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Obama calls U.S. to take in at least 10,000 more Syrian refugees

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Obama calls U.S. to take in at least 10,000 more Syrian refugeesPresident Barack Obama has ordered his administration to “scale up” the quantity of Syrian refugees admitted to the u. s. within the coming year, leading his team to organize for a minimum of 10,000 within the next year, the White House said last week.

The announcement comes amid growing pressure for the U.S. to extend the amount of refugees it accepts as those displaced by the raging Syrian war pour into Europe and different regions.

Before the White House announcement, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi criticized the amount of extra refugees the Obama administration had said last week that it had been trying to simply accept — just 5,000.

This is really important. I think 5,000 is far too low a figure,” relating the number Secretary of State John Kerry had mentioned to lawmakers last week, in keeping with legislature aides and alternative sources at home with the meeting.

That would increase the whole range of refugees allowed into the U.S. to 75,000 for 2016. That range includes refugees from round the world however would enable the U.S. to lift the cap on Syrian refugees.

A Senate aide said that Kerry had also told senators that “they’d seek an additional increase beyond that.”

He gave a range of numbers,” the aide said. Kerry mentioned a potential new total as high as 100,000, as well as other possible maximum numbers, according to the aide.

Pelosi last week said that California Democratic Rep. Zoe Lofgren is working on a “far more ambitious” proposal that would allow for a greater number of refugees to come in.

The administration plans to resettle 1,800 Syrian refugees by Oct. 1. Human rights groups have called on the U.S. to accept 65,000 Syrian refugees by the end of next year. Last spring, Democratic lawmakers wrote to President Obama asking him to “significantly increase” the number of Syrians permitted to resettle in the U.S.

Kerry and Assistant Secretary for Population, Refugees and Migration Ann Richard told lawmakers that they could come back to seek congressional agreement, or an “emergency exception” to bring in more refugees, a source familiar with the meeting said. A congressional aide said Kerry suggested he could return to Congress to ask for their support for admitting as many as 30,000 more refugees.

We are looking hard at the number that we can specifically manage with respect to the crisis in Syria and Europe,” he said after the meeting. “That’s being vetted fully right now.”

A senior State Department official briefing reporters said there were “varying views among lawmakers present at the meeting about accepting more refugees.” The official said Kerry proposed “a range of different numbers.

The thinking all along this year was we could move to increase it, some sort of a modest increase,” the official said. “Given what’s going on in the world today, I know that there’s a lot of people outside the administration, and inside the administration, too, in very senior positions, who would like to increase it significantly.

The official added: “The question becomes, will Congress support that? Can we move this process that we have, that doesn’t turn on a dime, to start bringing larger numbers sooner? That’s hard.”

The official added the main objective of the resettlement program was to ensure refuges admitted to the U.S. return home once the conflict ends, which was difficult to do when they were resettled so far from home.

In a statement after the meeting, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican, expressed his concerns.

While he said Kerry was seeking a “reasonable increase” in refugees allowed into the U.S. for the approaching year, pertaining to the 5,000 figure, he extra that “when pressed, the administration indicated that they were considering gap the floodgates and using emergency authority to travel on top of what they planned to Congress in consultation.”

He continued, “Before agreeing to accept tens of thousands of Syrian refugees, the Obama administration must prove to the American people that it will take the necessary precautions to ensure that national security is a top priority, especially at a time when ruthless terrorist groups like ISIS are committed to finding ways to enter the United States and harm Americans.

Vetting the Syrian refugees has been a problem. The U.S. depends on U.N. lists of refugees who are deemed safe candidates for relocation, however the screening method will take between eighteen and twenty four months and strains the resources of the Department of Homeland Security and Customs and Immigration Services.

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper said last week that the current migration is a “disaster of biblical proportions” that poses an opportunity for terrorist groups such as ISIS to “infiltrate operatives among these refugees.

What we’re trying to do is weed out people who are liars, who are criminals or would-be terrorists,” a senior State Department official said.

“I believe that the President has made it clear he wants the United States — which has always taken a leadership role with respect to humanitarian issues and particularly refugees — to be able to do what we can,” Kerry told after his meeting with senators last week.

“We are committed to increasing the number of refugees we take and we are looking hard at the number we can specifically manage with respect to the crisis in Syria and Europe and their migration today,” Kerry said.

Kerry’s meeting is part of an annual discussion the administration has with Congress to set its refugee admissions quota for the next fiscal year.

But while the meeting is routine, it comes at a time when unprecedented international attention is being paid to the issue of refugee resettlement.

More than half the population of Syria has been displaced by the ongoing civil war, and the flow of refugees in the Middle East and Europe has put a strain on countries’ resources and divided local populations.

The U.S. has accepted just over 1,500 refugees from the crisis so far, the vast majority of them in the past year.

The rate of admissions is growing, but the U.S. is limited in how quickly it can resettle refugees because of both admissions quotas and security concerns.

Last week, State Department spokesman John Kirby said the administration’s response to the crisis would need to be balanced against “the proper vetting procedures to make sure that, particularly when we’re bringing in people from that part of the world, that we’re doing it safely and securely.”

Congressional Republicans in particular have raised alarm bells for months over the possibility that Syrian extremists — including ISIS sympathizers — could enter country by pretending to be refugees, potentially committing attacks against the homeland.

John Turner
John Turnerhttp://www.patriotdirect.org/
Dedicated to upgrowth, developement and prepared for the "worst" to come... Simple guy, simple skills, simple attitude. Just an ordinary guy who tries to survive!

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