Tuesday, November 19, 2024
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How Many Hezbollah or Hamas Terrorists Are in US? No Way of Knowing.



When then-FBI Director Robert Mueller testified in the House Judiciary Committee on May 9, 2012, then-Rep. Elton Gallegly asked him about the threat of terrorists entering the United States by crossing the southern border.

โ€œFirst of all, as it relates to our southwest border,โ€ said Gallegly, R-Calif., โ€œdo you see any growing evidence of al-Qaeda or any other terrorist organization working to exploit our border with the attempt of launching another terrorist attack on our own soil?โ€

Mueller indicated he was more concerned about Hezbollah doing that than al-Qaeda.

โ€œAs to the southwest border and al-Qaeda, we have not seen an increase of effort by al-Qaeda to come across the southwest border,โ€ said Mueller. โ€œOn the other hand, when you open the question up to other terrorist groups, I would say that we have a continuing concern about Iranian influence, actors and Hezbollah.โ€

In fact, Mueller had testified in the Senate Committee on Intelligence on Feb. 16, 2005, about a Hezbollah fundraiser from Lebanon who had been discovered in Michigan. โ€œIn 2004,โ€ Mueller said in a statement to the committee, โ€œwe had some success in uncovering individuals providing material support to Hezbollah.โ€

โ€œIn Detroit, Mahmoud Youssef Kourani was indicted in the Eastern District of Michigan on one count of Conspiracy to Provide Material Support to Hezbollah,โ€ Mueller said. โ€œKourani was already in custody for entering the country illegally through Mexico and was involved in fundraising activities on behalf of Hezbollah.โ€

A staff report on โ€œ9/11 and Terrorist Travelโ€ published in 2004 by the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States provided information about a smuggler who smuggled โ€œLebanese nationals sympathetic to Hamas and Hezbollah into the United States.โ€

โ€œIn July 2001,โ€ said the report, โ€œthe CIA warned of a possible link between human smugglers and terrorist groups, including Hamas, Hezbollah, and Egyptian Islamic Jihad. Indeed, there is evidence to suggest that since 1999 human smugglers have facilitated the travel of terrorists associated with more than a dozen extremist groups.โ€

โ€œOne smuggler, Salim Boughader-Mucharrafille,โ€ said the report, โ€œsmuggled Lebanese nationals sympathetic to Hamas and Hezbollah into the United States and relied on corrupt Mexican officials in Beirut, Mexico City and Tijuana to facilitate their travel. Specifically, Boughader obtained Mexican tourist visas from an official at the Mexican Embassy in Beirut to facilitate the travel of humans to Mexico.โ€

โ€œBoughader was charged with human smuggling and sentenced to 11 months in prison,โ€ said the report. โ€œAfter serving his sentence, he was deported to Mexico, where he was arrested along with several other members of his smuggling ring.โ€

โ€œIn May 2006,โ€ the Congressional Research Service reported in 2007, โ€œa Mexican judge reportedly sentenced Boughader-Mucharrafille to 14 years in prison for his role in the smuggling ring and on organized crime charges.โ€

So, after discovering that โ€œLebanese nationals sympathetic to Hamas and Hezbollahโ€ had been smuggled into the United States from Mexico, did the United States secure its southern border?

No.

Over each of the past four years, Customs and Border Protection has encountered an increasing number of individuals on the โ€œTerrorist Screening Datasetโ€ trying to sneak into the United States between the ports of entry on the Mexican border. This dataset, according to CBP, includes โ€œknown or suspected terroristsโ€ and โ€œadditional individuals who represent a potential threat to the United States, including known affiliates of watchlisted individuals.โ€

In fiscal year 2019, as this column has noted before, CBP did not encounter a single individual on this terrorist watchlist trying to sneak across the Mexican border. In 2020, it encountered three. In 2021, it encountered 15. In 2022, it encountered 98.

In fiscal year 2023, which ended Sept. 30, it encountered 169.

This February, the State Department issued its โ€œCountry Reports on Terrorism 2021.โ€ What did it say about Hezbollah?

โ€œLebanon-based and Iran-backed terrorist group Hezbollah continued its long history of activity in the Western Hemisphere, including fundraising by its supporters and financiers in places like the tri-border area, where the borders of Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay meet,โ€ said the State Department. โ€œHezbollah supporters generate funding through licit and illicit activity and donate undetermined amounts to Hezbollah in Lebanon, which uses the funds to advance its broader agenda. In recent years, Hezbollah supporters and members have been identified in Chile, Colombia, Panama, Peru and the United States.โ€

Jennie Taer of the Daily Caller News Foundation (where this writer is investigative editor) published a report this week that Customs and Border Protection had issued a memo on Oct. 20 warning that โ€œ[f]oreign fightersโ€ from the Middle East might try to enter the United States from Mexico.

โ€œSan Diego Field Office Intelligence Unit (SDFO-FITU) assesses that individuals inspired by, or reacting to, the current Israel-Hamas conflict may attempt travel to or from the area of hostilities in the Middle East via circuitous transit across the Southwest border,โ€ said the memo.

โ€œForeign fighters motivated by ideology or mercenary soldiers of fortune may attempt to obfuscate travel to or from the U.S. to or from countries in the Middle East through Mexico.โ€

So, how many Hezbollahโ€”or Hamasโ€”terrorists are in the United States today? Since our southern border is not secure and many people cross it illegally every day, our federal government has no way of knowing.