Refugees are the most carefully vetted and investigated of all
travelers. Before refugees are admitted into the United States, they go
through security screening that is almost unheard of. All of that
screening takes place before they can even consider being allowed to
set foot in America, and Syrian refugees go through an even stricter
review. Extreme vetting? I have news for this President: Syrian
refugees and refugees all over the world are already going through
extreme vetting.
Shutting down the Refugee Resettlement Program won't protect our
security. It plays into ISIS's argument that the United States is
waging a war against Islam.
Listen to what Michael Hayden, former Director of the CIA and
National Security Agency under Presidents Bush and Obama, said about
President Trump's Executive order:
It's a horrible move. It is a political, ideological move
driven by the language of the campaign and, frankly, campaign
promises--promises in the campaign that were hyped by an
exaggeration of the threat. And in fact, what we're doing now
has probably made us less safe today than we were Friday
morning before this happened because we are now living the
worst jihadist narrative possible, that there is undying
enmity between Islam and the West. Muslims out there who were
not part of the jihadist movement are now being shown that
the story they were being told by the jihadists--they hate
us; they're our enemy--that's being acted out by the American
government. And frankly, at a humanitarian level, it's an
abomination.
That statement was not made by the Democratic National Committee; it
was made by Gen. Michael Hayden, former Director of the Central
Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency under Presidents
Bush and Obama.
If we are serious about protecting America, we should be serious
about closing the real loopholes that might threaten us. Think of the
hundreds of thousands of foreign visitors to the United States under
the Visa Waiver Program who go through no vetting, not even
fingerprinting, before they get on a plane to come to the United
States. Want to close a loophole in security? Let's look at that one
seriously.
Instead of real security threats, President Trump is focusing on
innocent people--children, women, families who are fleeing terrorism.
Today's refugees, like millions before them from all over the world,
will become proud Americans who contribute greatly to our society and
economy.
Albert Einstein was a refugee. Thank goodness he came to the United
States. Today, so many of the leaders of our major corporations and
high-tech companies are immigrants to this country and, in some cases,
refugees.
Building walls on our borders and fear in our hearts will not move
America forward. Let's not continue the cruelty or deception of blaming
immigrants and refugees for our security and economic challenges. Let's
work together to build a better America for all Americans, including
new Americans, no matter the color of their skin, where their parents
were born, or how they pray.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, citizens across the country are very
concerned. In fact, they are more than concerned; they are terrified
that our President is degrading the fundamental values on which our
Nation was founded: religious tolerance, freedom of religion, the
ability to worship as you please, and a fundamental principle that we
would be welcoming to refugees, that we would be a nation that embraces
immigrants.
Tonight Lady Liberty is crying. She said, ``Give me your tired, your
poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,'' but our President
has slammed the door on the tired and the poor and the huddled masses.
It is an action the citizens in my home State have come out to protest.
They have gone to the airport in Portland en masse 2 days in a row to
say that we are welcoming to the world, that we are not going to slam
the door shut on refugees, that we are not going to single out Muslim
nations and say: We do not want you here.
Indeed, I held two townhalls over the weekend. The first was in a
gymnasium about this size. There were 600 people jammed into it. They
are very upset and angry that our fundamental values are being
disregarded by the President of the United States. Then I went to my
second townhall. I thought 600 was a lot; there were 3,700 Oregonians
who came out to my second townhall. Every one of them is wanting to
send a message to President Trump: You are taking us on the wrong
road--a road that hurts people around the world, a road that hurts our
fundamental values, and a road that decreases our security.
This Executive order, this Executive action from the President has
had an
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immediate and painful impact--hundreds of people en route to our
country detained at airports although they were legally traveling here.
Many of them have been vetted on extended periods, some of them going
through several years of vetting, and finally they have in their hand
that visa that says, yes, I am going to have a country, and it is going
to be the United States of America. And the President crushed that
hope.
Chaos and confusion abounded. Lawyers and protesters and advocates
descended on airports everywhere across this country to tell the
administration that there is no mandate, no public will for this path
that is so destructive to our values. They came out to say: Mr.
President, when you tear down women in America, we stand with the women
of America. Mr. President, when you tear down the disabled, we stand
with the disabled of America. Mr. President, when you tear down African
Americans and Hispanics, we stand with African Americans and Hispanics.
And, Mr. President, when you tear down Muslims, we stand with our
Muslim brothers and sisters because this is the United States of
America, where we value religious freedom, where we value religious
tolerance. This is a nation of immigrants. If you are not 100 percent
Native American, then you are either an immigrant yourself or you are
the child or the grandchild or the great-grandchild of an immigrant.
Most of us can track members of our family who came from the ravages of
war or the ravages of drought or the ravages of oppression to come here
to this soil, this land of freedom. James Madison remarked: ``America
was indebted to immigration for her settlement and for her
prosperity.'' This remains just as true today as it was in Madison's
day.
Here we stand, but the President of the United States has denied
access to our Nation to a group of people based on nothing more than
religious beliefs, betraying our values of religious tolerance and
shutting the doors on refugees. The President has said this is not a
ban on those of the Muslim faith, but of course it is a ban on those of
Muslim faith because it is a ban on seven nations that are Muslim
nations, with an exception made for individuals who are Christians so
it is nothing more than a ban on Muslims.
The President says this is about protecting our citizens, but let us
be very clear about that. Numerous refugees have come to our land,
numerous immigrants, and there have been zero fatal terror attacks
carried out by the immigrants from the seven countries listed in the
order. Zero. We have been attacked by individuals from other countries
which are not listed in the order, from Saudi Arabia, United Arab
Emirates, Egypt, and Lebanon. Those nations aren't listed on this
order. What we do know is that this ban does not make our Nation safer.
National security experts recognize that it does exactly the opposite.
By signing this Executive order, the President has betrayed our most
fundamental values and principles, antagonizing 1.6 billion citizens of
the world, and given our enemies ammunition for their false narrative
that America is at war with Islam because that is exactly what they
have used to recruit. That is exactly what they have used to increase
and pour fuel on the fire to persuade people to attack Americans. The
President has basically handed them this argument--this false
narrative--and put our Nation at risk.
Former CIA Director Gen. Michael Hayden said to National Public Radio
this morning, ``In fact, what we're doing now has probably made us less
safe today than we were Friday morning before this happened, because we
are now living the worst jihadist narrative possible, that there is
undying enmity between Islam and the West.''
I share the value of Daniel Benjamin, the former Coordinator for
Counterterrorism at the State Department, who said this: ``It sends an
unmistakable message to the American Muslim community that they are
facing discrimination and isolation,'' and that message, he said, will
``feed the jihadist narrative that the United States is at war with
Islam, potentially encouraging a few more Muslims to plot violence.''
This is the wrong move in every possible way. It is ill-considered,
it is hasty, it is dangerous, it is wrongheaded, it puts American
citizens at risk, and it helps our enemies. Benjamin Franklin once
said: ``Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little
temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.'' In this case,
President Trump's Executive order has degraded both our liberty and our
security--both our liberty and our safety.
We have turned our backs on friends and allies who are helping us in
the war against ISIS. The President has made it clear that he wants to
take on ISIS as we had been, but he wants to amplify it, and he has
sabotaged that effort with this Executive order.
There are individuals like Hameed Khalid Darweesh, who worked for
more than a decade for the United States as an interpreter in Iraq. Our
interpreters place their lives at risk to assist our soldiers. They
place the lives of their families at risk to assist the United States
of America. This man risked his life for more than 10 years for us, and
how is he greeted when he arrives here in our country? He is greeted
with handcuffs. Muslim Iraqi interpreters like Mr. Darweesh have earned
the right to come to America. They risked their lives and their
family's lives. They assisted us in multitudinous ways.
What about this ban on refugees? Refugees are the most thoroughly
vetted of all those who come to the United States. If a terrorist wants
to come to the United States, a terrorist wouldn't attempt to come as a
refugee. It would be 1 to 2 years of waiting in miserable conditions in
a refugee camp, with all kinds of vetting, and they might never get
permission to come. If you want intense vetting, then look to how we
vet refugees. Blocking women and children and interpreters from coming
to our country who have been the most thoroughly vetted of all
potential immigrants is simply wrong. In fact, the model for vetting
refugees is intense. Women and orphans are just searching for a safe
haven, but we have turned our back and we have slammed the door.
America is better than this. For centuries we have been a beacon of
hope to the world. We have been a beacon of justice, a beacon of
compassion, and we must restore our Nation as a beacon of hope,
justice, liberty, and compassion.
Millions of Americans are coming out in the snow and the rain and in
some places in good weather. They are coming out in any possible
conditions to speak out and say: This is not America. This is not us.
Change paths. Tear down this ban. Tear down this ban that has slammed
the door on refugees. Tear down this ban which has placed our Nation at
risk.
Let us together put our Nation back on track. Let us together fight
for the values that made America great for the last two centuries. Let
us together fight for the richness of our culture and our community,
the strength of our society that comes from being a nation of
immigrants. We need to act and act urgently.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Daines). The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BENNET. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BENNET. Mr. President, Mr. Trump's poorly drawn and implemented
Executive order blocking refugees from the United States sacrifices
fundamental American values and does not make us safer.
For the first time in memory, the order imposes a ban on all refugees
entering our country, many of whom are fleeing war or who risk
persecution for their religious or political beliefs. The order affects
many thousands of children, women, and men whom our government has
vetted for years and cleared for rescue.
President Trump's action--taken in the first days of his new
administration, for political reasons, without regard for real world
consequences and without the expertise of our national security
professionals or even some of those appointed by the President
himself--represents a rare, but shameful, departure from a
constitutional heritage that has made America strong and a beacon to
oppressed people throughout the world.
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For generations, immigrants and refugees have come to our country to
flee religious persecution and to seek a better life. Indeed, these are
the very people who founded our original colonies. Although, as now, we
have occasionally failed to live up to our ideals, over generations the
United States has accepted millions of refugees from around the world.
My own family is part of this story, as so many people's families in
this Chamber are. My mom was born in Poland in 1938 while Nazi tanks
massed at the border. She and her parents miraculously survived the
Holocaust--one of the worst human events in history.
After the war, after arriving in Sweden and then Mexico City, they
were able to come to New York City in 1950. They wanted to come to the
United States because it was the only country in the world where they
believed they could rebuild their shattered lives. And they did.
This weekend, my mom joined hundreds of thousands of Americans to
call on the President to change course, knowing that our family's
struggles in Europe require us to recognize the danger and persecution
facing families throughout the Middle East today.
Out of a population of 22 million, almost 5 million Syrians have fled
to neighboring countries--some to Europe--and have registered as
refugees. More than half of those displaced are children.
According to the United Nations, more than half of the remaining
Syrian population--6 million of them children--require assistance such
as food, water, and health care. Nearly one in four people in Lebanon
today--tonight--is a Syrian refugee, and the fourth largest city in
Jordan is now a refugee camp.
In the wake of President Trump's refugee ban, it seems useful to
ask--and I am sure the American people are asking--why are so many
millions of people fleeing their homes, their countries, and their
history?
They are doing it to save their lives--and, in many cases, their
children's lives--from ISIS's medieval barbarism and Assad's
unrelenting brutality. They seek to escape the murder, rape, detention,
and torture they suffer because of their religion or their ethnicity or
both.
Assad is their enemy. ISIS is their enemy. Today's refugees are
fleeing the violence and extremism that threatens our own national
security. Their enemies are our enemies. The same is true of the
refugees from Afghanistan, Libya, Somalia, and Sudan.
Does this mean we have an obligation simply to open our borders to
them? Of course not. We have a national security imperative to ensure
that no terrorist tries to sneak into the United States as part of the
refugee program.
I have long said that the burden of proof is not on the United States
to accept a refugee. Rather, the refugee has the burden to demonstrate
that they are not a threat to the United States. We have no obligation,
nor should we, to take anything on faith. It is for this reason that
refugees are more thoroughly vetted than anyone else entering the
United States. They must pass stringent screening standards to ensure
that they pose no threat, a process that can take up to 2 years.
First, the United Nations screens them and collects biometric data.
Only those who pass that test are then referred to the United States.
And, by the way, no refugee knows at that stage of the process to which
country they will be referred--to the United States or to any other
country that is accepting refugees. After that, multiple agencies--
including the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, the State
Department, and our intelligence agencies--conduct rigorous screenings.
This process includes repeated biometric checks, several layers of
biographical and background screening, health checks, and interviews.
Syrian refugees, in particular, receive enhanced scrutiny through an
additional security risk review by specially trained officers.
Out of the nearly 60,000 people referred to the United States, only
about 12,000 have been accepted. Of those Syrian refugees accepted by
the United States, three-quarters are women and children and half were
under 13 in 2016.
We are the leader of the free world, a republic founded on the
premise of religious freedom and a society that for generations has
called out to the tired, the poor, and the huddled masses yearning to
be free. That is who we are. Yet, in the name of fighting terrorism in
his first week as President, Mr. Trump has sacrificed what has made us
exceptional and has banned these children and their mothers from our
shores.
These children are no different than Omran Daqneesh, whose distant
stare from the back of an ambulance in Aleppo bore witness to the
senseless violence he suffered; or Alan Kurdi, whose lifeless body on a
Turkish beach condemned the worst savagery of humankind.
Once he learns the details--if he chooses to study them--if President
Trump wishes to make our vetting even more extreme than it already is,
I guess he may do so. But banning refugees and prioritizing immigration
by religion or ethnicity simultaneously abandons our principles and
weakens our counterterrorism efforts. It sends the wrong message to our
Muslim partners who fight with us in places like Iraq and Afghanistan,
including civilians in those countries who have risked their lives
alongside our troops. It also hands ISIS a recruiting tool by fueling
their narrative that the Western and Muslim worlds cannot coexist in
peace.
If the President really wants to secure our borders and ensure
extremists stay out of the country, there are far better alternatives,
and they are alternatives that are not at war with who we are as
Americans. We should work together to close security gaps in our Visa
Waiver Program and partner with European countries to better track the
flow of foreign fighters throughout Europe and the Middle East. We
should also do more to counter the ability of terrorists to radicalize
and recruit, both here at home and abroad. We should do more to equip
our agencies with tools and capabilities to degrade the ability of
terrorist organizations--in particular, ISIS--to persuade and inspire
using social media. Congress should enact ideas passed by the Senate in
2013 to strengthen border security, double the number of border agents,
and address visa overstays.
By tackling real vulnerabilities and investing in smart security
solutions, we can secure not only our borders but also our values, and
we will not repeat the darkest moments of our history when America
turned away from those fleeing persecution around the world.
A year ago, I came to the Senate floor to share a note sent to me by
my grandparents on my first birthday. It is a message that bears
repeating tonight. The year was 1965--15 years after my mother and
grandparents came to this country after surviving the horrors of the
Holocaust in Poland. This is what they wrote:
The ancient Greeks gave the world the high ideals of
democracy, in search of which your dear mother and we came to
the hospitable shores of beautiful America in 1950. We have
been happy here ever since, beyond our greatest dreams and
expectations, with democracy, freedom, and love, and
humanity's greatest treasure. We hope that when you grow up,
you will help develop in other parts of the world a greater
understanding of these American values.
Like so many immigrants, my grandparents knew how special these
American values are and how rare they are. We cannot take them for
granted or subvert them for a political moment. These values make us
who we are.
Edmund Burke once wrote: ``In history a great volume is unrolled for
our instruction, drawing the materials of future wisdom from the past
errors and infirmities of mankind.''
This is a time when we can learn from the past errors and infirmities
of humankind. We cannot turn our backs on women, children, and families
who risk persecution, starvation, or death.
The President should rescind this Executive order. If not, the Senate
should end the ban immediately and start a serious conversation on how
to make our country safe again in a manner that is consistent with our
fundamental values.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, I am honored to follow that very
eloquent speech by my colleague from Colorado and to be followed on the
floor by our colleague from Massachusetts.
We are here today with stories. Every one of us has a story going
back one
[[Page S474]]
generation, maybe two or three, maybe five or ten, but we all have an
immigrant story. Most of those immigrant stories are about people
coming here to seek hope, opportunity, and, yes, safety; to escape
violence and persecution; to come here for refuge.
I met one of those refugees over this weekend in West Hartford at a
Holocaust remembrance ceremony. Abby Weiner is a Romanian Jew who
survived Auschwitz and Buchenwald but lost his parents there. He was
honored by Voices of Hope at this Holocaust remembrance ceremony at a
synagogue in West Hartford, attended by 500, 700 people. There was a
massive outpouring of support for him and for the values that are
represented by people who come here as immigrants fleeing persecution
and violence, as he did in Nazi Germany. He said: The words came before
the bullets and gas chambers. The words of Nazi Germany came before the
bullets and gas chambers. Words have consequences. Edicts and orders
have consequences.
When I spoke, I told my own story--a proud story of my father, who
also came here from Nazi Germany in 1935. He was 17 years old. He spoke
virtually no English, he had not much more than the shirt on his back,
and he knew almost no one. This great country, the greatest in the
history of the world, gave him a chance to succeed. He was a proud
American. How sad and ashamed he would be today to see actions by the
President of the United States that ban a group coming to this country
based on their religion--a ban that is antithetical to our history, our
values, our Constitution, and the rule of law.
I salute Sally Yates, who has taken a stand based on moral and legal
principle in the highest tradition of the Department of Justice, saying
that these orders cannot be defended and that the rule of law and
morality is more important than the politics of the moment and the
impulsive edicts of a ruler who apparently fails to understand that
law--or, at least his administration does.
It raises the question of whether the next Attorney General--she is
only acting--will have the strength and courage to uphold the rule of
law. Tomorrow, I will vote against our respected and admired colleague,
Jeff Sessions, because I believe that the next Attorney General must be
a champion--a steadfast advocate and protector of the rule of law and
rights and liberties that are overridden and abridged by this order
banning people from Muslim-majority nations, in effect a ban on a
religious group.
We are better than this kind of discriminatory edict. We know it
harms mainly children and families fleeing violence and oppression.
Refugees like those children have helped to shape and build this
Nation. We are stronger because of our diversity. We are a nation of
immigrants. Our strength comes from the talents, energies, strengths,
and vibrancy they bring to this country.
Often, when I am feeling down about our public life, I go to
immigration and naturalization ceremonies. They occur every Friday in
courts around the State of Connecticut. I welcome people who are
becoming citizens, and I say to them: Thank you for becoming a citizen
of the greatest country in the world. You are a source of strength for
us, and you have taken a test that most Americans could not pass.
They laugh because they know it is true. They will never take for
granted what it means to be a citizen of this country. I look at them
in their diversity, and I know that is America. That is our future.
We will be less safe because of this order, which will alienate
allies and deny us sources of intelligence to troops on the ground that
we need to win the war against ISIS, and we must win that war. It will
provide a recruiting tool to ISIS, convincing young people who may be
tempted to join their ranks that, in fact, this country is engaged in a
war against Islam, which is utterly and totally untrue. It will
discourage people from within the United States who are part of the
Muslim community from coming forth when they see threats and could
provide information that would forestall an attack by violent
extremists within our country.
This order makes us less safe, but it weakens us mainly in a deeper
moral sense: It is wrong. It is wrong for this great country, devoted
and founded on the ideals of welcoming people seeking that beacon of
hope and protection and opportunity.
The Statue of Liberty is a symbol, but the ideals and the values are
living. The damage that has been done to them can be repaired. We must
repair it and reverse this order. That is why I have sponsored
legislation that will rescind it, and why I am proud to join my
colleagues today on the floor of the Senate to say: Rip up this order,
Mr. President. With all respect, do the right thing. Be on the right
side of history and the right side of our Constitution. Rip up this
illegal order.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Massachusetts.
Ms. WARREN. Mr. President, on Friday night, President Donald Trump
issued an Executive order that strikes at the very heart of our
democracy.
I wish I were exaggerating. I wish this were some sort of game. But
the ban that imposes religious tests and keeps refugees and immigrants
from entering our country is illegal, it is unconstitutional, it is
immoral, and it must be overturned.
The effects of this order were immediate and terrifying for people in
Massachusetts and all across this country. My office got a call from an
Iranian citizen who was traveling to Massachusetts to see his daughter
who is currently receiving treatment for cancer. He was denied boarding
in Germany and sent back to Iran. We heard from a woman who already has
an approved immigrant visa but still hasn't found an airline that will
allow her to board a flight to the United States. A Massachusetts
resident called because her cousin who holds a student visa was not
allowed to board a flight either. Another Massachusetts resident called
because her Iranian sisters were denied boarding at London Heathrow.
Both have their valid J-1 visas. One is a visiting professor at
Harvard, and the other is a postdoc fellow at Harvard Medical. We heard
from an Iranian student studying at MIT. She was denied entry on
Saturday, and when she tried to return on Sunday, after the temporary
stay had been issued, she was denied boarding by Lufthansa. A
Massachusetts student on a student visa called because his wife was
denied boarding in Switzerland.
None of these people are criminals. None of these people are threats.
They are students at some of the world's top universities; they are
doctors and scientists at some of the country's best hospitals. Most of
them have already been vetted and granted the right to come to America.
One is a father who wants to see his cancer-stricken daughter. They are
husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, friends
and neighbors. They are people. They are real people. They are part of
what makes Massachusetts great, and they are part of what makes America
great.
Donald Trump's radical ban on Muslims isn't in line with American
values or with our Constitution. It is also not in line with what the
Republican Party stands for.
In the months following the attacks of September 11, President George
W. Bush made a point to remind the United States that we were not at
war against Islam. In a speech in April of 2002, he said:
America rejects bigotry. We reject every act of hatred
against people of Arab background or Muslim faith. America
values and welcomes peaceful people of all faiths--Christian,
Jewish, Muslim, Sikh, Hindu and many others. Every faith is
practiced and protected here, because we are one country.
Every immigrant can be fully and equally American because
we're one country. Race and color should not divide us,
because America is one country.
Do Senate Republicans agree? If so, then come down here and say so.
Where are you? Where are Senate Republicans when their Republican
President issues an order targeting one religious group?
Let's be clear about what happened here. Keeping the details secret,
working with a small group of operatives inside the White House,
consulting no experts in diplomacy or homeland security, and getting
advice from outsiders with no actual legal authority, President Trump
acted unilaterally to issue this order.
Make no mistake, while it may not affect every Muslim in the world,
Donald Trump's Executive order is a Muslim ban, and it is
unconstitutional.
[[Page S475]]
This is a crisis. The Senate should take up and pass Senator
Feinstein's bill to overturn this illegal order right now. What is
happening is shocking. It is shocking, but it is not surprising.
Donald Trump is doing exactly what he said he was going to do. During
his Presidential campaign, he promised ``a total and complete shutdown
of Muslims entering the United States.'' That is what he said. Last
year, it seemed like pretty much everyone agreed that this was not
acceptable in the United States of America.
Speaker Paul Ryan declared:
A religious test for entering our country is not reflective
of America's fundamental values. I reject it.
Where are you now, Paul Ryan? Have you rejected President Trump's
order to impose a religious test for entering our country? Have you
introduced a bill to overturn it? You have the power. Where are you?
As Governor of Indiana, Vice President Mike Pence said: ``Calls to
ban Muslims from entering the U.S. are offensive and
unconstitutional.'' Where are you right now, Vice President Pence? Have
you called to overturn President Trump's offensive and unconstitutional
order? Have you asked Republicans to introduce a bill to overturn it?
You have a platform. Where are you?
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called a Muslim ban
``completely and totally inconsistent with American values.'' Where are
you right now, Mitch McConnell? Have you rejected President Trump's
Muslim ban that is completely and totally inconsistent with American
values? Have you introduced a bill to overturn it? You have the power.
Where are you?
President Trump ignored these Republican leaders. Today these
Republican leaders will not stand up for what is right. President Trump
may be willing to ignore the Constitution and the laws of the United
States of America, and the Republican leadership in Congress may be
willing to ignore the Constitution and the laws of the United States of
America, but the American people are not.
This weekend, Americans across this country came together to reject
this sort of fear and hate. The American people showed courage, even as
the Republican leadership hid out. Crowds of people raced to airports
across this country to welcome immigrants and refugees and to demand
compliance with court rulings that gave individuals and families
temporary relief and to demand that this reckless order be rescinded.
I was proud to stand with hundreds of people at Logan Airport in
Boston on Saturday night and then with more than 20,000 people in
Copley Square on Sunday. We had one of the biggest demonstrations in
the country. I also want to say I am in awe of the hundreds of lawyers
and translators who dropped everything and spent sleepless nights in
airport terminals and courts fighting for justice. Because of their
tireless work, we have already been able to undo some of the damage
caused by President Trump.
While I am encouraged by our victories in the courts this weekend,
the Trump administration has derided these judges and, in some
instances, refused to follow these orders. This is shocking and
unconstitutional. Congress must act. We must act now. Congress must
stand up and say to President Trump that this is not who we are.
Congress must say to Donald Trump and to the world: We will not turn
our backs on lawful immigrants and refugees fleeing murderers. We will
not turn our backs on people who risk their own lives to protect our
soldiers in Iraq and in the fight against ISIS. We will not give ISIS
more recruiting material. We will not promote an imagined religious war
between America and Islam. We will stand for our values, for American
values, for human values. We will not be divided by hate and fear.
Fifteen months ago, I traveled to the Greek island of Lesbos. This is
the first stop for many Syrian refugees as they flee from the
terrorists of ISIS. That was where I saw the shoddy, paper-thin river
rafts that people cram onto, with nothing more than a hope and a prayer
that they will make it across a choppy sea. I saw the little plastic
pool floaties that people put on small children, hoping it would be
enough to save them if the raft went down.
I met a 7-year-old girl who had been sent out on that perilous
journey alone. I thought about what horrors her parents must have faced
to hand a wad of cash to human smugglers with only the most desperate
dream that their little girl would find something better on the other
side.
President Trump is trying to shut the door on that little girl and on
countless others who are fleeing for their lives. He is trying to shut
the door on children, on doctors, on students, on engineers, on
husbands and wives, on grandmas and grandpas. That is not all.
President Trump is trying to shut the door on people who risked their
lives helping American soldiers, people who face execution in the hands
of terrorists if they are sent back.
President Trump is even trying to shut the door on legal immigrants,
on students and faculty, on people who work in Massachusetts and across
this country, on people who have already been thoroughly screened for
entry into the United States and have been granted permanent status to
live and work in our country. This has nothing to do with security--
nothing.
Little girls fleeing from murderers are not a threat. Elderly
grandparents detained at airports are not a threat. Students and
teachers and people who work in Massachusetts and across the country
are not a threat. Iraqi translators who put their own lives at risk to
protect American soldiers are not a threat. We should welcome them. We
should welcome them with open arms. That is who we are.
Voices from across the political spectrum, including many of my
friends from across the aisle, have already stepped forward to
criticize this order, but criticism is not enough. President
Trump's Executive order must be overturned. We must overturn it.
For those who remain unconvinced, I would like to take some time this
evening to talk about some of the people who are hurt by the
President's reckless, heartless, illegal, and unconstitutional actions.
As stories have poured into my office, on the evening news, on social
media, we have heard time and again about the consequences of President
Trump's reckless and illegal order, and I would like to share some of
those stories in my time tonight. I want to read one.
My staff and I have spent the weekend listening to and meeting with
people who have been affected. I have seen firsthand the devastating
effects of President Trump's actions. I want to start with a story of
someone I met at Logan Airport on Saturday night. The story I want to
read is from CBS Boston, ``Detainee Released After Federal Judge Grants
Stay On Trump's Immigration Freeze.''
Hamed Hosseini Bay was questioned at Logan Airport Saturday
while trying to get back into America after caring for his
sick father in his native Iran. Hosseini Bay has lived in the
Boston area for approximately nine years. After a judge
granted a case brought by lawyers from the American Civil
Liberties Union Saturday night, Hosseini Bay was reunited
with his wife and daughter, who had traveled with him to Iran
but returned two weeks earlier.
He was not angry about his questioning.
``Everybody was friendly,'' Hosseini Bay told WBZ-TV's Jim
Smith. ``They had to do what they had to do. I'm grateful for
all the people back there, but it was chaotic.''
Hosseini Bay's wife is now questioning what the future will
be like for her family in America. ``It's just terrifying how
my life has changed in two days, in three days,'' she said.
``I don't know (about the future). Last week everything was
normal. I would pick up my daughter from preschool, she was
like everyone else, I was like everyone else. But now we're
different.''
I met with this family. This is what President Trump's order means.
It means stopping people like this and telling them that their future
is different now in America.
I am going to read another story. This one is from NBC Boston.
``Protesters Rally as Doctors, Students Blocked From Entering Country
After Trump's Orders.''
At Boston's Logan International Airport, at least six
people from Iran were detained Saturday after their flights
landed in the U.S. A Federal judge in New York issued a
temporary stay late Saturday for all detainees affected by
Trump's executive orders, which barred all refugees from
entering the United States for four months, and indefinitely
halted any from Syria. Trump argued the ban is needed to keep
out ``radical Islamic terrorists.''
A tweet by Samira Asgari, an Iranian doctor, stated that
she was denied boarding when she arrived for her flight to
the U.S.
[[Page S476]]
from Germany. In a Skype interview from Switzerland, Asgari
told us she had planned to come to the U.S. to start a study
at Harvard Medical School analyzing tuberculosis.
``My view of America of course, doesn't change because of a
decision a politician makes. My view of America changes
because the land that used to be the land of those who want
to be there, who want to do something good to the community
and take something good from the community--that picture of
America has changed for me,'' she said.
Several students at Massachusetts colleges also tweeted
that they were being blocked from entering the country.
In a statement, MIT officials said they're ``very
troubled'' that Trump's executive order is affecting the
university's community and are exploring options for helping
impacted students.
Northeastern University in a statement to their community
offered support to their students, faculty and staff
reminding them of ``their commitment to each other.''
We believe in the commitment to inform each other, but that
is what it is that Donald Trump is trying to destroy.
Another story, from WBUR, a ``Somali Family Resettling In Lowell
Worries For Other Refugees As Trump Promises Restrictions.''
The order will have global implications, including for one
newly arrived Somali family now living in Lowell.
The three Ahmed sisters from Somalia huddled on a couch
with their mother in a lobby of a busy office. Each woman
wore a brightly colored head scarf and winter jacket, and
each clutched a plastic bag carrying their personal
documents.
They are the most recent refugees to be welcomed at the
International Institute of New England's Lowell resettlement
office. And, with Trump's refugee restrictions hanging in the
balance, they are likely the last Somali family to enter the
state for some time.
``My mom and dad fled from the conflict in Mogadishu,''
explained Hawo Ahmed, 24. She and her twin sister were only 4
months old when their parents fled for Kenya.
Hawo retold the story of her mother, Fatuma, and why she
and Hawo's father left in 1993 amid the Somali Civil War.
``She said that it was, like, conflict all over the
country,'' Hawo said. ``People were killing each other, like
tribes, different tribes were killing each other. Whenever
they see you, they kill you, and they even used to come in
the houses to rape the girls and kill them. So they had to
move.''
The youngest daughter, Asha, was born in Kenya, where the
girls grew up, and went to school and learned English. Still,
they all very much consider themselves Somali.
When asked about their father, one of the young women said
she watched him die in 2006 from an asthma attack. She said
the family didn't have enough money for a new inhaler.
After beginning the refugee application process in Kenya 6
years ago, the family arrived in Manchester, NH, only a few
days ago.
Hawo and Muna said their arrival barely felt real, like a
dream come true. And then, Hawo said, as soon as they got off
the plane, they saw the news about Trump's executive orders
on the airport television.
``Even tears were filled up in my eyes, because I felt very
bad for others,'' she said. ``They have more expectations,
some were even told where they are going, which city they are
going, and if they stop all the things, it's going to be very
painful. I just have a very sincere request to the President,
that he should drop out that idea. That is all.''
Hawo said that they know many fellow refugees in Kenya who
are in the final phases of their application process.
She said her aunt and cousin, who live in a refugee camp in
Kampala, Uganda, had only one more interview to complete
before they were hoping to meet them in Massachusetts. Now
they're not sure what will happen.
``I couldn't sleep last night just thinking about them, and
she has been in the process for so long, and we want, if you
can help her,'' Hawo said.
That is what Donald Trump is doing to people around the world.
Another story--WCVB TV.
Trump's executive order worries Massachusetts family
awaiting loved one.
With the stroke of a pen, President Donald Trump fulfilled
a campaign promise that temporarily bans more than 130
million people from entering the United States.
Several people were prevented from entering Boston due to
Trump's executive order.
``We are very worried. We are very concerned,'' Omar Salem,
of Canton, said. ``I'm hoping for the best. I'm hoping that I
could get a text from him saying, `I'm here.'''
Salem is anxiously awaiting his brother's arrival back in
Massachusetts. The Syrian-born, Boston-based orthodontist was
on vacation when the President signed the executive order
suspending visa entry from seven countries.
``We didn't know it was going to be that bad and that
shameful,'' Salem said.
Salem's brother thought his green card would be enough to
secure his return, but the business owner is now facing
uncertainty.
``It always starts somewhere and we see it evolving to
become much bigger and much more sophisticated,'' Salem said.
While Salem is hoping to see his brother soon, his heart is
heavy for the millions of refugees and visa holders, who see
the U.S. as a sanctuary of freedom and acceptance.
``I really call it un-American to do this with the stroke
of a pen,'' Salem said.
The seven countries included in the executive order may be
just a starting point as the order left room for a broader
ban.
That is what Donald Trump is doing around the world.
Another story--this is a Facebook post from Niki Rhamati, a student
at MIT.
I just got back home (Tehran) and I figured I should break
the silence. I want to start by saying how grateful I am to
all the friends, faculty, alums, sorority sisters, staff and
admin at MIT and other parts of the US who have contacted me
in the past couple of hours. My inbox is flooded with
messages and emails of love and support. I am truly
speechless, grateful and proud to be part of the MIT
community. I have never been subjected to any form of
religious or racial discrimination at MIT. Our community is
extremely diverse, inclusive, supportive and accepting of
individuals and their backgrounds. But I cannot believe all
this love is coming from the same country that banned me from
entering its borders just a couple of hours ago.
I don't want to get to the political mess that has created
this situation for me and many others. I just want to share
what millions of other people and I are going through, and
simply what it feels like to be an Iranian and targeted to
such racism and discrimination--things I have been very
familiar with most of my life.
I currently have a valid multiple entry student visa that
I've used for the past year and a half and have traveled very
smoothly (thank you Obama!). I came home (Tehran) to visit my
parents and family. I suspected I would not be able to travel
as easily as before with the new President, so I extended my
stay.
Here's the story of what happened this past week. On
Wednesday, I woke up to the announcement of the new Executive
Order by President Trump that would restrict entry for Syrian
refugees and citizens of seven majority-Muslim countries
(Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan, Somalia, Syria, Yemen) for 30
days. As BBC Persian, one of the reliable sources here,
contacted immigration attorneys and Politicians, this order
was read and interpreted as, ``issuance of any types of
immigrant and non-immigrant visas would be banned for
citizens of those countries for 30 days.''
The President had not yet signed this order so the ban was
not yet effective. I changed my flight to another one that
would get me to Boston on Saturday night with a transfer in
Qatar. It was rumored that the President signed the Order
once I was on my way to the airport, and it was executed
while I was in my first flight to Doha. But I looked on the
White House website, BBC and Washington Post and nothing had
been published yet. When I got to Doha, I was stopped at the
gate for my U.S. flight.
We found out that the ban (which is effective for 90 days
now instead of 30), included everyone currently holding an
immigrant, student or tourist visa as well as Green Card
holders. We heard a lot of people were deported at the
American border in different cities.
About 30 other Iranians and I were stuck in Doha, waiting
for flights back to Tehran. Among them were old couples
trying to go and see their children in the US, 2 old women
trying to be with and help their pregnant daughters there for
their third trimesters, students who had just gotten their
visas and families who had sold their belongings back home so
they could build a better life in the US. All these people
had gotten visas legally and had gone through background
checks. The President had said that the goal of this Order
was dealing with illegal immigration. Do any of the people
sound like illegal immigrants?
This will not secure the borders from the terrorism and
illegal immigrants. It will only increase racism in the
American society. The President is trying to make
Islamophobia a norm and policy by which he wants to lead the
country. There has not been a single terrorist activity from
those 7 countries listed above, in the US.
If you feel like helping millions of people facing this,
please contact your representatives or senators in your areas
and ask them to fight against this absurd ban. Reach out to
friends and ask them to do the same. Please also let me and
everyone else know how we can contribute to this.
As I was stuck in Doha, with other Iranians, I was telling
stories of interactions with many of the Americans I know.
Please know that I love and respect all of you because you
have always treated me with love and respect.
This is who Donald Trump is trying to keep out of the country.
Another story--this time from CNN.
A Syrian teen was headed to MIT and then came the ban.
Mahmoud Hassan was ecstatic when he got the acceptance
letter.
All through high school, the 18-year-old had one goal in
mind: get an engineering degree from the prestigious
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
But Hassan is from Damascus, Syria. And Friday, he had his
hopes crushed through no fault of his own.
[[Page S477]]
When President Trump signed the executive order on
immigration, temporarily banning citizens from certain
Muslim-majority countries, Syria was one of the seven.
``Now Trump's orders will prevent me from going there,'' he
told CNN. ``My dreams are basically ruined.''
Hassan had been looking forward to his journey to the
Cambridge campus in the fall. He says he had been offered a
scholarship.
He's read and reread that letter from MIT dozens of times.
``Dear Mahmoud, On behalf of the Admissions Committee, it
is my pleasure to offer you admission to the MIT Class of
2021! You stood out as one of the most talented and promising
students in one of the most competitive applicant pools in
the history of the Institute.''
Hassan doesn't know what he'll do next.
This is who Donald Trump is determined to keep out of America.
Another story. This one is from our office.
A constituent from Concord, MA, came into my office in Boston just
this morning--Monday, January 30, 2017. She came looking for more
information on the current status of the Muslim ban, on behalf of her
husband, who was originally born in Iran.
She explained that when he was young, he received refugee status in
Australia for religious persecution, as he was raised in the Baha'i
faith. He now has dual citizenship in Iran and Australia and is a green
card holder of 10 years here in the United States. He is the vice
president of a startup company that requires him to travel outside the
country often but has decided that, because of the latest Executive
orders, to stay grounded in the United States until further notice. He
is currently safe in the United States.
Emam has also decided to begin his U.S. citizenship application, and
the couple have two young children whom they are raising in the United
States, afraid to travel outside the United States on business because
of President Trump's ban.
Another story. This is a story via the Wall Street Journal.
Iraqi interpreter Laith al-Haydar received multiple death
threats for working with the American military at the height
of the war in his country. In return for helping the U.S., he
and tens of thousands of other Iraqis were promised U.S.
immigration visas.
Nearly four years after he applied, the 41-year-old father
of two is still waiting for a visa--and now he faces a new
setback: President Donald Trump signed an order suspending
immigration from several countries with a Muslim majority,
including Iraq, and a temporary ban on all refugees.
Mr. Haydar is among roughly 58,000 Iraqi applicants for
U.S. immigrant visas and refugee resettlement under the
federal programs that promised to fast-track entry for Iraqis
who worked with the U.S. government and other institutions
deemed critical to the U.S.-led effort in Iraq, according to
the State Department. A similar program for Afghans who've
worked with the U.S. government may also be at risk.
At least one Iraqi and two Afghans who worked with the U.S.
government and also qualify for expedited immigration visas
were turned away from American ports of entry on Friday and
Saturday, a State Department official said, adding that
several more were prevented from boarding planes to the U.S.
A substantial backlog of applications remains in part
because Congress limits the number of visas that can be
granted each year. Frustration with visa delays has now been
aggravated by Mr. Trump's executive orders.
Critics of the visa ban say it abandons thousands of
valuable allies abroad and risks deterring such people from
working with the United States in the future at a time when
Mr. Trump is promising a more aggressive military posture
abroad.
``These guys laid their lives on the line alongside
American soldiers and got paid a fraction of what I made,''
said Jake Thomas, a U.S. Army veteran who worked with Mr.
Haydar in Iraq and who now lives in Georgia. If they want
out, we need to honor our promises and get them out. Mr.
Thomas is one of several U.S. military officers who have
written letters to the State Department appealing for Mr.
Haydar to get a visa. He said he sympathizes with some of the
views regarding immigration that Mr. Trump campaigned on, but
he added that Iraqis like Mr. Haydar ``were singled out and
shot at for serving the United States and we made a
promise.'' Mr. Thomas said he knew of five Iraqi interpreters
who were killed in the 15 months of his last tour in Iraq,
including 3 who were gunned down in their homes for working
with the U.S. military.
President Trump continues to ignore the damage he is doing to the
safety of our country and our servicemen and servicewomen overseas.
Brave men and women who risked their lives to help U.S. soldiers in
Iraq have already been caught up in the President's unconstitutional
order.
I just want to associate myself with the man who said--who had been
there, the soldier who had been there--that America made a promise. I
believe in an America that keeps its promises. Donald Trump's order
breaks our promises.
Another story, this one from Marcolla via PRI:
The Iraqi linguist who worked side by side with US troops
in Baghdad put her life on the line for America's war effort.
Now her family is in danger back in Iraq and she fears her efforts to
get them to safety in America are all but doomed.
``I'm scared. The chance to see my family reunited again is
very slim now,'' she says. ``People like me and my family who
helped and supported America, I believe we should be
reunited. The history of the United States is to support
people and help them, not to separate the families.''
Marcolla was just 18 and living in Baghdad shortly after
American tanks rolled into the Iraqi capital in 2003. She was
recruited to work for the US military. Her role caught the
attention of Iraqi militants. They sought revenge. They
burned down Marcolla's house, kidnapped her father and
murdered her husband.
Fearing for her life, she applied for a US visa. And in
2013, after seven years of waiting, she received the
permission she had been waiting for. But Marcolla had to
leave her parents and siblings behind, even though she says
they too were in danger because of her service with US
troops. She says she tries to talk with her family in Baghdad
daily. ``Every day their lives are in danger,'' she says.
``They have to change their address, move from place to
place. They live in the unknown.''
Marcolla is worried that the refugee ban proposed Wednesday
means her parents and siblings will never reach American
soil.
``We already been in extreme vetting,'' she says. ``I
understand and I respect the US rules and the safety and
national security. . . . I understand that and I respect
that. However, there are people in Iraq who have a long
history of supporting America in Iraq and Afghanistan--the
linguists, the translators--they deserve and they need their
papers to be expedited.''
These are the people Donald Trump is keeping out of America.
Another story from Mother Jones:
``Immoral,'' ``Stupid,'' and ``Counterproductive'':
National Security Experts Slam Trump's ``Muslim Ban.''
``At the moment we need them most, we're telling these
people, `Get screwed.' ''
While Trump's executive order claims to be in the interest
of ``protecting the nation,'' experts in national security
and counterterrorism who spoke with Mother Jones argue that
it poses potentially disastrous immediate and long-term
security threats to the nation and US personnel overseas.
``Not only is it immoral and stupid, it's also
counterproductive,'' says Patrick Skinner, a former CIA
terrorism case officer who now works at Soufan Group, a
security consulting firm. ``We've got military intelligence
and diplomatic personnel on the ground right now in Syria,
Libya, and Iraq who are working side by side with the people
imbedded in combat and training and advising. At no time in
the US's history have we depended more on local--and I mean
local--partnerships for counterterrorism. We need people in
Al Bab, Syria; we depend on people in certain parts of
eastern Mosul, Iraq; in Cert, Libya. At the exact moment we
need them most, we're telling those people, `Get screwed.' ''
Kirk W. Johnson, who spent a year on reconstruction in
Fallujah in Iraq with the US Agency for International
Development (USAID) echoes Skinner's fears: ``This will have
immediate national security implications, in that we are not
going to be able to recruit people to help us right now, and
people are not going to step forward to help us in any future
wars if this is our stance.''
The US-led war on ISIS is but one front of a constellation
of fights against extremist groups that could be hampered by
Trump's decision. ``The US is officially banning people in
these countries at the same time we are trying to build up
local support to fight ISIS,'' Skinner said. ``It takes a
long time to build trust with these people. You have to start
over, say, `Okay, starting now, trust me.' How many times can
you get away with that?'' It also sends a message that groups
like the so-called Islamic State can exploit. Elizabeth
Goitein, the codirector of the Brennan Center's Liberty &
National Security Program, says, ``The message this projects
is that America sees Muslims as a threat--not specific
actors who are intent on committing terrorist acts. The
message that America really is at war with Islam will be
ISIS's best friend.''
BuzzFeed reporters Mike Giglio and Munzer Al-Awad spoke
with five current or former ISIS fighters who cited Trump's
divisiveness as a factor that will weaken America. They added
that his rhetoric against Muslims will help them reinforce
their narrative that America and the West are fighting not
just terrorism, but Islam itself. ``Trump will shorten the
time it takes for us to achieve our goals,'' said one.
Meanwhile, the very allies who have operated alongside US
personnel in war zones for years--contractors and translators
like Darweesh--are once again being abandoned. For the past
decade, Johnson has been leading an effort to resettle Iraqi
allies, many of whom, he says, face torture, kidnapping, and
[[Page S478]]
death after collaborating with American soldiers. It all
started in 2006 when he heard from an Iraqi USAID colleague
who had been identified by a militia. The militia left a
severed pig's head on his door step, along with a message
saying that it would be his head next. Despite his years of
helping the United States, the US government offered no help,
and he had to flee the country with his wife.
``We are not going to be able to recruit people to help us right now,
and people are not going to step forward to help us in any future wars
if this is our stance.''
This is what Donald Trump's Executive order is doing. It is putting
Americans at risk around the world.
Another story from Newsweek: ``Spy Veterans Say Trump's Muslim-
Country Visa Ban Will Hurt Recruitment.
President Donald Trump's temporary ban on immigrants from
seven Muslim-majority nations takes a major recruiting tool
out of the hands of US spy handlers, say a growing number of
intelligence veterans.
For decades, CIA and US military spy recruiters have held
out the promise of eventual resettlement in America to induce
foreigners to turn coat and work secretly for the United
States against terrorist groups or repressive governments. In
reality, many were caught before they ever made it, but
during the Cold War countless Eastern Europeans living under
communist rule, and more recently, Muslims across the Middle
East, North Africa and Central Asia, have worked secretly for
US spy agencies on the promise that they or their children
would eventually be extracted. Another effective recruiting
tool for US operatives has been to offer their agents'
families medical care or education in the United States.
Those inducements, a primary recruiting tool in Muslim
land, were effectively suspended with Trump's executive order
Friday to temporarily ban immigration from seven critical
targets of the U.S. spy agencies--Iraq, Iran, Syria, Yemen,
Sudan, Libya and Somalia. The departments of State and
Homeland Security, the order stipulates, may allow entry from
those countries on ``a case-by-case basis,'' but it's a balky
arrangement not likely to appeal to the managers of the CIA's
highly secretive operations directorate, its espionage and
covert action arm.
Intelligence veterans with vast counterterrorism experience
are expressing dismay about how the order will affect their
spy operations.
``These individuals often put themselves at the risk of
death for working with the U.S., and without the ability to
offer them safety, we will be reducing the likelihood that
those in countries targeted by the ban will work with us in
the future,'' Phillip Lohaus, a decorated veteran of the U.S.
Special Operations Command and CIA, tells Newsweek.
``We relied heavily on local translators, many of whom have
gone on to forge productive lives for themselves here in the
States,'' Lohaus added. ``Why would they take such a risk if
they knew that they would face retribution or death by
staying in their home countries?''
``Absolutely,'' agreed Cindy Storer, a former member of the
CIA intelligence team that tracked al-Qaeda leader Osama bin
Laden. ``It hurts,'' she said in a brief interview. ``Capital
h-u-r-t-s.'' Imagine, she said, if the ban had been in place
when Jamal al Fadl, a Sudanese Muslim and key al-Qaeda
operative, showed up at the American embassy in the mid-1990s
and volunteered to defect to the United States. FBI
counterterror agents brought him into the U.S., where he
provided ``a major breakthrough of intelligence on the
creation, character, direction, and intentions of al-Qaeda,''
according to the official 9/11 Commission report.
And that is what Donald Trump is putting an end to.
Another story from the Washington Post: ``Dissent memo circulating in
the State Department over Trump's policy on refugees and immigrants.''
For this one, Foreign Service officers have written a memo--and they
shared it with the Washington Post--in opposition to President Trump's
Executive order. Here are excerpts from a leaked dissent memo by U.S.
Foreign Service officers regarding the Executive orders:
It will immediately sour relations with these seven countries, as
well as much of the Muslim world, which sees the ban as religiously
motivated. These governments of these countries are important allies
and partners in the fight against terrorism, regionally and
globally. By alienating them, we lose access to the intelligence and
resources we need to fight the root causes of terror abroad before the
attack occurs within our borders. It will increase anti-American
sentiment. It will have an immediate and clear humanitarian impact. It
will have a negative impact on the U.S. economy.
Looking beyond its effectiveness, this ban stands in opposition to
the core American and constitutional values. This ban stands in
opposition to the core American and constitutional values that we, as
Federal employees, took an oath to uphold.
The United States is a nation of immigrants, starting from its very
origins. The concept that immigrants and foreigners are welcome is an
essential element of our society, our government, and our foreign
policy. So, too, is the concept that we are all equal under the law and
that we, as a nation, abhor discrimination, whether it is based on
race, religion, sex, or national origin. Combined together, that means
we have a special obligation to maintain an immigration system that is
as free as possible from discrimination, that does not have implied or
actual religious tests, and that views individuals as individuals, not
as part of stereotyped groups.
Banning travelers from these seven countries calls back to some of
the worst times in our history. Laws enacted in the 1920s and which
lasted through the 1960s severely restricted immigration based on
national origin and, in some cases, race. The decision to restrict the
freedom of Japanese Americans in the United States and foreign citizens
who wanted to travel to settle in the United States during the 1940s
has been a source of lasting shame for many in our country. Decades
from now, we will look back and realize we made the same mistakes as
our predecessors: shutting borders in a knee-jerk reaction instead of
setting up systems of checks that protect our interests and our values.
We do not need to place a blanket ban that keeps 220 million people--
men, women, and children--from entering the United States to protect
our homeland. We do not need to alienate entire societies to stay safe.
And we do not need to sacrifice our reputation as a nation which is
open and welcoming to protect our families. It is well within our reach
to create a visa process which is more secure, which reflects American
values, and which would make the Department proud.
Again, this is a dissent memo circulating in the State Department
over President Trump's policy on refugees and immigrants.
And this is what Donald Trump's Executive order does; it makes us
less safe. It is wrong.
Another story, from a Boston Globe op-ed, Matt Gallagher, who is a
veteran. The headline: ``Trump rejects the Muslims who helped us.''
The bravest person I've ever known went by the nickname
Suge Knight. He was as physically imposing as the infamous
music producer, but he was calm and bighearted, with a smile
as wide as a canyon. A Sudanese Muslim, Suge served as my
scout platoon's interpreter during our deployment to Iraq in
2007 and 2008, and he went on every patrol and mission with
us, no matter the circumstances. He'd survived multiple
roadside bomb attacks, had lost three young children to the
bombings of the first Gulf war, and yet still believed in
America and what America represented to him and his family.
Though he doubted he'd ever get to our country, he aspired
for his children to do so. ``Perhaps my grandchildren will go
to school with your kids,'' he once told me with typical
paternal charm. ``I'd like that very much.'' I felt the same.
We all did. He was one of us.
President Trump's recent executive order on Muslim refugees
and immigrants works to ensure that such a dream never comes
true. Muslim allies, including interpreters like Suge in Iraq
and Afghanistan, have done more for the United States during
the past 16 years of war than most Americans will even think
of doing their entire lives. Yet we're abandoning them in
their hour of need, wrapping ourselves up in a big, billowing
flag of fear and pretending it's for safety. We're also
abandoning Middle Eastern refugees fleeing the very
terrorists we've professed to combat, who have seen their
homes and lives destroyed and now seek shelter on our shores
the same way immigrants have for generations.
This is a national disgrace. The president's executive
order betrays American values and weakens our national
security all at once. Our country was founded as a haven.
Trump and his administration seem intent on turning it into a
medieval fortress.
In November, shortly after the election, I joined a
nonpartisan group in Washington, D.C., to advocate for Muslim
refugees and immigrants--Veterans For American Ideals, a
project of Human Rights First. There was a gray pall over the
city, and a deep sense of uncertainty for what awaited, even
in Republican offices. No one knew then what we all know now:
Trump really did mean to do what he'd said on the campaign
trail.
Time and time again, Democrats and Republicans alike told
us the United States already has in place the best and most
thorough refugee and immigrant screening process on the
planet. A prominent Republican adviser assured us that
Trump's ``extreme vetting'' idea was just a ploy to rustle up
votes. A national security official suggested that we should
be more thankful Congress
[[Page S479]]
had saved the Special Immigrant Visa program for interpreters
and translators who served with the US military, and
maintained that the amount of issued visas was sufficient,
despite the overflowing backlog of requests.
A shouting match ensued. Enraged veterans can have our own
sort of diplomatic style.
I look back at that week with both pride and despondency.
On one hand, to see so many young American veterans standing
up for the principles of our nation--often the very same
principles that led them to enlist in the military to begin
with--was stirring. We tried, sometimes successfully and
sometimes not, to convey to politicians the importance of
remaining true to our Muslim brothers- and sisters-in-arms.
We also tried to remind them of the secondary and tertiary
effects of not honoring the bonds forged in combat. On the
other hand, bearing witness to how easily dismissed entire
lives and formative experiences can be by fellow citizens
(let alone elected representatives) was rather dismaying.
Even in our era of yellow-ribbon patriotism and star-
spangled grandiosity, veterans' stories of heroic Muslim
translators and brave, dedicated local Iraqis and Afghans
were, sometimes, met with hollow stares and empty platitudes
in Washington. What we were telling these officials defied
their preconceived notions about vets, and Muslims, and how
vets of the terror wars were supposed to feel about Muslims.
What we were telling them was that American security was
dependent on opening our doors to as many vetted refugees and
immigrants as possible, not barricading ourselves and saying,
``We're not that America anymore.'' What we were telling them
was that we knew, more than any other group of Americans,
what the hearts and souls of the Middle Eastern people were,
and that those hearts and souls were so very much like our
own.
These are just some of the stories of what Donald Trump is doing to
people here in America, to Americans abroad, and people around the
world.
This Executive order is illegal. It is unconstitutional. It is
immoral, and it must be overturned by Congress.
I understand that under the rules, a majority can stop any Senator
after speaking for an hour postcloture, but there is a bit more I would
like to say.
Therefore, I ask unanimous consent to speak for up to 10 additional
minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Tillis). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Ms. WARREN. Thank you, Mr. President.
I will continue with the story that was published this morning in the
Boston Globe. This is from a veteran who was writing of his own
experiences.
He says:
Trump's executive order, which seeks to ``keep radical
Islamic terrorists out of the United States,'' will only
embolden those very same people, who already had a near-zero
chance of gaining entry to our country to begin with. This
order proves too many ISIS and al-Qaeda talking points true
about what the United States really is, and will serve as an
excellent recruiting tool for those organizations and others.
This executive order isn't about national security. It's
about fear-mongering for ends we can only guess at.
This shouldn't be a partisan issue. As my friend Phil Klay,
winner of the National Book Award and a Marine veteran,
pointed out last year, Ronald Reagan's ``city on a hill''
speech outlined an America ``For all the pilgrims from all
the lost places who are hurtling through the darkness toward
home.''
``I get that people are scared,'' Klay continued. ``But
it's only during frightening times when you get to find out
if your country really deserves to call itself the `home of
the brave.' ''
Donald Trump's zero-sum worldview and flimsy understanding
of the intricacies of modern war and terrorism threaten to
undermine our republic. His policy on Middle Eastern refugees
and immigrants must be checked and resisted by citizens of
all political stripes, legislators of both major parties and
the judicial courts.
After 16 years of war, much of my generation of military
veterans stands with the Middle Eastern people we sweated,
labored and bled with, and sometimes died for. It's going to
be a fight, but it's one we're not going to lose. The legacy
of America's past is at stake, as well as the soul of its
future.
Matt Gallagher is the author of the novel ``Youngblood''
and the memoir ``Kaboom: Embracing the Suck in a Savage
Little War.'' He is an Iraq war veteran and a former US Army
captain.
And he wrote this morning in the Boston Globe.
We are here tonight because this country is in crisis. We are here
tonight because it is a constitutional crisis, because it is a moral
crisis. We are here tonight to stand up and ask the rest of the U.S.
Senate to overturn Donald Trump's Executive order. We have that power.
All we need is the courage, the courage to stand up and do what is
right. This is why we came to the U.S. Senate, to stand up and do what
is right.
I call on the rest of the Senate to overturn Donald Trump's illegal,
unconstitutional, and immoral Executive order.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Jersey.
Mr. BOOKER. Mr. President, I rise in gratitude for the opportunity to
speak on the Senate floor. I want to express a lot of gratitude toward
the Senator from Massachusetts. She has been an advocate for the truth
of our country. She has spoken here on this hallowed floor. I have now
watched her speak in the streets, at airports, at rallies. She is one
of those people--like so many Americans, literally millions of
Americans over the course of these last few weeks--who is saying with
the force of conviction that they will not be silent when the cause of
our country is at stake.
I join with her tonight, along with some of my other colleagues, to
stand up and really speak from the heart. I think this floor has seen
many partisan speeches, but this is not going to be about Republican or
Democrat. This is not a speech I ever imagined I would be giving in the
U.S. Senate. I never thought I would be here today talking about
something that quite honestly was unimaginable to me just months ago.
This is a time I could not have foreseen, and I fear my generation of
Americans maybe, perhaps, should have known that moments like this are
possible; that we who believe in the values of our Nation, we who
believe in the ideals enshrined in our Constitution, such as religious
liberty, we should know that every generation of Americans has to prove
worthy of these ideals and stay forever vigilant in their protection
and never get so complacent as to think that this could never happen.
The ideals we enjoy were fought for and struggled for and often bled
for and died for. We of our generation who have the privileges we
enjoy, the blessings of liberty that we luxuriate in, we have the
obligation to stay the course to ensure that these moments never come,
and when they do, that we stand with conviction to speak out against
them, work against them to resist any retrenchment of American values.
What Donald Trump did in this Executive action issued this past
Friday is, in no uncertain terms, a break with American policy. I
believe it is a violation of our very Constitution, that it is illegal,
unconstitutional, as well as immoral. More than this, it very
specifically makes this Nation less safe and not more so. I want to
repeat that. It makes this Nation less safe and not more so.
The ban was put forth in a climate of fear, intending to try to
appeal to people's fears, trying to tell people that doing this
Executive order was going to make us safer, but in its essence it is
illogical when you look at the facts. Not only should it be known that
it blocks immigration from seven majority Muslim countries--seven
countries. Not a single perpetrator of terrorist attacks on American
soil has come from these countries, dating back to well before 9/11. In
fact, well before 2000, well before the nineties, well before the
eighties and, in fact, not since the seventies, in over 40 years, no
American has been killed on American soil by any of these countries in
terrorist attacks.
In addition to that, what this ban is doing is it is shutting down
the Refugee Resettlement Program for about 4 months and suspends the
Syrian refugee program indefinitely, despite the fact that individuals
entering the United States as refugees undergo the most heavily vetted
resettlement process of anybody traveling into the United States.
So understand this. If you are trying to come into this country
through student visas, Visa Waiver Programs, there are so many ways to
come into this country without going through the refugee process, which
takes between 1 year and 3 years, and you are not just going through
the vetting of the Department of State but also the Department of
Defense, the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, the National
Counterterrorism Center, numerous agencies for over up to 3 years are
vetting you. Let me tell you right now, again, people who go through
this
[[Page S480]]
program, history is showing, you have not seen in any recent years that
folks going through these programs pose a terrorist threat or are
taking American lives. So the very argument being used to push this ban
is illogical and has no basis for any of the experiences we have had in
this country.
A former chief counsel for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration services
remarked that no competent terrorist would choose the U.S. refugee
process as a preferred strategy for gaining entry into this country.
Subjecting yourself to the 1 to 3 years of vetting from multiple
agencies, more than any other way to enter, is not a way for terrorists
to try to gain access to this country at all.
What we see is that this terrorist ban is putting focus--excuse me,
this Executive order is putting focus in areas that do not produce
safety but do have the collateral consequence of making us less safe.
The order indefinitely suspends the resettlement of Syrian refugees
in the United States. The majority of these folks are women and
children who are fleeing barrel bombs, chemical attacks, military
attacks on homes and schools. They are fleeing famine, they are fleeing
starvation, they are fleeing the same violent extremism that we
ourselves are trying to fight against. While the Syrian people face
violence, terror, and oppression, the President has chosen to equate
helpless refugees with those who are actually perpetrating the terror.
Despite the fact that we have this stringent years-long vetting program
for Iraqis and Afghans who risked their lives to help Americans by
acting as interpreters, the ban ends--astonishingly, it ends a Special
Immigrant Visa Program and substitutes it with nothing.
What is this Special Immigrant Visa Program that many of my
colleagues have spoken about? It is a program that is specifically
there for Iraqis and Afghans who helped America and put their families
in danger, who put their necks out for us. They put themselves out
there to assist our servicemen and servicewomen. It actually is there
to help people who, because of their service to us and our country, now
have their lives endangered where they are.
I want to read a series of tweets just yesterday from Kirk Johnson, a
former USAID Administrator in Iraq who wrote about these folks who put
themselves on the line for Americans who are our allies and our
friends. This is what Kirk Johnson wrote:
I served in Iraq as USAID's man in Fallujah. Lived
alongside Marines and interpreters as they fought terrorists.
Over 100,000 of these Iraqis risked their lives for us
during the war. They bled for our country.
You said, before signing--
He is talking about President Trump--
``We only want to admit those into our country who will
support our country, and love deeply our people.''
And what Kirk Johnson wrote follows:
I'd like you to know [Donald Trump] about some of these
people.
``Homeboy'' lost his leg dragging a wounded U.S. SSgt from
MN out of the field of fire. He spent 4 years being vetted
before coming here.
Hossam helped us build schools. When insurgents found out,
in Oct `06, they left a severed dog head on his front step
that said ``run.''
Faisal, an interpreter for the troops you command [Donald
Trump], died of a suicide bomb on 3/14/2008.
Mohammed was assassinated when terrorists, who wanted to
kill the ``traitor'' booby-trapped his house in Jan 2008.
Ali had both his legs amputated by an IED blast while
working as an interpreter in Nov 2007.
Hameed died of a gunshot wound to the head while helping
our troops in July 2007.
I could do this all day, sadly.
He wrote in his remarks. He goes on to say:
Those that helped us were Christians, Muslims, Yazidis,
atheists, you name it.
These people in Fallujah and the surrounding areas were our allies.
When they ran through gunfire to save our troops, they
didn't think about such labels.
These Iraqis believed in America. They loved our country.
They lost their country as a result of the choice they made
to help us.
Your signature [Donald Trump] just banned them.
He continues:
I have heard from many, many soldiers and Marines (some of
extremely high rank) who believe this is a huge mistake.
One senior military officer with extensive experience in
Iraq and Afghanistan told me it was ``heinous and
counterproductive.''
Now why is it counterproductive? Well, for one, when we are
conducting dangerous missions, when we are relying on people in country
to assist us with our counterterrorism efforts, if they are going to
take that risk, put their lives on the line, be subjected to terrorism
themselves, there should be a process that allows them, after proper
vetting, to get into this country. That has been American policy. Even
people who have been threatened, victimized, and persecuted can't just
walk into our country because some of our high-ranking Marines say so.
They still go through vetting that often takes years. That is the
process. It is a process that Donald Trump has now stopped.
Yesterday a report noted that radical jihadists--the people we are
fighting against, the terrorists intending to kill us--were already
using this Executive order as a victory, proof that the United States
is at war with Islam. Now some people say that claim is hard to make.
This is just banning people from seven countries. Well, look a little
closer at the Executive order. There are exceptions made for non-
Muslims in those countries.
Imagine this. We are the United States of America. Enshrined in our
Constitution is this idea of freedom of religion; that there is no
religious test to vote, there is no religious test to have citizenship,
there is no religious test to enjoy the richness of a nation that
believes in religious liberty. But in one action by the President of
the United States, who claims to be concerned about terrorism from
these countries, he says: I am going to stop people from entering. Oh,
wait a minute, only Muslims. Christians are welcome. If that is not a
violation of core principles of freedom of religion that there should
be religious tests to enter from these countries--that is an assault on
all we proclaim in our country to be our core values.
This is not missed by our enemies. They are now trying to say this
isn't a war between America and ISIS. This isn't a war between America
and radical jihadists. They want, as a propaganda tool, for people to
believe that this is a war between the United States and Islam, between
America and a religion. That is a lie. But when Donald Trump takes
actions like this that specifically target people because of their
faith, he is playing into the hands of the propagandists who seek to
hurt us.
National security experts from across the political spectrum, from
Republicans and Democrats, have spoken out against this order on this
basis and on how it will affect our security as a country.
The former Director of the CIA, Gen. Michael Hayden, said of this
order that it ``inarguably has made us less safe.''
Those people who want to help us, who want to serve with our marines,
who want to be interpreters, who want to stand up for America, what are
they to think now when America has shut its doors, when they have
watched others do this, and now they can't gain access to this country?
What about those allies of ours who say that the great United States of
America is standing up against terrorism and Muslim leaders in other
countries? But it is not about Islam; it is about the people who are
conducting vicious terrorism, which is a sin on a peaceful religion.
What can our allies say now, when we have specifically targeted an
Executive order from our President not at a country but at a people who
pray a certain way in that country?
What are we to think in the United States? This great Nation born
from the ideas of liberty and freedom--freedom to pray as we want--what
are we to think?
Despite all of the evidence to the contrary, just 2 days after
President Trump instituted this ban, he remarked: Hey, this ban is
going ``nicely.'' Earlier today, President Trump's spokesman referred
to those being unlawfully detained as just being ``temporarily
inconvenienced.''
We know that the reality of the situation is much different for the
families and individuals across the globe who are affected. Many of
them are permanent residents and green card holders for whom this
Executive order has amounted to a door slammed in their face by the
country that is supposed to represent the shining beacon on the planet
Earth of liberty and hope.
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Hundreds of people of seven different nationalities have been trapped
at American airports. Many of them were detained for hours on end
without access to lawyers; they were handcuffed and interrogated; some
were immediately deported, while many more have been turned away at the
doors to their flights bound for the United States. These are people
who followed all of the rules, who went through extensive vetting, who
upended their lives--doors slammed in their faces.
I am sorry, but this is not an inconvenience. This is a denial of
process, a denial of procedure; it is a denial of basic liberty and a
violation of our principles.
It is no wonder, though, that judges across the country began issuing
stays within hours of this order becoming effective. As we saw in New
York, how people like Hamidyah Al Saeedi, the 65-year-old mother of a
sergeant--65-year-old mother of a sergeant in the 82nd Airborne
Division of the U.S. Army, who traveled from Iraq to see her son for
the first time in 5 years. A mother of a sergeant in the 82nd
Airborne--someone who should be honored--lawfully entered the United
States, and because of this order, she was detained for 30 hours,
denied a wheelchair, and handcuffed, before her release.
On Saturday night and early into the morning, I saw Customs and
Border Patrol officials at Dulles. I left Washington, DC, and drove to
Virginia to go to Dulles Airport. I saw Customs and Border Patrol
officials seemingly defy the orders coming from a Federal judge to at
least permit all legal permanent residents in detention access to legal
counsel. I held the judge's order in my hands. Because of the kindness
of a local law enforcement officer who was stationed in Dulles, I was
able to shuttle to Customs and Border Patrol, and I was then able to
submit handwritten notes and questions to the officials who refused to
meet with me. I did not get much of an explanation as to why they were
defying a clear order from a Federal judge. Whether or not this was a
case of bureaucratic confusion or a message from the courts getting
lost, Federal law enforcement officers, under the supervision of the
Department of Homeland Security, ignored and defied the orders of a
Federal judge.
To me, this is more reason for outrage. In a Nation with three
branches of government, the judiciary with a clear role giving an order
to the executive branch, I believe the defiance of that order also was
unconstitutional.
Access to counsel is a principle in our democracy. It is about
fairness and due process. Failing to allow access to counsel, to me,
seems a clear violation of constitutional norms and ideals. The judge
obviously believes so, and that is why he ordered counsel to be
provided.
Still, right now, we don't know how many people are being detained
across the country in the wake of this Executive order or how many were
immediately and quietly deported once they came here again, thoroughly
vetted, in accordance with the law, but they were still deported upon
their arrival in this country. I think Congress deserves answers. I
wrote to Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly earlier this evening to
seek them.
This mistreatment of any legal permanent resident or visitors to this
country is wrong. It is un-American. It undermines the truth of who we
are. It is patently unacceptable.
This Executive order has treated green card holders and immigrants in
this Nation as if they were criminals. It has torn families apart
across the world and pulled the rug out from families who were
preparing to begin a new life in the United States of America. And this
order has betrayed some of our closest allies--men and women who risked
their lives to help American servicemembers deployed often on hostile
soil. Ending the special immigrant visa programs established to help
Iraqis and Afghans who risked their lives to help American forces is
unacceptable. The United States cannot turn its back on those who
stepped up and stepped in when we needed them most.
Just this morning, I read about an Iraqi man, Sami, who had risked
his life to work with the American Government in Iraq. After waiting 7
years to gain entry, going through a laborious process of vetting under
the special immigrant visa program, he and his family finally got the
OK, and they were ready to start their new lives in America. On
Saturday, he and his wife and two daughters had flown from Iraq to
Istanbul, and they were sitting in their seats ready to take off when
they were removed from the plane by security officials. Foreign Policy
magazine reported that, through tears, Sami's 7-year-old daughter
asked, ``Why don't they want us in America?''
American servicemembers and veterans are joining a growing core,
speaking out against this misguided decision which threatens the
commonsense program that helps our military do their jobs.
Take Zachary Iscol, a former Marine infantry officer who wrote about
some of the Iraqis he worked with who had risked everything to help the
United States. He told the story of one man, Frank, who had served as
an interpreter for his Marine Corps unit and, in doing so, had taken a
bullet in his leg. Frank had remained in Iraq since then. Zachary
wrote:
He was still living in Baghdad with daily fears for his and
his family's safety. After six years of vetting, including
what seemed like countless interviews and background checks
by various government agencies, he had finally been cleared
to come to the United States with his pregnant wife and 18-
month-old son.
Zachary went on to write:
My wife and I began to prepare our guest room for their
arrival. But now, because of a new executive order by
President Trump, Frank is no longer welcome.
This is an American military man, preparing to have these folks who
put their lives on the line for him, stay in his home.
This special visa program is why people like Mohammed and Saif
Alnasseri, whom I am proud to call Jersey residents--two of my
constituents--were able to come to this country. I would like to share
a little bit about this family.
Mohammed Alnasseri was finishing high school in Iraq in 2003 when the
Americans arrived. As an English speaker, Mohammed began helping the
Americans stationed near his neighborhood, working for free as their
neighborhood translator. When the unit he had become friends with left,
he decided to apply for work as an official interpreter with the U.S.
Army. By 2004, he had been sent to Fallujah to work with and help
protect American military fighting there. Because of his work with the
American military, he recounts receiving hundreds of death notes,
threatening not just his life but the life of his mother and his
family.
He returned to Baghdad where he worked, despite these threats, as a
contractor with an American company until one day he was targeted and
almost assassinated in his car. He knew at that point, with the death
threats and the assassination attempt, that he had to get out of the
country.
After moving to Australia, his sister informed him about America's
special visa program, so he applied, and 2\1/2\ years later he was able
to join his family in the United States.
In a call with my office just earlier today, he wanted to make it
clear that he arrived in the United States on July 3, and by August 10,
he had started his job. He remarked to my team that he couldn't
understand why anyone would think he was coming to America because it
was easy or because he wanted something. He spent most of his savings
trying to get to America, and he had never taken any benefit since
arriving here.
Mohammed met his wife in New Jersey and now lives in our State, works
at Costco, and is working to obtain his citizenship. He shared that
this Executive order made him more sad than scared and that it simply
didn't make sense to ban regular, hard-working people who are also
afraid of terrorists, persecuted by terrorists, almost killed by
terrorists, and who had done so much to help our country. It made no
sense to them.
This is what he said: ``We ran away from these people. I paid all the
money I had to leave.'' He did that for the safety of his family.
Mohammed's brother is now a proud American citizen, father of two,
and resident of Scotch Plains, NJ. Saif and his wife had worked as
pharmacists in Iraq, but when the war began, he knew he needed to get
involved. So Saif worked as a translator and reporter for
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the Los Angeles Times during the war in Iraq, providing support and key
insights to the American media and the American public. They were able
to come to the United States in 2008 through that special visa
program--the SIV program--and slowly worked their way through school.
Now, as pharmacy technicians, they have their pharmacy licenses.
Saif is a pharmacy manager in Cranford, NJ, a homeowner in Scotch
Plains, and a proud father of two girls. He savors this country, this
precious Nation. He celebrates our values. He is a glowing testimony to
the truth of who we are. His success is our success. His family's
security and safety and thriving lives in New Jersey give luster to the
greatness of America.
In a phone call yesterday, Saif remarked that this Executive order
was embarrassing and hurtful, that it was clear Muslims were being
targeted, and that he couldn't understand why those who were so heavily
vetted like his family posed such a threat.
Saif and his family are heavily involved in their community in Scotch
Plains, and they make sure to offer support to families similar to
theirs who come from Iraq seeking refuge. They are not just basking and
luxuriating in their good fortune to become American citizens; they are
honoring one of the great hallowed traditions of our country, which is
service.
At the end of the call, Saif remarked that ``[he] didn't think this
would happen in any other country.'' It seemed like he was about to say
this kind of religiously targeted ban wouldn't happen anywhere else,
and he might have been right. But instead, he said that ``if this kind
of executive order from a leader in any other country happened against
any group of people, you would never see the kind of resistance and
action of so many standing up for them.''
Even in one of the darkest moments in recent history, this man, this
patriot, this person who served our Nation's interests and continues to
volunteer in service to this day, could have every reason to be angry,
upset, and cynical. But what is beautiful from our conversations with
this man is that he hasn't given up faith. He still believes in the
American people.
The beautiful thing about the conversations my staff has had with
those New Jersey residents who once were serving our Nation in theaters
of violence and terrorism, standing up for our military, for our press,
victimized by terroristic threats, shot at, assassination attempts--
these families now here in America witnessing this Executive order are
saddened and embarrassed by it, but they are not giving up in their
faith in America. That is our story.
I stand here today--dare I say, all of the Members of the Senate
stand here today because of this tradition of our country, that even
when we had dark chapters from our past where others in positions of
power violated our values, the faith and activism and engagement of
American people remained.
I dare say we are the oldest constitutional democracy on the planet
Earth. God, the genius of our Founders who put on paper ideals that
have been heralded for centuries on planet Earth. Newer constitutional
democracies literally would study our Constitution and model their
nations after elements of our Constitution. I am sad to tell you that
some of those countries' democracies have failed. They had the vaunted
words, they put forth the same principles and ideals, but their
countries' democracies have been overthrown, have seen despots who
destroyed the very spirit of those ideals.
Why has America persisted? It is not just because of the documents
that are sacred and so special in the course of human events. But what
makes those documents true and real--because those sentiments are not
just written on parchment; every generation has had them written on
their hearts and have said: No matter what I may be experiencing in
this country, I am going to dedicate myself to the principles and
ideals, because as great as our Founders were when they founded this
country in liberty and in justice and equality under the law, it didn't
apply to everyone. It didn't apply to women. Native Americans were
referred to as savages. African Americans were fractions of human
beings. Yet the faith of a people in every generation worked to expand
the concepts of liberty and freedom. They made the Constitution more
real. They made our Union more perfect. They made our country's truth
more true for more people.
It is why great poets like Langston Hughes wrote:
America never was America to me,
And yet I swear this oath--
America will be!
That is the call to the citizenry of this country.
There have been dark days in our past, but every generation of
Americans, despite the dark actions of people in power, understands the
truth that the power of the people is greater than the people in power.
If we never lose faith in the ideals of this Nation, if we keep
standing and working and sacrificing and struggling, every generation
could advance the ideals of our country and make us more free and more
true and more real for more people.
Last week, we saw yet another American leader shrink the ideals of
this country, try to pull us backward to times past when we turned our
backs on people fleeing persecution. What Donald Trump did is try to
pull back on the ideals inscribed on that great statue that sits right
next to New Jersey, the mother of exiles, who says in poetry, among
other things, ``give us''--not ``Hey, you can come in'' but a demand:
Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning
to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
It is a demand to the world that we will take those who are
oppressed, we will take those who are being violated, we will take
those who are being victimized. A President turns his back on those
ideals. We have seen it before.
Dr. Lauren Feldman wrote to me about chapters of dark pasts. She
wrote:
Today is Holocaust Remembrance Day. I am a Jew. My
relatives were unable to find refuge in our country and were
murdered by the Nazis. My grandmother lost her beloved aunt,
Rokhl Rosnick Gertman, and an uncle and 4 young cousins that
she never met. Had we as a country done the right thing and
welcomed the refugees fleeing the Nazis, Tante Rokhl and
millions of others could have joined their family members in
safety and we could have been proud of our country, instead
of ashamed of the racist paper walls built by the FDR
administration to keep my family and others out.
Please tell Mr. Trump that we cannot go back. We must be a
beacon of safety and refuge for the persecuted. Please do all
that you can to prevent this ban from being enacted. Please
think of my relatives and the relatives of your other
constituents and fellow citizens who were needlessly and
shamefully murdered because of our fear and racism. We are
better than that. You are better than that.
She concludes, ``Thank you for your time and service. Dr. Lauren
Feldman, Princeton.''
We are the United States of America. We haven't been perfect, but
there has been a striving and a yearning in every generation to be more
so.
I am a product of people Black and White, Christian and Jewish and
Muslim, who, even though issues didn't affect them directly, knew that
injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. They marched and
they fought. They sat in. They got on buses for freedom rides knowing
they would be bombed. They tried to cross bridges, standing up against
law enforcement, State troopers, Governors who dared them to try to
pass them. There were implacable walls of hatred and racism, but they
stood anyway, and they bled the southern soil red--for my freedom, for
our freedom, for this Nation's freedom.
I have worked all my career for the safety of communities. Yes, we
must make sure our Nation is safe. But don't let fear and concern for
safety ever make us ever turn our backs on our values as a nation. When
we are threatened by our enemies, it is not a time to surrender our
values, it is time to double down on them. The terrorists win if they
change our free hearts and our souls set on liberty.
We as a nation are called to be great, to be a beacon of liberty and
justice. There are people now pulled off of airplanes, forced to return
to communities where their lives are being threatened. We made a
bargain with them: Stand for America. Stand with our military. Stand
against terrorism.
There are people who went through years and years of vetting by
agency after agency, and when they were on the brink of freedom, like
people of old who were on ships that came into our harbor, they were
turned away, back to
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face persecution and injustice. That is not the America I believe in.
It is not who we are.
So I say to our President in prayer, in deep abiding faith: Repeal
your Executive order. Stand up for our principles. Defend them. Be the
champion millions of Americans want you to be.
I say to Americans, to all of us as a country: This is not a time to
despair. It is not a time to give up. It is not a time to grow cynical
or lose faith in our country or our values. No, remember our history.
When dark times come, when it seems that people in the highest points
of power are turning their backs on their ideals, it is not a time to
retreat or equivocate, it is a time to fight, to stand up, to resist.
We are a great nation not just because of the words printed on a
Constitution; we are a great nation because people with great sacrifice
and struggle fought to live those words and to make them real in the
lives of every single person.
America, we must now stand up. The opposite of justice is not just
injustice; it is silence and indifference. This may not affect you or
your family directly, but it is a threat to all of our collective
values.
Go to the Jefferson Memorial and read those final words. Thomas
Jefferson knew that for this Nation to be great, we had to pledge to
each other an unusual level of commitment. He said that we must
mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred
honor.
There is no honor in this Executive order. We as Americans now must
pledge our sacred honor to do all we can to tear this order down so
that the truth of America can rise again.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Rounds). The Senator from Connecticut.
Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, there is a French farmer by the name of
Hector St. John de Crevecoeur. He immigrated to the United States from
Normandy, France, in 1759, and he settled in the Hudson Valley. He
married an American woman. The astounding diversity of those who
settled around him, his fellow farmers, was shocking to him. He said:
It is ``a mixture of English, Scotch, Irish, French, Dutch, Germans,
and Swedes.''
There was one family he knew who had an English grandfather, a Dutch
grandmother, an Anglo-Saxon son who had a French wife, whose four sons
all married women who were from different places of different
nationalities. Hector said: ``From this promiscuous breed, that race
now called Americans has arisen.''
He asked: ``What then is the American, this new man?''
This farmer who came to America from Normandy in 1759 wrote this:
He is an American, who leaving behind him all his ancient
prejudices and manners, receives new ones from the new mode
of life he has embraced, the new government he obeys, and the
new rank he holds. The American is the new man who acts upon
new principles. . . . Here individuals of all nations are
melted into a new race of men.
George Washington told us that the bosom of America is open to the
oppressed and the persecuted of all nations and religions.
That great American philosopher, Alexis de Tocqueville, that observer
of American life, said in a letter:
Imagine, my dear friend, if you can, a society formed of
all the nations of the world . . . people having different
languages, beliefs, opinions: in a word, a society without
roots, without memories, without prejudices, without
routines, without common ideas, without a national character,
yet a hundred times happier than our own.
I am not sure if any of those are completely accurate descriptions of
what an American was or is or whether those are commensurate with our
understanding as to the foundations of this country, but they speak to
this founding ideal of America, this place where you could come from
any part of the world with any set of beliefs, with any religion, with
any skin color, and become something that is uniquely new.
There were people here before those who traveled from far-off lands,
but to be an American is in many ways an invention--an invention of the
amalgamation of faiths of peoples from all over the world.
Both Hector and de Tocqueville talk about the leaving behind of
prejudices when you come to this new country. Inherent in that idea is
this belief of new Americans that the discrimination they faced in
other places could be washed away upon coming to a country, a land at
that time in which everyone was equal, everyone started from the same
place. Of course, that has to be true because this country was founded
by individuals who were fleeing religious persecution, who thought that
America was a place in which they could practice their religion freely.
They could be who they knew themselves to be.
The reason why you hear such anxiety and anger and sadness from many
in this Chamber and from many people we represent is because what
happened on Friday is an abandonment of American originalism. It is a
walking back of the faith that we have held since the days in which
Scotch and Irish and French and Dutch and German and Swede came to this
country believing that they could leave behind prejudices. It feels as
if we are shrinking as a country before our eyes.
A young woman from Stamford, CT, wrote me this beautiful letter, and
I want to read some of it to you. She encapsulates in modern language
what Crevecoeur, Washington, and de Tocqueville were saying centuries
ago. She said:
I am the proud descendant of Syrian immigrants. My great-
grandparent's sacrifices to resettle in Rhode Island have
shaped my entire life. I've grown up very close to my
grandfather, the first generation of his family born in
America, and I know what my ancestors did to be here and
how far we've come from them being persecuted and
subjected to religious violence in Damascus. I was able to
grow up around Syrian culture and appreciate how great-
grandparents made it possible for my entire family to be
where they are now.
To give you an idea, my grandfather went on to receive a
master's degree and was a high school teacher and guidance
counselor. He is also heavily involved in the Roman Catholic
church and quietly serves communion in hospitals each Sunday.
My father, second generation, also received a master's,
serves on hospital boards, and has had a successful career in
human resources. With their encouragement, I have begun a
career as a journalist, one I have dreamed of since I was in
high school.
In 2012, on the 100-year anniversary of my family's arrival
in the United States, I was the third generation in my family
to graduate from high school and enroll in college. . . . I
tell you this because this moves me every day when I go to
work. How amazing it is that my family has gone from being
persecuted for their religion to being able to hold jobs
protected by the First Amendment? Surely, this is something
my great-grandparents never could've dreamed of when they
came here, and I embrace my career with the intention to
honor their sacrifices. . . . Recently, my heart broke at the
executive order to suspend the entry of refugees,
specifically from Syria. I have looked into this extensively
and recently worked on a story about the vetting process. . .
. Trump's order is nothing but xenophobic and racist. I was
preparing to report on a family that was supposed to be
coming to a community near me, but it seems that family won't
be coming now. How truly American it would've been for the
descendant of Syrian immigrants to welcome a new generation
of Syrians into this country.
This is for many cataclysmic because everything they thought about
this country seems to be disappearing in front of us. I understand that
President Trump tries to sell this as something less than it is; that
it isn't a ban on all Muslims entering the United States, it is just a
ban on Muslims from a select set of countries. But these are countries
that encapsulate over 230 million Muslims. That is almost two-thirds of
the population of the United States of America, including some of the
most populous Muslim nations in the world, and it is directly targeted
at people of Muslim faith.
It is simply not credible to say that this isn't a ban on members of
one religion from entering the United States because it selects
countries that are majority Muslim and then includes a caveat that if
you are not of the majority religion, if you are of any religion that
is not the majority religion, you can get around the ban and will be
given priority to come to the United States.
This is a Muslim ban--a Muslim ban that applies to over 200 million
Muslims around the world. It makes us smaller and weaker and less great
as a nation. It also makes us weaker from a national security
standpoint as well.
Let's step back for a second and understand the context here. This
country does face a threat, a serious threat. There are religious
extremists around the world who have perverted the religion of Islam
and tried to turn it into
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a doctrine of violence. They are attempting today to do great violence
in the Middle East and in other parts of the world, and they are trying
to recruit attackers here on U.S. soil. But you are not likely to be
killed in an act of terrorism in this country. In fact, on average,
there have been about three Americans killed every year by terrorism.
I am not trying to underplay the threat. People feel fearful. As a
body, we need to respond to that fear. They see these awful things
happening on TV, and they want us to make sure it will not happen to
them. You are more likely to be killed in this country by lightning or
by an elevator malfunction than you are by terrorism.
If you really want to talk about securing this Nation, about
protecting Americans, then the conversation has to be bigger than just
banning individuals from one country but recognizing the real threats
that are posed.
Let me guarantee you this: If this ban goes into effect, if President
Trump is successful, with the support from the Republican Congress, in
sending a message to the world that America is at war with Islam, then
that number of three Americans killed by terrorism every year will
jump, it will skyrocket. More Americans will be killed by terrorism.
Why? Because today ISIS is on its heels. It is in retreat. It has
substantially less territory than it ever has before, and that has
robbed from it one of its primary rationales for existence, one of its
primary arguments to those it is trying to recruit into its fold--the
idea that ISIS is forming a caliphate, an area of geographic control in
the Middle East.
That argument doesn't work any longer because the supposed caliphate
is shrinking. The amount of territory they control is getting smaller
and smaller. Most folks can see the writing on the wall, that it is
just a matter of time before the Islamic State as a state is gone. But
they have this second rationale for existence, this second argument
that they proffer to would-be recruits, and that is that there is a war
between East and West, that this is really about a long-term struggle
between Islam and Christianity. You need to sign up with us because
they--the West, America, the Christian world--are coming for us.
We know that is not true, and we have watched Presidents of both
parties make it very clear to the world that this is not the fight that
we seek to engage in. Famously, immediately following the 9/11 attacks,
President Bush said:
The face of terror is not the true faith of Islam.
He said:
That's not what Islam is all about. Islam is peace.
Yet the message that is being sent with this ban on Muslims from
these seven countries entering the United States is clear. The message
is that the United States is at war with this religion, that we are at
war with people of the Muslim faith.
As we speak, these recruitment bulletin boards are lighting up with
arguments being made as to the true nature of America's intent against
the Islamic people. One posting on one of these message boards said
that Trump's actions ``clearly revealed the truth and harsh reality
behind the American government and their hatred toward Muslims.''
Another posting on one of these extremist Web sites hailed Trump as the
``best caller to Islam.'' Another message said that the leader of ISIS,
``Al Baghdadi[,] has the right to come out and inform Trump that
banning Muslims from entering America is a blessed ban.'' That is a
phrase with very meaningful connotations. To the extent that these
messaging boards are calling this ban on Muslims entering from seven
countries a ``blessed ban,'' it is rooted in a different phrase,
something called the ``blessed invasion.''
The U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 became the starting point for the
very insurgency that we are fighting today. It was that invasion that
was called by Al Qaeda, Al Qaeda in Iraq, and the affiliated extremist
groups that were drawn into the fight the ``blessed invasion.'' Today
on extremist Web sites, the ban on Muslims entering the United States
is being called the ``blessed ban.''
This order is making this country less safe hour by hour. It is
giving a pathway to rebirth for the very terrorist organizations that
we had made such progress in pushing back and fighting back. In Iran
specifically, it will lead to this country and our allies in the Middle
East losing the fight against hardliners who pose a threat to the
United States, to stability in the Middle East, and to our sacred ally
of Israel. In Iran, there is a contest between moderates--and that is a
relative term within the Iranian political space--and hardliners who
chant ``Death to Israel'' who don't fear a world war or a conflict with
the United States.
With the signing of the Iran nuclear agreement and the lifting of a
handful of sanctions on Iran, the moderates won a victory. The
population of that country--which is surprisingly pro-American and
supported that nuclear agreement--was ascended, potentially
foreshadowing a day in which that country would no longer be a
provocateur in the region and instead could join in conversations about
how to bring stability to the Middle East. Now the hardliners have been
handed a gift, a gift which proves that America is an enemy, not just
of the Iranian state but of the Iranian people.
Remember, when we think of actions that we take against governments
that we don't like, we first try to start with actions that
specifically identify individuals in the government, so that we make it
clear that it is not about the people of that country but about their
leaders. If that isn't strong enough, then we go to sanctions against
commercial interests, against the economy writ large. Yes, those
sanctions do filter down and hurt real people, but the sanctions are
levied at the economy or against commercial actors.
When you enact a specific ban on the people of a country being able
to travel to the United States, you are levying that punishment
directly on those individuals, who, by and large, bear no ill will
toward the United States. You are telling them that it is their fault,
and the Iranian people will turn against the United States, will turn
toward the hardliners based upon this action.
This ban makes us less safe. It will allow for terrorist groups to
rebound. That is not just me saying it. Senators McCain and Graham have
said the same thing. National security experts of both stripes have
testified as such. Tonight I think back to the moment in which I first
heard that Candidate Donald Trump was proposing a ban on all Muslims
entering the United States. I remember the universal bipartisan
derision that met that announcement. It was almost laughable at that
point in time during the campaign. If you remember, Candidate Trump was
flailing. He was weak. He needed to reassert himself. He needed to make
news, and so he grabbed for the most controversial, most outlandish
proposal he could make. Republicans and Democrats here in Congress
condemned it.
Speaker Ryan tweeted this:
A religious test for entering our country is not reflective
of America's fundamental values. I reject it.
Governor Mike Pence said:
Calls to ban Muslims from entering the United States are
offensive and unconstitutional.
A religious test for entering this country is not
reflective of America's fundamental values. I reject it.
Calls to ban Muslims from entering the United States are
offensive and unconstitutional.
I give credit to a small handful of Republicans here in the Senate
and a small handful of Republicans in the House who have raised serious
concerns about this ban with respect to what it says about American
values or what it says about American national security. But there is
utter silence from Republican leadership. Republican leadership--who
only months ago claimed that if there were a religious test for
entering our country, they would reject it--today are quiet. The idea
that individuals could come to this country without regard to their
religion or their national origin or their set of beliefs has never
been a partisan issue. Of all the things that divide us, that idea has
been one that unifies us.
My hope is that there is still a chance that both parties can come
together and recapture the essence of American originalism, can put
this country on firmer national security footing, and can continue the
relentless drive against extremist groups like ISIS that now find
themselves at a point of potential rebirth.
[[Page S485]]
You have heard a lot of stories on the floor of the Senate today. It
is interesting. We have these incredibly compelling stories from real
people who are caught today in the middle of this reckless ill-thought-
out ban. There are 67,000 refugees who are currently in the pipeline to
come to this country right now. This isn't about 100, 200, 300, or 400.
This is about tens of thousands of refugees who are fleeing
persecution, terror, and torture. This is about the 230 million Muslims
who live in those seven countries, who have been told that they are
lesser. Frankly, every other Muslim in the world believes the message
is being sent to them as well.
These stories that we tell you are--the tip of the iceberg isn't even
accurate. This is a pinprick. Fadi Kassar and his family--here are his
two girls. They left Syria in 2011 due to the epic levels of violence
that Fadi was sure would kill his two little girls if he didn't leave.
His family went to the UAE, or the United Arab Emirates. But the way in
which the UAE works is that if you have a job, you can stay, but if you
don't have a job, you leave. When he lost his job, they were kicked out
and that began an epic journey for Fadi and his family.
These girls actually were born in the UAE, as I understand. He was
fleeing Syria to protect his family and his future children, yet they
were kicked out of the country they went to. Fadi then began a journey
to try to find a home for him and his family. He tried to get to Europe
via Tunisia, but he was detained and sent back to Turkey. He eventually
flew to Brazil. He made his way to the United States by crossing the
border with Mexico. Upon entry, he was detained. He was transferred to
Miami. He was released and eventually found his way to Connecticut. He
applied for asylum that was granted in December of 2015.
Fadi's relatives in Syria were tortured and had been detained by the
regime. His neighborhood was dangerous and deadly. Fadi and his family
were exactly the kind of people whom this country historically has been
able to rescue from war-torn countries, from terror, and from torture.
His family had experienced torture. His children were later returned to
Syria and would face potential death.
He went through all of the processes that we asked him to go through.
He didn't go into the shadows. He didn't hide. He applied for asylum
status. It was granted in 2015. He filed forms that would allow for his
wife and two daughters to follow. Those visas were issued last Tuesday,
on January 24.
Originally, they had a flight that was scheduled to bring his wife
and these two little girls to the United States today, but last week,
when Fadi learned of the potential for this Executive order, he paid
$1,000 to move their flight up to Friday. His two little girls and his
wife got on a flight from Jordan to Kiev, Ukraine, and eventually to
the United States. But once in Kiev, their passports and their visas
were taken from them. They were sent to CBP. Their visas were rejected,
and they were returned to Jordan.
These two little girls are back in their old apartment, but they got
rid of all their furniture. They got rid of all their clothes. Their
neighbors have temporarily given them mattresses to sleep on. They
don't even know where their suitcases are. Their father, who is ready
to greet them at the airport here in the United States, may never see
them.
They are scared to death. I have two little boys who are the exact
same age. I have an 8-year-old. I have a 5-year-old. I think about what
these two little girls went through, getting ready to finally go see
their dad who had gone through an epic struggle to try to find
someplace in this world where his two little girls could be safe. He
found it. He found it in America. He found it in my State of
Connecticut.
He found it, just like hundreds of thousands of other people who fled
war-ravaged Europe, who fled the bombing in Vietnam, who left Albania
and Kosovo to come live a better life just like they found. He was
ready to go to the airport to welcome his two little girls, and they
were told that they are not leaving. You are not going to see your dad.
You are going to go back to Jordan and, potentially, eventually back to
Syria.
Imagine what those little girls went through. Imagine millions of
other little boys and girls like them who had in their mind this place
called America, a place that would welcome them, who would rescue them
from the disaster that had become their lives.
Imagine that dream that was literally hours away for these two little
girls extinguishing, and extinguishing for millions of others like them
all around this planet. It is up to us whether that light which
flickered off on Friday relights. It is up to us as to whether we
rekindle the American dream, that idea of America from our founding.
This is not irreversible. These two little girls, you could bring them
here. We could choose to bring them here. It is up to us.
There is legislation on the floor of the Senate right now as we speak
that would rescind this order. It is our decision, right? There are 100
of us. There are only 435 down the hall. There are only 535 of us. It
is our decision whether these two little girls come to the United
States or they go back to their war-ravaged home that their father
left. It is up to us. It is not up to the President of the United
States alone. He does not get to make these decisions by himself.
Democracy allows for us to make a different decision. It is up to us.
I believe we can do it. I believe we can bring these girls here. I
believe we can undo the damage that has been done to this country's
security. I believe we can get back on a path such that ISIS remains on
its heels. I believe we can recapture that idea of that farmer who came
to this country from a far-off land who looked in amazement at the
amalgam of cultures and peoples and religions that was America.
I know this sounds like hyperbole. I know there are a lot of people
out there who say: Wait a second. This is only temporary. It is only
for a few months. It is only for a few countries. But people are
listening and watching. Which direction are we heading? Do we really
care about the things we have always cared about? Millions upon
millions of people, all cross this country and all across this world
are watching. What do we do?
Is this a partisan issue or can we commit ourselves together to stand
up for those basic ideas of America's founding? There are two little
girls who are watching most closely, who are watching to see if we can
rise above partisanship and deliver to them the promise that has been
made real for millions and millions of Americans who call this place
home.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic leader.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, so we have had a number, a large number
of eloquent speeches about the President's Executive order. While they
were going on, of course, we had a Monday night massacre. Sally Yates,
a person of great integrity, who follows the law, was fired by the
President. She was fired because she would not enact, pursue, the
Executive order on the belief that it was illegal, perhaps
unconstitutional.
It was a profile in courage. It was a brave act and the right act. I
hope the President and his people who are in the White House learned
something from this; first, that we are a nation under the rule of law.
You cannot just sit down, Twitter something out, and then think: OK.
Let's enact it. It is a complicated country. When you do something as
major as what the President proposed in his Executive order, you have
to think it through. You have to talk to people.
Sally Yates was the Acting Attorney General. Why wasn't she
consulted? Maybe they would have known what she felt and maybe they
would not have done what they did. Clearly, that lack of consultation
went up and down the line. Sally Yates is from a different
administration. General Kelly was President Trump's selection.
He learned of this Executive order when he got a phone call from the
White House while he saw it being announced on television. How can you
run a country like that? I am hearing from my constituents in New York.
There are hard-core Trump supporters. They are for him. But they are a
small minority of New Yorkers.
There are many progressive, liberal, and pro-immigrant people.
Obviously, they are horrified, but I would say this to the President
and his minions. There are a lot of people who voted for
[[Page S486]]
President Trump--not the hard core--and they are appalled by the simple
ineptitude of this administration. Substantively, even more important,
how can you run a country like this? How can you make a major order,
major doing, and not check it out with your Homeland Security
Secretary, with the Justice Department and the Attorney General?
I will say, if this continues, this country has big trouble. We
cannot have a Twitter Presidency. We cannot have a Presidency that
thinks: Oh, this sounds good. Let's just go do it and not think the
consequences through. Most of all, we cannot have a Presidency that
does not understand the beauty and depth of America, in this case when
it comes to immigrants.
We have been an amazing country. In the city in which I live there is
a big lady in the harbor with a torch. It is a beautiful symbol.
Americans revere it and admire it. The world reveres it and admires it.
Why? Because it says: America will be a place where people can take
refuge if they are persecuted religiously, politically, and then they
can build a great life for themselves.
That is a beautiful thing. That moral force of America helps us win
wars, helps us win support, helps us be the greatest country in the
world that everyone admires.
Of course, we need a strong military. Of course, we need a strong
economy. Praise God, America has had both through the decades, but we
also have been a moral beacon, ``God's noble experiment,'' as the
Founding Fathers called it. In those days, as now, we have welcomed
people from distant shores and said: Come be Americans.
Our President is trampling on that, to be honest with you. The idea
that immigrants are preponderantly criminals and preponderantly
terrorists is absurd. They are the future of America. In my State of
New York, 25 percent of the people are foreign born, probably as high
as 40 percent if you are either foreign born or had a parent foreign
born.
They are great New Yorkers. I was with a Syrian refugee this week. He
and his wife and his children had just come. His parents were American
citizens. They had come to America in 1970. The parents and Mr. Elias,
who lived in the Bronx, came here. He was a tailor. We don't have that
many fine tailors in America these days. It is a lost art. So people
who do it tend to be immigrants; mainly from Italy is my experience.
But he was a tailor from Syria. He then did what immigrants do in
America. He founded a little business. He reupholsters boats, a lot of
them in a place in the Bronx called City Island. He built a company. He
made America better. He is a Syrian immigrant.
His children and grandchildren were in danger. A suicide bomber had
even blown up himself in front of their home nearly killing them. They
just got in this month. Had Donald Trump's Executive order been in
effect several weeks earlier, they would not have been able to get
here. They might have perished. They might have been hurt.
Similarly, another guy I met is Mohammed. Mohammed knows English. He
was so impressed by America, by the lady with the torch, by our values,
by what we stand for, that he volunteered to be a translator for our
soldiers. He put his life in danger for doing that.
Then he began to get threats from the terrorists in Iraq. He is an
Iraqi. His wife was in danger. His children were in danger. He came
January 5. Again, had President Trump and his evil order--and that is
what it is, it is evil--gone into effect January 1, for all we know
Mohammed would have died for helping our soldiers.
Do we have to prevent terrorists from coming into America?
Absolutely.
The greatest source of terror are lone wolves. Americans, citizens--
ISIS gets its evil ideas in their heads, and they do terrorist things.
John McCain, my colleague, the senior Senator from Arizona who is an
expert on this stuff, said: This Executive order will encourage and
increase the number of lone wolves.
Here is another group that needs tightening, I would suggest to the
President and his minions: those available in the Visa Waiver Program.
If you are a country that has generally been friendly to us, there is
something called the Visa Waiver Program, which means you can come into
this country with very few questions asked, very little vetting.
Refugees are vetted for 2 years. That is why not a single refugee
from any of the countries that were proscribed by the President has
committed an act of terror here--not a single one.
I heard someone defending the President saying: Well, all these
people would have come in; the terrorists would have come in had they
done it slowly and announced a date.
Well, we have done it like this for 15, 20 years, and we haven't had
a single terrorist come in. What kind of absurdity is that?
Anyway, the Visa Waiver Program allows people from, say, France and
Belgium to come into this country with few questions asked. We have
seen French citizens, Belgian citizens do terrorism. They would be
allowed to come into this country to do it here. Why aren't we
tightening that up? That is what should be done.
So I am going to conclude. The evening is late.
Sally Yates was a profile in courage, a profile in courage. Maybe
some of her courage, her insight, and her wisdom would rub off on the
people in the White House. Maybe they will back off and repeal this
Executive order, and then we can work together and truly try to tighten
up the laws, the actions of the administration to prevent terrorists
from coming in.
This Executive order makes us less safe. It was poorly done in a
slipshod, quick way that foretells real trouble in the White House,
and, most of all, it has done more to tarnish the great American dream,
the great moral force of America that has, in part, made us the
greatest country in the world--in 1, 2 days, undoing the work of
generations.
Please, Mr. President, reconsider. Really think about this. Don't
just tweet. Don't just get mad. Don't just call names. Think about it.
Change it. Repeal it.
It is too far gone to change; we have to repeal it. And then maybe we
can work together on tightening up some of the areas that I have talked
about.
I see my friend from Arizona has come to the floor, and I will not
hold him up, so I yield the floor.
____________________