Code Orange: Diminishing the Terrorist Threat to America: Executive SummaryFile Attached - click here for more info Executive SummaryAmerica remains under threat and vulnerable to attacks by international terrorists. While progress has been made since September 11, 2001, to tighten visa issuance procedures and enhance intelligence cooperation in preventing international terrorists from entering the country, this makes it more likely that the continuing vulnerability of our borders to illegal entry will be exploited in the next terrorist attack against us. The additional resources that have been allocated to border control since 9/11 are only making a dent in the problem because nothing has been done to deter thousands of foreigners from attempting illegal entry every day in response to the job magnet that draws them here. Only when the assault on our borders is diminished by denying jobs to illegal workers will we be able to gain effective control over our borders. The measures recently adopted in the 9/11 Intelligence Act and in the Real ID Act will be beneficial if they are fully enforced, but important changes such as new driver’s license standards are not due to be implemented until the end of 2007 and their implementation faces strong opposition. Efforts to end sanctuaries abroad for international terrorists must be accompanied by efforts to end sanctuary policies in the United States that may facilitate terrorist operations. Additional measures are needed to strengthen both border security and security in the interior of the country. Measures that improve security in the interior of the country will assist in gaining control over the border, and greater border control will facilitate the process of diminishing the illegal alien population living in the interior of the country. Granting amnesty to those now living illegally in the country is not a solution to the terrorist threat, and it likely would aggravate the threat by diverting Department of Homeland Security (DHS) resources from their primary responsibilities and encourage increased illegal entry by persons attracted by the hope of benefiting from recurring amnesties. On this fourth anniversary of the tragic and horrific September 11, 2001, attacks on our country, we offer in the memory of the innocent victims of those attacks our considered recommendations for lessening the threat of further attacks. The recommendations below address conditions that exist today. They include a call to enforce the law where it is not being enforced, identification of efforts to undermine reform measures already due to be implemented, and for new reform measures that are needed to turn the tide on our continued vulnerability to terrorists. The measures that are identified are all necessary components to weaving a fabric of security. Failure to take a holistic approach to national security will perpetuate our vulnerability in the same way that it is impossible to control the border today as long as interior immigration law enforcement is slighted. Gaining Greater Border Security
Gaining Greater Interior Security
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