By Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
“More than 70 repatriation missions
have returned 1,500 fighters to their home countries, yet much work
remains,” Adm. Brad Cooper told a UN conference
in New York. “Today, I join you all in calling on every nation with
detained or displaced personnel in Syria to return your citizens.”
The ‘citizens’ and ‘fighters’ in question are ISIS. And some are coming here.
Even
while one arm of the Trump administration is trying to deport Islamic
terrorists and their supporters, another is trying to import them into
our communities and around the world.
While ISIS is rebounding in Syria,
carrying out 117 attacks, the United States has adopted the position
that the tens of thousands of ISIS ‘detainees’ left over from the
previous defeat of the Jihadist group have to be distributed around the
region and the world including to the U.S.
When an Al Qaeda group known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) seized control over Syria,
with backing from the Islamist terror regimes in Turkey and Qatar, the
Trump administration had a choice between opposing the move or
supporting it as a way of getting US troops out of Syria.
The Trump administration dropped sanctions
and a $10 million bounty on the head of former Al Qaeda leader and ISIS
ally Ahmed al-Sharaa (formerly Abu Mohammed al-Jolani) who along with
some of his former Al Qaeda associates was able to tour New York City.
Widely reported attacks on Christians, Druze and other minority groups
by Sunni Jihadists soon followed.
But the real and much less
widely reported issue for the United States that hardly anyone was
talking about were the tens of thousands of ISIS detainees being held by
the Kurdish militias known as the Syrian Democratic Forces. Unlike the
Sunni Jihadist groups that were touted as ‘democratic’ during the heyday
of the Syrian Civil War, the SDF is non-Islamist, includes Christians
and women, does have Marxist roots, but is the only non-Jihadist game in
town.
Turkey’s Islamist regime is obsessed with suppressing the
Kurds in its own country and in those areas that its ruler, Erdogan,
wants to expand into to rebuild the Ottoman caliphate, like Syria.
During the ISIS war, Turkey covertly backed Al Qaeda, ISIS and other
Jihadist groups to attack the Kurds. Erdogan did not go to all this
trouble just to leave the SDF intact and operational.
The ISIS
camps contain at least 9,000 ISIS Jihadis and around 30,000 ISIS family
members, who maintain their own mini-ISIS state within the camps, with
mothers preparing their children for an endless war. They all pose a
significant national security threat wherever they go.
The Trump
administration might have insisted that Erdogan leave SDF alone enough
to be able to control the camps and keep those inside from breaking out
or detain ISIS inside Turkey.
But the man in charge of our Turkey
and Syria policy is Tom Barrack, a major Lebanese Arab donor and
Jeffrey Epstein associate (Epstein reportedly gifted Barrack an $11,000 watch)
who had previously been in court for acting as an unregistered foreign
agent of a Muslim oil country (he was acquitted) and whose speeches can
be hard to distinguish from Turkish propaganda.
Barrack bemoaned
that under Western colonialism, “Sykes-Picot divided Syria” by which
Arab nationalists generally mean Greater Syria, but at the same time
insisting that federalism for Kurds and Druze is a non-starter because
“you can’t have independent non-nation states within a nation.” Barrack
reportedly purged American diplomats supportive of the Kurdish militias.
Officially,
the new Al Qaeda regime is supposed to take control of all the Kurdish
areas, including the ISIS detention camps, but the deal hasn’t been
implemented because no one trusts Al Qaeda, and meanwhile we’re pushing
other countries to take their ISIS terrorists.
According to a
“Syrian military strategist”, the push to export ISIS terrorists is
about authorizing a “limited military operation against the SDF” by
Turkey and the Al-Qaeda regime while “removing the detainee issue as a
bargaining chip.” Once the ISIS terrorists are out, the Al-Qaeda-Turkey
alliance is free to attack the Kurds without a mass ISIS jailbreak.
The
problem is that we’re already engaging in a slow-motion ISIS jailbreak
to enable Turkey’s tribal warfare against the Kurds and the
centralization of an Al-Qaeda terror state in Syria.
While most
of the ISIS terrorists and their families are staying in Syria or going
to Iraq and other places in the region, possibly accounting for the
surge in ISIS attacks, some are going to Russia and others to Western
countries, including the U.S., which is a potential national security
disaster.
Around 6,000 of the ISIS detainees are “third-country nationals”.
“These
detainees in camps and prisons must be repatriated by their respective
countries,” Turkey’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan insisted, and we’re
rushing to obey him.
Not everyone is.
France rightly
refused to import around 200 ISIS detainees. Other European countries,
some of which previously agreed to accept a small number of ISIS people
are balking at taking them all.
And while CENTCOM, which is
heading up efforts to clear the ISIS detainees out to make way for a
Turkish-Al Qaeda assault on the Kurds, describe them as “foreign
citizens”, that’s only by the Arab Muslim definition of ‘citizenship’
that always follows the father, not the birth country.
Many of
the so-called ISIS families include children who were born to one or
both foreign parents a decade or more ago in Syria or Iraq and have no
ties to any other country.
Over the summer, the State Department
announced that the United States had “repatriated a U.S. citizen minor”
from Syria and claimed that they had given “this child, who has known
nothing of life outside of the camps, a future free from the influence
and dangers of ISIS terrorism” and urged that “every country must take
responsibility for its nationals in northeast Syria and not look to
others to solve the problem for them.”
So why is America being expected to solve Syria’s problem by taking in ISIS minors?
Any
‘minors’ living in an ISIS camp were almost certainly born in Iraq or
Syria, not in the United States, to a parent who abandoned their
American citizenship to join an enemy force. These foreign terrorist
minors have no claim on entering America: a country that they never
lived in.
The name of this ‘child’ was not given, but in one
previous example of “repatriation”, Abdelhamid, a Muslim immigrant
living in Minneapolis, left as a teenager to join ISIS, married an ISIS
widow, and had a baby with her. Abdelhamid also adopted her previous
offspring. The two boys, one of whom was born in Iraq to an immigrant
who had temporarily lived in Minneapolis, and the other who had
absolutely no blood ties to America, were ‘repatriated’ here.
While children are born innocent, ISIS members trained theirs to hate and kill from an early age. Visitors to the ISIS camps encountered children chanting support for Jihad and violence.
Repatriation means taking in terrorist teenagers already trained to wage war on America.
While
there were only 22 U.S. citizens listed in the ISIS camps, each one is a
potential ticking time bomb so even one is too many. One single Islamic
terrorist killed 49 people in a Florida nightclub. One single Islamic
terrorist driving a truck killed 15 people in New Orleans.
“If I
had a bowl of skittles and I told you just three would kill you, would
you take a handful?” Donald Trump Jr. tweeted about Syrian refugees a
decade ago. The advocates for ‘repatriation’ might want to recall that
wisdom before they bring the next future terrorist to our community.
“Repatriating
vulnerable populations before they are radicalized is not just
compassion—it is a decisive blow against ISIS’s ability to regenerate,”
Adm. Cooper claimed. The “populations” were long radicalized. And we’re
safer with them in Syria than we are with them living next door.
Fighting ISIS by importing ISIS into America, Australia, Canada and Europe is a terrible idea.
The
disastrous ‘repatriation’ campaign puts the Trump administration on the
same side as the terror lawyers who have been fighting legal battles to
force European countries to take in those terrorists, and the ones who
want to bring Islamic terrorists into America. President Trump ran on
keeping Jihadists out of America but parts of his administration are
pursuing appeasement of foreign interests in a way that not only
empowers Al Qaeda but imports terrorists into America.
The last
thing we should be doing is risking American lives for Turkey’s national
interests. And yet we’re risking the lives of our civilian population
so that Turkey can expand into Syria.
ISIS repatriation is a bad
deal for America and for the rest of the world. We should stop
pressuring our allies to take in terrorists and their families. They’re
Syria’s problem now.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.
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