Syrian refugees wait to be registered by police in the southern Serbian town of Presevo in September.

Syrian refugees wait to be registered by police in the southern Serbian town of Presevo in September. Santi Palacios/AP

Could a Terrorist Infiltrate the Syrian Refugee Program?

Despite the current uproar, the U.S. has been resettling people fleeing war-torn countries for decades without trouble.

If you look solely at Amer­ica’s long re­cord of tak­ing in refugees from coun­tries torn apart by war, it’s hard to ar­gue that na­tion­al se­cur­ity should be a top con­cern in the de­bate over Syr­i­an mi­grants.

In the 14 years since Septem­ber 11, 2001, the United States has re­settled 784,000 refugees from around the world, ac­cord­ing to data from the Cen­ter for Mi­gra­tion Stud­ies, a D.C. think tank. And with­in that pop­u­la­tion, three people have been ar­res­ted for activ­it­ies re­lated to ter­ror­ism. None of them were close to ex­ecut­ing an at­tack in­side the United States, and two of the men were caught try­ing to leave the coun­try to join ter­ror­ist groups over­seas.

“I think I can count on one hand the num­ber of crimes of any sig­ni­fic­ance that I’ve heard have been com­mit­ted by refugees,” said Lavin­ia Limón, a vet­er­an of refugee work since 1975 and the pres­id­ent of the U.S. Com­mit­tee for Refugees and Im­mig­rants. “It just hasn’t been an is­sue.”

If you look solely at Amer­ica’s long re­cord of tak­ing in refugees from coun­tries torn apart by war, it’s hard to ar­gue that na­tion­al se­cur­ity should be a top con­cern in the de­bate over Syr­i­an mi­grants.

The gov­ern­ment and the non­profit or­gan­iz­a­tions it part­ners with to re­settle refugees cite two main reas­ons why this is the case. The first is that there is a key dif­fer­ence between people seek­ing place­ment in the United States as refugees and the mil­lions of people who have flooded in­to Europe seek­ing asylum. The Syr­i­ans in Europe, in many cases, are already at or over the bor­der, hav­ing come dir­ectly from Syr­ia in­to Tur­key and then Greece and else­where; that situ­ation is more akin to the thou­sands of Cubans who have fled by boat to South Flor­ida or to the mi­grant work­ers from Cent­ral Amer­ica who gathered at the U.S.-Mex­ico bor­der last sum­mer. A refugee ap­ply­ing for re­set­tle­ment in the United States, by con­trast, must en­dure a screen­ing pro­cess that takes as long as two years be­fore step­ping foot on U.S. soil. “Ger­many doesn’t have the lux­ury of screen­ing them or vet­ting them in any way be­fore they ar­rive, un­like the United States,” said Kath­leen New­land, a seni­or fel­low and co-founder of the Cen­ter for Mi­gra­tion Stud­ies.

The second reas­on is that since the pro­gram was briefly hal­ted and then over­hauled after the 9/11 at­tacks, refugee ap­plic­ants are sub­ject to the highest level of se­cur­ity checks of any type of trav­el­er to the United States. The United Na­tions High Com­mis­sion­er for Refugees ini­tially chooses which refugees to refer to the United States after do­ing its own check. Amer­ic­an of­fi­cials then con­duct mul­tiple in-per­son in­ter­views and veri­fy a refugee’s story with in­tel­li­gence agen­cies and run back­ground checks through sev­er­al gov­ern­ment data­bases, in­clud­ing the Home­land Se­cur­ity De­part­ment and the Na­tion­al Coun­terter­ror­ism Cen­ter. As a res­ult of that ex­tens­ive pro­cess, only around 2,000 Syr­i­an refugees have been re­settled in the United States since its civil war broke out in 2011—a much lower num­ber than many pre­vi­ous refugee crises. The Obama ad­min­is­tra­tion wants to ac­cept at least 10,000 more in 2016, but even that might be too much for the bur­eau­cracy to handle. Once re­settled, refugees get hous­ing and mon­et­ary as­sist­ance for sev­er­al months. After a year, they can ap­ply for a green card, at which point they un­der­go an­oth­er se­cur­ity screen­ing.

More than half of the na­tion’s gov­ernors—mostly Re­pub­lic­ans—are now ur­ging the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment to keep Syr­i­an refugees out of their states. But they prob­ably don’t have the fi­nal say. Courts have ruled that im­mig­ra­tion policy is al­most en­tirely a fed­er­al mat­ter, and while the Obama ad­min­is­tra­tion says it must “con­sult” with states as part of the refugee pro­gram, the states can’t re­ject im­mig­rants en­tirely. Yet as a prac­tic­al mat­ter, be­cause the be­ne­fits that refugees re­ceive are ad­min­istered at the state level, the gov­ern­ment might be un­likely to send them to states where they won’t be wel­come.

A cent­ral ques­tion that Re­pub­lic­ans have raised is wheth­er the United States has good enough in­tel­li­gence and data from Syr­ia to de­term­ine if a refugee might pose a threat. How ex­tens­ive is their data­base? How easy would it be for an ap­plic­ant to use forged or stolen doc­u­ments to get in­to the United States? Crit­ics of the refugee policy have gained am­muni­tion from FBI Dir­ect­or James Comey, who ac­know­ledged while testi­fy­ing be­fore Con­gress in Oc­to­ber that there were “cer­tain gaps … in the data avail­able to us.” He de­clined to de­tail those con­cerns in an open hear­ing, say­ing he did not want to provide a roadmap for ter­ror­ists. “There is risk as­so­ci­ated with bring­ing any­body in from the out­side—but es­pe­cially from a con­flict zone like that,” Comey said.

Re­pub­lic­an gov­ernors and con­gres­sion­al lead­ers (along with a few Demo­crats) have seized on those re­marks in call­ing for “a pause” in the Syr­i­an refugee pro­gram so it can un­der­go an­oth­er re­view, and the House could pass le­gis­la­tion to that ef­fect in the next few days. Refugee ad­voc­ates, however, say there is little cause for con­cern. “I just don’t find that ar­gu­ment plaus­ible,” New­land told me. She said the United States might have less data on Syr­ia than on Ir­aq and Afgh­anistan, where the mil­it­ary has had a pres­ence for more than a dec­ade. “But I don’t think there’s less in­form­a­tion than there would be any oth­er refugee pop­u­la­tion,” New­land said. She ad­ded that com­ing from a po­lice state that likes to keep track of its people, refugees from “a well-or­gan­ized so­ci­ety” like Syr­ia would be more likely to have doc­u­ment­a­tion than those flee­ing from im­pov­er­ished coun­tries where cit­izens are un­likely to have gov­ern­ment-is­sued birth cer­ti­fic­ates or pass­ports.

Steven Ca­marota, the dir­ect­or of re­search at the right-lean­ing Cen­ter for Im­mig­ra­tion Stud­ies, said the key dif­fer­ence between Syr­ia and most oth­er sites of re­cent hu­man­it­ari­an crises is the heavy in­flu­ence of a group de­voted to the de­struc­tion of the United States and of West­ern so­ci­ety. He also dis­puted the blem­ish-free his­tory that ad­voc­ates of the refugee pro­gram have clung to, cit­ing Somali im­mig­rants in Min­nesota who have left the coun­try to join IS­IS and the case of the Bo­ston Mara­thon bombers, who ar­rived as chil­dren after be­ing gran­ted asylum. Yet the pro­cess for re­ceiv­ing asylum status is not as strin­gent as for those ap­ply­ing for refugee re­set­tle­ment, and those cases all in­volved people rad­ic­al­ized while they were liv­ing in the United States. “The point here is,” Ca­marota said, “is it worth the risk?”

Im­mig­ra­tion of any kind has caused ten­sion and, in many cases, out­right hos­til­ity throughout U.S. his­tory, and refugee crises are no ex­cep­tion. In a 1939 poll re­cir­cu­lated widely on Tues­day, more than three out of five Amer­ic­ans op­posed the re­set­tle­ment of 10,000 Jew­ish refugees flee­ing Nazi Ger­many. Of­ten­times, the con­cerns have been eco­nom­ic. In the late 1970s, New­land said, fish­er­men in Cali­for­nia feared com­pet­i­tion from Vi­et­namese refugees who would be will­ing to work longer hours for lower pay than they did. And states and cit­ies have oc­ca­sion­ally asked the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment to steer refugees else­where if they didn’t think they’d be able to find jobs in their com­munit­ies. But the ter­ror­ism-fueled fears that have promp­ted a rush of op­pos­i­tion to Syr­i­an re­set­tle­ment is something else. “In my ex­per­i­ence,” New­land said, “this is unique.”