[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 148 (2002), Part 8]
[House]
[Pages 11254-11255]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




         ISSUANCE OF VISAS IS NOW A NATIONAL SECURITY FUNCTION

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the 
gentleman from Florida (Mr. Weldon) is recognized for 5 minutes.
  Mr. WELDON of Florida. Mr. Speaker, tomorrow the Subcommittee on 
Civil Service, Census and Agency Organization will begin examination of 
one of the most vital components of the President's homeland security 
proposal. Our homeland security starts abroad, and nothing is more 
important than who gets issued a visa.
  The issuance of visas can no longer be thought of as a mere 
diplomatic function. It is now a national security issue, and must be 
our first line of defense. While the President recognizes the 
importance of visa issuance and the obvious problems, the current 
proposed legislation does not go far enough. The entire visa program 
should be part of the proposed Homeland Security Department.
  The State Department views the issuance of visas as a diplomatic 
tool. The day is past when it should be viewed this way. It is now 
clearly a national security function. The fragmented approach, where 
the Secretary of Homeland Security issues regulations regarding visas, 
but actual operational control remains under the State Department, is 
not acceptable.
  Just as we work hard to prevent biological, chemical, or other 
weapons of mass destruction from making their way to our shores, so we 
must keep terrorists, deadly weapons in and of themselves, keep them 
from coming into our homeland. A strong visa issuance program is 
essential to achieve that objective.
  We are all too aware of the fact that 15 of the 19 September 11 
terrorists had obtained ``appropriate'' visas. This is unacceptable. No 
longer can the issuing of visas be a diplomatic function; it must be a 
security function, with proper scrutiny only a trained agent can apply. 
Diplomats are trained to be diplomats. Visa issuance should not be 
about speed and service with a smile.
  Recent news reports have brought to light a program in Saudi Arabia 
called ``visa express.'' It allows private Saudi travel agents to 
process visa paperwork on behalf of Saudi residents. Three of the 
September 11 terrorists obtained their visas this way, never being 
interviewed by anyone in the consular office.
  When the program began, it was advertised as helping qualified 
applicants obtain U.S. visas quickly and easily. Applicants will no 
longer have to take time off from work, they said, no longer have to 
wait in long lines or under the hot sun in crowded waiting rooms. I am 
quoting from State Department documents.
  Here are some of the September 11 terrorists who came into this 
country under the visa express program. Salem Al-Hamzi, age 20, arrived 
in the United States with a tourist visa obtained through visa express.
  Here is another one: Khalid Al-Midhar, a 25-year-old gentleman. He 
was one of the people on Flight 77 that crashed into the Pentagon.
  Here is another one: Abdulaziz Al-Omari, 28, arrived in the U.S. on a 
tourist visa in June of 2001, a pilot of the American Airlines Flight 
111 that crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Centers.
  Now, under this program, the Saudi citizens just go to a Saudi travel 
agent, and they fill out a two-page form. They paid a fee and went home 
and waited for their visas to arrive in the mail. There was no 
interview with any American official. One senior consular affairs 
official describes the program as an open-door policy for terrorists to 
come into the United States.
  Mr. Speaker, it seems to me that we have our priorities out of order 
here. This is not customer service; it is national security. Visa 
issuance must be in the homeland security system from top to bottom. 
This is the only way the Secretary of Homeland Security will be able to 
completely and thoroughly protect our borders, by preventing terrorists 
from ever making it into our homeland.
  We must change the culture of the way we issue visas. It is no longer 
sufficient for this process to be an entry-level position for a person 
at a college. It is simply too vital to our national security.
  Mr. Speaker, security begins abroad. I feel the burden is on the 
administration to prove to us why the Bureau of

[[Page 11255]]

Consular Affairs is fragmented and a pseudo part of homeland security. 
Thus far, they have not convinced me of the need for this fragmentation 
in this area. I support putting all of consular affairs in homeland 
security.

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