From Judicial Watch: President
Obama’s own Homeland Security Secretary has snubbed him by refusing to go along
with his outrageous plan to lift a decades-old ban on Libyans attending flight
schools and training as nuclear scientists in the United States .
As
unbelievable as it may seem, the commander-in-chief and his State Department
schemed to lift the prohibition despite strong congressional opposition. In
fact a final regulation was recently approved by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB). Judicial Watch wrote about it just weeks before the second
anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the U.S. Special Mission in Benghazi , Libya .
Four Americans, including first diplomat to be killed overseas
in decades, were massacred so the timing could not have been worse.
The ban
was implemented in 1983 after a wave of terrorist incidents involving Libyans.
The African nation continues to be a hotbed of terrorism and in fact, the U.S.
Embassy in Tripoli
was recently evacuated because violence between rival militias has created a
deadly environment. Many other foreign governments have also shut down their
embassies in Libya
because the violence has spread throughout the entire country.
Nevertheless,
President Obama and the State Department discounted congressional opposition to
let Libyans train as pilots, airplane mechanics and nuclear scientists in the United States .
This despite the fact that many of the 9/11 hijackers—mostly Saudi
nationals—received their training in American flights schools because our
government allowed it. At a Congressional hearing earlier this year, a top
Homeland Security official revealed that the Hillary Clinton State Department
first requested the Libyan ban lift in 2010. Three years later, the official,
Alan Bersin, told Congress, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano agreed
to begin the process to amend the regulations relating to Libya .
But a
group of Republican lawmakers were determined to halt the dangerous plan one
way or another. They even introduced legislation, which quickly earned
bipartisan support. The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), which represents
51,000 pilots from dozens of U.S.
and Canadian carriers, has also strongly opposed lifting the prohibition on
Libyans. In a letter to leaders of the House Judiciary Committee,
the group’s president notes that Libya
is so dangerous the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) prohibits U.S.
airlines and commercial operators from entering Libyan airspace.
Furthermore,
the letter says, any person entering the U.S. for flight training undergoes
a mandatory thorough background check which requires reliable data from foreign
governments. “Given the political instability in Libya and the transitory nature of
the government, ALPA is concerned that information relevant to a background
check on Libyan nationals would be unreliable if not entirely unavailable,” the
letter states. The ALPA also takes a dig at the administration’s assertion that
the U.S. and Libya
have normalized their relationship, writing that safety and security concerns
must never be set aside to build diplomatic ties.
Something
evidently clicked for Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, who rebuffed his
boss by assuring Congress that he would keep the Libyan ban.
At a House Judiciary Committee hearing this week Johnson confirmed that he
would not lift it at this time, “given the current environment.” The lawmakers
behind the effort to keep the status quo issued a joint statement praising
the decision and Johnson’s common sense over Obama’s foolish plan. “Given the
ongoing terrorist activity in Libya ,
there is no reason that the Obama Administration should have ever contemplated lifting
a decades-old ban on Libyans coming to our country to train as pilots or
nuclear scientists. The fact is that Libya ’s
government remains unstable today and the country is becoming more dangerous as
rival rebel groups battle each other for control of Libya ’s cities.”
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