By Deroy Murdock
While Americans march against Arizona's new restrictions on unlawful immigration (and the US administration gets
on with its decision challenging the law in courts), hundreds of illegal aliens from countries awash in Muslim terrorists
tiptoe across the U.S.-Mexican frontier.
According to the federal
Enforcement Integrated Database, 125 individuals were apprehended along the border from fiscal year 2009 through April 20,
2010.
These deportable aliens included two Syrians, seven Sudanese,
and 17 Iranians, all nationals from the three Islamic countries that the U.S. government officially classifies as state sponsors
of terrorism.
Federal authorities also track "special interest
countries" from which terrorism could be directed against America. Over the aforementioned period, 99 of those nations'
citizens also were nabbed on the border.
They were two Afghans,
five Algerians, 13 Iraqis, 10 Lebanese, 22 Nigerians, 28 Pakistanis, two Saudis, 14 Somalis, and three Yemenis. During 2007
and 2008, federal officials caught 319 men from the same countries traversing America's southwest border.
Some such characters were confined in Arizona, which recently adopted a controversial
law that lets cops ask the citizenship status of those they suspect of other possible violations.
WSB-TV recently publicized an April 15, 2010, "population breakdown" of immigrants detained at a facility
in Florence, Ariz. Of the 395 males behind bars, 198 were Mexican, 18 hailed from Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Nigeria,
Pakistan, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.
Perhaps these gentlemen
simply want to "pursue the American dream." [But who knows their real intentions.] Worrisome signs suggest that
some may have arrived via blistering, cactus-adorned deserts so they could blow Americans to smithereens.
Texas Border Patrol agents discovered, along with Iranian currency and Islamic
prayer rugs, an Arabic clothing patch that reads "martyr" and "way to immortality." Another shows a jet
flying into a skyscraper.
"Members of Hezballah, the Lebanon-based
terrorist organization, have already entered the United States across our southwest border," declares "A Line in
the Sand," a 2006 report by the House Homeland Security Investigations Subcommittee, then-chaired by Rep. Michael McCaul,
R-Texas.
Even more disturbing are the uninvited terrorists and
terror suspects that were arrested after entering America through our permeable underbelly:
Mahmoud Youssef Kourani pleaded guilty in March 2005 to providing material support to terrorists. First, Kourani
secured a visa by bribing a Mexican diplomat in Beirut. He and another Middle Easterner then hired a Mexican guide to escort
them into America. Finally, Kourani settled in Dearborn, Michigan's Lebanese-immigrant community, and raised cash for Hezballah.
Miguel Alfonso Salinas was caught in New Mexico near the international
border in 2006. As The Washington Examiner reported, one week of FBI interrogation exposed Salinas as an Egyptian named Ayman
Sulmane Kamal. Evidently, he remains in federal custody.
Then-National
Intelligence Director Mike McConnell said that in 2006 and 2007, at least 30 potentially dangerous Iraqis were found trying
to penetrate America via Mexico. As McConnell told the El Paso Times: "There are numerous situations where people are
alive today because we caught them."
The Department of
Homeland Security issued an April 14 intelligence alert regarding a possible border-crossing attempt by a Somali named Mohamed
Ali. He is a suspected member of Al-Shabaab, a Somali-based al-Qaida ally tied to the deadly attack on American GIs in 1993's
notorious "Blackhawk Down" incident in Mogadishu.
Captured
in Brownsville, Texas, Ahmed Muhammed Dhakane pleaded not guilty on May 14 to federal charges that he "ran a large-scale
smuggling enterprise" designed to sneak East Africans through Mexico into Texas, including "several AIAI-affiliated
Somalis into the United States." Al-Ittihad Al-Islami is yet another Muslim-extremist organization.
Daniel Joseph Maldonado also has Somali ties. He was picked up in Somalia in 2007
during terrorist training. He was returned to Houston for prosecution. As Rice University's Joan Neuhas Schaan told KHOU-TV:
"They had plans for him to come back to the United States and recruit female suicide bombers."
All this
involves only the bad guys who the authorities nailed. Those who have stayed undetected after crossing the border to murder
Americans remain, by definition, invisible.
[Deroy Murdock is
a columnist with Scripps Howard News Service and a media fellow with the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace at
Stanford University. E-mail him at Deroy.Murdock@gmail.com.]
© Scripps Howard News Service