{"id":16896,"date":"2018-04-16T16:05:43","date_gmt":"2018-04-16T20:05:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/live-immigrationreform.pantheonsite.io\/?p=16896"},"modified":"2018-12-28T10:35:30","modified_gmt":"2018-12-28T15:35:30","slug":"illegal-alien-pipeline-bangladesh-texas-warning-sign","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.immigrationreform.com\/2018\/04\/16\/illegal-alien-pipeline-bangladesh-texas-warning-sign\/","title":{"rendered":"Why the Illegal Alien Pipeline from Bangladesh to Texas is a Warning Sign"},"content":{"rendered":"
For years, experts have been expressing their fears about terrorists sneaking across our border with Mexico. In 2012, the House Homeland Security Committee published a report<\/a> noting that terrorists will inevitably exploit our porous southern border. In its January 2017 Public Safety Threat Overview<\/em> the Texas Department of Public Safety<\/a> raised the very same concerns.<\/em><\/p>\n However, open-borders advocates deride the notion that terrorists might exploit the ever-present chaos<\/a> on the southern border<\/a> as foolish. They claim that since \u2013 to date \u2013 there have been no terrorist attacks carried out in the U.S. by illegal entrants who crossed the southern border, the threat is low<\/a>. But data recently released by the Department of Homeland Security indicates that Islamic terror groups may have finally become aware of just how porous our southern border really is.<\/p>\n U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has \u00a0announced<\/a> that the Laredo Border Patrol Sector is, for the second year running, the number one crossing point for Bangladeshi nationals attempting to enter the U.S. Illegally. Since the start of fiscal year 2018, the Laredo Sector has apprehended approximately 171 Bangladesh citizens. And KGNS<\/a>, Texas, reports that CBP arrested<\/a> nearly 180 Bangladeshis in the Laredo Sector during fiscal year 2017. \u00a0Laredo seems to be emerging as the epicenter of a new smuggling route that brings South Asian and Afghan migrants to the United States via Latin America.<\/p>\n Aside from the obvious fact that Bangladesh is a long way from Mexico \u2013 sandwiched between Bhutan and India \u2013 why is this noteworthy? There are two reasons:<\/p>\n As FAIR has repeatedly noted, we are living in an age where national security and immigration<\/a> are intimately and inextricably intertwined. After losing most of its physical territory, ISIS is looking to regroup and continue its operations<\/a>.\u00a0 Al-Qaeda is hoping to regain its position as the world\u2019s pre-eminent jihadist terror organization. And the fastest route to either of those goals is a dramatic, large-scale terror attack in the United States, which is much easier to plan and carry out once a terrorist is inside the U.S.<\/p>\n It\u2019s time for America to get serious about hardening our porous southern border against exploitation by terrorists. We need to build President Trump\u2019s border wall. And we need to build it quickly, before our border begins to look like Europe\u2019s, awash in Middle Eastern \u201crefugees\u201d who are impossible to thoroughly vet.<\/p>\n \n