Iraqi Refugees to Settle in U. S.
The Iraqi refugee problem is showing more unseen consequences of war. Wars should only be fought as a last resort. If 7,000 Iraqis refugees come to the U.S., how many of those will be radical Muslims? Our State Department does not do a good job of keeping out undesirables. Suppose only 10% of the 7,000 Iraqi refugees allowed into the U.S. are radical Islamists who hate secularism and feminism! Will they change and assimilate or will they become terrorists?
During the past few years the foreign policy of the United States has caused its popularity in the Muslim world to plummet. President Bush has often said we need to fight the terrorists over there so we will not have to fight them here. Now he proposes to bring them here with our financial support! The world gets stranger and stranger. After one of the refugees kills someone in a terrorists attack, the Department of Homeland Security will ask for a bigger budget and more of our freedoms. The State is like an arsonist who gets paid to put out her own fires. Maybe the State wants another terrorist attack. It will keep the hoi polloi aroused and loyal.
Bilbo Baggins
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http://www.sierratimes.com/07/02/20/refugees.htm
COLUMBUS - Gov. Ted Strickland on Wednesday had a message for President Bush: any plan to relocate thousands of refugees uprooted by the Iraq war to the U.S. shouldn't include Ohio.
The Bush administration plans to allow about 7,000 Iraqi refugees to settle in the United States over the next year, a huge expansion at a time of mounting international pressure to help millions who have fled their homes in the nearly four-year-old war.
The United States has allowed only 463 Iraq refugees into the country since the war began in 2003, even though some 3.8 million have been uprooted.
Strickland, a Democrat who opposed the war as a U.S. House member, said Ohioans cannot be expected to have open arms for Iraqis displaced by the war. More than 100 Ohioans have been killed since the war began.
"I think Ohio and Ohioans have contributed a lot to Iraq in terms of blood, sweat and too many tears," Strickland said. "I am sympathetic to the plight of the innocent Iraqi people who have fled that country. However, I would not want to ask Ohioans to accept a greater burden than they already have borne for the Bush administration's failed policies."
The decision to allow about 7,000 Iraqis to come to the United States answers mounting political and diplomatic pressure on the administration to do more to remedy the consequences of a war it largely started. Only 202 Iraqis were allowed in last year.
The administration also said it will immediately contribute $18 million for a worldwide resettlement and relief program.
The United Nations has asked for $60 million from nations around the world.
The U.S. has a responsibility to help Iraqis who face danger in their own country for helping Americans topple Saddam Hussein's government, said Abid Al-Marayati, a professor of government at the University of Toledo who left Iraq in 1958.
"It's not a question of whether we should accept them or not. These people served the U.S. forces," Al-Marayati said. "I think for our country, we could absorb that (number of refugees) quite easily."
While Ohio's economy is struggling, the refugees would take whatever work was available, Al-Marayati said.
"I feel bad for those people. They cannot live in Iraq anymore," he said.
The U.S. proposal also includes plans to offer special treatment for Iraqis still in their country whose cooperation with the U.S. puts them at risk.
Expanding visa programs for those Iraqis would require legislation in Congress, State Department Undersecretary Paula J. Dobriansky said Wednesday.
Some 2 million Iraqis have left their country, and an additional 1.8 million are believed to have relocated inside Iraq.
The refugee flow has increased sharply as sectarian violence has increased over the past year.
The numbers have overwhelmed the hospitality of Arab neighbors such as Syria and Jordan.
The United Nations says most of those who have been uprooted have no desire to come to the United States, and want to return to their homes in Iraq when fighting stops.
But allies, U.N. diplomats and lawmakers of both parties have recently told the administration that the small number of Iraqis the U.S. has allowed in looks miserly.
Syria has taken in an estimated 1 million Iraqis. It was the last Arab country to take in large numbers.
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