Broad & Liberty ran my piece on potential terrorists from Tajikistan coming across the Southern Border today.
You can read the
piece via the below link or the below text:
Paul Davis: From Tajikistan With Love (broadandliberty.com)
In Ian Fleming’s 1959 classic spy thriller, the Soviet counterterrorism agency SMERSH dispatched a psychopathic murderer named Donovan “Red” Grant to assassinate British intelligence operative James Bond and discredit British intelligence in a sex scandal. With his tongue slightly in cheek, Ian Fleming called his serious, dark, and complicated novel From Russia With Love.
On June 12th,
eight suspected terrorists who reportedly entered the U.S. illegally through
the southern border were arrested in New York, Los Angeles and Philadelphia by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. The eight apprehended
illegals are suspected of having ties to the terrorist organization ISIS
in Tajikistan. The New York
Post reported that at least one of the suspects was recorded on a
wiretap discussing bombs.
Were the
suspected terrorists sent from Tajikistan “with love” to the United States in
order to commit acts of terrorism? With one of the suspects arrested
here, one wonders if Philadelphia is a potential terrorism target.
“Over the last
few days, ICE agents arrested several non-citizens pursuant to immigration
authorities. The actions were carried out in close coordination with the FBI’s
Joint Terrorism Task Forces. The individuals arrested are detained in ICE
custody pending removal proceedings,” the FBI and the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) noted in a released statement. “As the FBI and DHS have recently
described in public and partner bulletins, the U.S. has been in a heightened
threat environment. The FBI and DHS will continue working around the clock with
our partners to identify, investigate, and disrupt potential threats to
national security.”
According to news
sources, the eight suspects crossed the porous southern border illegally and
were processed through what the U.S. government called a “full vetting” and
then released into the United States after nothing derogatory was reported
against them.
But considering
that most illegal aliens carry no identification and often give fictitious
names, I’ve not much faith in the full vetting process.
According to a
June 25th report by NBC News, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has
identified more than 400 illegal aliens brought into the U.S. by an
ISIS-affiliated network. DHS has labeled these illegals as “subjects of
concern.”
According to a
government official who spoke to NBC, about 50 of them remain in the wind
across the United States, with ICE agents seeking to arrest them on terrorism
charges. About 150 of the illegals have been apprehended and some have
been deported.
“In this case, it
was the information that suggested a potential tie to ISIS because of some of
the individuals involved in smuggling migrants to the border that led us to
want to take extra care,” a senior official said to NBC.
Back in March,
FBI Director Christopher Wray expressed his concern about terrorists crossing
the Southern border, but he said he knew of no specific plot.
Testifying before
the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence during the annual Worldwide Threats
Assessment hearing, Wray said, “Some of the overseas facilitators of the
smuggling network have ties with ISIS that we’re very concerned about, and
we’ve been spending an enormous amount of effort with our partners
investigating,” Wray said. “Exactly what that network is up to is something
that is, again, the subject of our current investigation.”
Back in 2013, I
interviewed then-Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey in his
office at the old Roundhouse police headquarters. I asked Commissioner Ramsey
if Philadelphia was a terrorist target.
He noted that
Philadelphia was geographically located on the Eastern Corridor between New
York City and Washington D.C.
“The harder the
target they make New York, the harder they make D.C., the more attractive
Philadelphia will look to terrorists,” Ramsey said. “The historical monuments
and institutions we have here in Philadelphia make the city a target of value
to someone who wants to psychologically harm the United States, in addition to
actually harming people.”
Ramsey said that
from the standpoint of homeland security, Philadelphia receives millions of
tourist visitors each year, and the city has a major port, an international
airport and many other business, government, historical and cultural
institutions.
“Philadelphia has
a lot going on,” Ramsey said.
That assessment
is still true today.
We need to secure
the southern border to prevent further potential terrorists from entering the
United States, and we need to round up those who have already come through. And
the Philadelphia Police, the Feds, other public officials, and the general public
all need to be diligent in order to prevent a terrorist attack here.
Paul Davis, a Philadelphia writer and frequent contributor to Broad + Liberty, also contributes to Counterterrorism magazine and writes the “On Crime” column for the Washington Times. He can be reached at pauldavisoncrime.com.
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