Top 10 Reasons Governors are Wrong to
Exclude Syrian Refugees
By Juan Cole
November 17, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Some half of US governors have announced their
opposition to their states taking in Syrian refugees
after the Paris attacks. Although they can bother
refugees, they can’t actually dictate to people who are
here legally where they can live. But anyway, here are
the reasons for which these announcements are a form of
political hysteria and not grounded in any rational
policy considerations:
1. The attackers in Paris were
European nationals. The Syrian passport found near one
of them was a fake. So are the governors opposed to
Belgian immigration into the United States?
2. The attackers were not refugees.
They were born in Europe. Refugees are poor and lacking
in knowledge or resources about their new environment.
The attackers knew exactly where everything was that
they wanted to assault and were hooked in with arms
smugglers and other hard-to-discover criminal networks.
3. There is no rational reason to bar
Syrian refugees but accept refugees from other conflict
areas. The US already admits 70,000 refugees every year,
but only took in about 400 Syrians last year. Most
refugees are fleeing conflict situations or oppressive
governments, and if you wanted to be paranoid about them
you could fear them all on the same grounds that the GOP
fears Syrians. The US has accepted
a former child soldier from the Congo (might have
skills).
In 2014 the US accepted 758 refugees from
Afghanistan; how are they different from Syrian
refugees? And here’s the kicker: the US accepted
19,651 refugees from Iraq last year! It is
completely irrational to single out Syrians if you are
going to take in Iraqis.
4.These
refugees
undergo at least 18 months of background checks,
contrary to what Sen. Mario Rubio (whose parents were
Cuban immigrants to the US) has alleged.
5.
The Economist points out that since 2001, the US has
admitted roughly 750,000 refugees and none, zero, nada
have been accused of involvement in domestic terrorism
aimed at the US homeland (2 Iraqis were accused of
trying to help a terrorist organization back in Iraq).
6. The need is urgent. Of the some 22
million Syrians, a good half are homeless. About 7.5
million have been displaced within the country and some
4 million have been forced abroad. Little Jordan (pop. 6
million) has taken 800,000. Little Lebanon (pop. 4
million) has taken 1.2 million. Turkey (pop. 75 million)
has taken 2 million. Sweden is accepting Syrian refugees
without announcing limits. Germany is taking tens of
thousands (though probably most of the refugees
Chancellor Angela Merkel has accepted are not Syrians).
Winter is arriving and the refugees have no proper
shelter, clothing or nourishment. The US has to step up
in the face of one of the world’s great humanitarian
crises.
7. Syrian refugees are not guerrilla
fighters or terrorists. They are fleeing the oppression
of the Bashar al-Assad government or the brutality of
Daesh (ISIS, ISIL) or al-Qaeda. The are the victims of
America’s enemies.
8. The US owes these refugees. Without
the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, there would have been
no al-Qaeda in that part of the world, and no al-Qaeda
offshoots like Daesh/ ISIL. Why do the governors (most
of whom supported the invasion of Iraq) think the US can
go around the world sowing instability and being
responsible for creating the conditions that lead to
millions of refugees but then can avoid the
responsibility of ameliorating those broken lives?
9. Some US politicians, such as Ted
Cruz, have spoken of taking in only Christian refugees.
That step would be unconstitutional. But let’s remember
that such a policy would have excluded Albert Einstein
from coming to the US in 1933, after the Nazis seized
his property in Germany. You wonder without such refugee
intellectuals, would the US have fallen behind Nazi
Germany on, e.g., constructing an atomic bomb?
10. Cruz’s call for Christian refugees
to be given special privileges reminds us of the the
racist
Chinese Exclusion Act, which derived in part from
Christian American dislike of those they called
“heathens.” Religion is often an element in the
construction of ethnicity, so the privileging of
Christianity has a long history of being a stealth form
of racism.
Juan Ricardo Cole is a public
intellectual, prominent blogger and essayist, and the
Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor of History at
the University of Michigan.
© 2014 Juan Cole