Archive for January, 2018

Erdogan accuses US of creating Kurdish terror enclave on …

His comments came a day after the US publicly admitted it is supplying weapons and training to the Syrian Democratic Forces which include militia from the Kurdish YPG.

YPG fighters, many of them women, have played a major role in flushing out ISIS from northern Syria, including from Raqqa.

Turkey considers the YPG to be the Syrian arm of the PKK, an outlawed Kurdish group responsible for major terror attacks in the Turkey as part of its bid for national ethnic autonomy. The European Union and the US have both named the PKK as a terrorist outfit.

"The US has admitted to building an army of terror along our national borders," Erdogan reportedly told workers of a new sodium factory in Ankara. "It is our responsibility to suffocate this effort before it is born."

In his address at the opening of the Kazan Soda Electric Company, Erdogan also warned that the PKK will turn on its US sponsors at the drop of a hat.

"The name of this army should be the traitors' army," Erdogan was reported as saying. "As soon as this 30,000 strong terrorist army comes under threat, they will be the first to turn their guns on the American soldiers."

Coalition assisting to build Border Security Force

Sunday, US Army Col. Ryan Dillon, spokesman for the anti-ISIS Operation Inherent Resolve, said in a statement that coalition forces were working with the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to establish and train the new Syrian Border Security Force (BSF).

"Currently, there are approximately 230 individuals training in the BSF's inaugural class, with the goal of a final force size of approximately 30,000," Dillon said.

He added that the idea was to train these defense forces in areas close to their homes. "More Kurds will serve in the areas in northern Syria. More Arabs will serve in areas along the Euphrates River Valley and along the border with Iraq to the south," he said.

Dillon said half of the planned 30,000 troops it will train were SDF veterans.

"These individuals will bring much-needed experience and discipline to the young force," Dillon said.

"To fill the other 15,000 positions, recruiting and training is underway. As previously mentioned, recruiting is being done in such a manner as to build a force reflecting the populations they serve."

Erdogan added in his Ankara speech that Turkey has already raised its concerns about the new border force with Washington and its allies.

"What we have told all our allies and friends is this: do not stand between us and terrorists, between us and murderers, otherwise it may give rise to situations that are unwanted and we will not be responsible," he was reported as saying.

"Take down the flags you fly on terrorist bases so that we do not have to hand them back to you. Remove your signage from terrorist uniforms so we do not have to bury them on the ground with the terrorists," he said.

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Erdogan accuses US of creating Kurdish terror enclave on ...

Erdogan Accuses U.S. of Creating `Army of Terror’ on Turk …

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Washington of establishing an army of terror along the Turkish border, as his country drew closer to open confrontation with U.S.-backed Kurdish troops in neighboring Syria.

Erdogan, who regards the Kurdish fighters as affiliates of Turkish Kurds battling for autonomy in Turkeys southeast, said Monday that a Turkish offensive in the Kurdish-controlled town of Afrin in northern Syria was imminent. The spark for the campaign is a new U.S.-backed plan to turn thousands of Syrian Kurds who fought Islamic State into border guards in areas they control along Turkeys frontier.

Turkey is afraid the Syrian Kurdish fighters incorporation into the force will give them cover to stage attacks on Turkey. It also says it will further their aim to consolidate a single autonomous region including Afrin along the Turkish frontier, and embolden PKK separatists the Turkish military has been fighting for more than three decades. Turkish military reinforcements were moved into the Afrin area over the weekend, state-run Anadolu news agency reported.

Turkey will suffocate this terror army before its born, Erdogan said. Our preparations have been completed. The operation is due to start any moment. After that, other regions will follow.

The impending face-off with the U.S. proxy exacerbates the already considerable strains that have tested Turkeys relations with Washington in recent years. Ankara has also been angered by the trial and conviction of a Turkish banker in the U.S. on sanctions violation charges, and Washingtons non-action on its request to extradite a Pennsylvania-based Turkish preacher Erdogan accuses of instigating a failed 2016 coup.

Turkish army units fired dozens of shells toward Kurdish positions in and around Afrin on Sunday. The army also beefed up troops in the area with armored personnel carriers and tanks over the weekend, according to Anadolu.

Turkey has acted against the Syrian Kurdish forces before. It began operating in northern Syria in 2016, its participation in an international effort to defeat Islamic State dovetailing with its campaign to block the convergence of Kurdish-run regions. An earlier deployment in Idlib, to the south of Afrin, denied the Kurds access to the Mediterranean Sea -- a prized target for a planned Kurdish corridor running all the way to northern Iraq.

The U.S. backed the Kurdish fighters because it regarded them as the most effective force against Islamic State. With the war against the extremist group largely won, Turkey sees no reason for incorporating Kurdish troops into the border guard unit.

Turkeys National Security Council, which advises on military actions, is scheduled to meet on Jan. 17. Turkish officials vowed similar action on several occasions last year.

The U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State said in an emailed statement Monday that the border security force will prohibit Islamic State freedom of movement and deny the transportation of illicit materials so the Syrian people can establish effective local, representative governance and reclaim their land. Ethnic composition of the force, it said, will be relative to the areas in which they serve.

With assistance by Asli Kandemir

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Workplace Raids Signal Shifting Tactics in Immigration …

Its causing a lot of panic, said Oscar Renteria, the owner of Renteria Vineyard Management, which employs about 180 farmworkers who are now pruning grapevines in the Napa Valley.

When word of the raids spread, he received a frenzy of emails from his supervisors asking him what to do if immigration officers showed up at the fields. One sent a notice to farmhands warning them to stay away from 7-Eleven stores in the area.

Our work force frequently visits 7-Elevens, said Mr. Renteria. Theyre very nervous. Its another form of reminding them that theyre not welcome.

The Obama administration largely took a lower-profile approach to enforcement, auditing employers compliance in documenting their workers status without conducting many on-site investigations. A handful of employers faced prominent criminal cases in recent years, but most companies employing workers illegally avoid serious charges, because it is often impossible to prove that they knew someone had handed in fake documents.

The consequences are not that harsh, and the effect of the enforcement is less than it should be, said Jessica M. Vaughan, the director of policy studies for the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates tighter restrictions on immigration.

The law requires employers only to ensure that documents appear to be valid, and federal law prohibits them from requiring specific types of identification from workers.

Employers negotiate reduced administrative fines and sometimes put political pressure on local officials when they become targets, making the punishment for companies weaker than it should be, Ms. Vaughan said. There are employers for whom the penalties are just the cost of doing business.

The more lasting effect of raids is to spread fear among undocumented workers, who often end up bearing the brunt of enforcement action at the workplace.

Having some semblance of a fear of workers being arrested will have a behavioral shift, said William Riley, who spent 20 years as an ICE special agent, under both Bush presidencies and the Clinton and Obama administrations, and is now a consultant at Guidepost Solutions, working on corporate compliance. Mr. Riley said that under the last administration, people were more lax about working illegally, assuming they wouldnt be arrested.

There was slightly more complacency when it was pretty well known that there wasnt a fear of being arrested in your workplace, Mr. Riley said, nor much of a deterrent to using fake documents to get a job.

Mr. Renteria said he expected raids on farms soon, because the industry is a big employer of people with complicated immigration status. More than half of Californias agriculture workers lack documents, according to a federal survey. Mr. Renteria worries that if agents home in on the Napa area, no one will stay to harvest the grapes.

They will start calling their cousins, aunts and uncles and finding the safest place where the work is, he said.

The last flurry of public, on-site investigations happened under President George W. Bush, who sent immigration agents to several meatpacking plants and other workplaces. Those raids led to hundreds of arrests of workers and prompted many other employees to stop reporting to work, according to local news reports. But they also enraged advocates for immigrants and drew complaints from business owners.

The Obama administration changed tack and pursued employers mainly by inspecting their paperwork. Such audits doubled from fiscal years 2009 to 2013, reaching 3,127, then declined sharply.

Law enforcement may welcome a more aggressive approach under the new administration. But sending armed agents to the doorsteps of American companies could prove politically uncomfortable for Mr. Trump, who has portrayed himself as an ally to business.

Doris Meissner learned how quickly local politicians can spring into action when their hometown industries feel threatened. As head of the agency that preceded ICE, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, from 1993 to 2000, Ms. Meissner tried to focus on holding employers accountable.

She approved the start of Operation Vanguard in the 1990s, in which the agency asked for employee records in several Nebraska meatpacking plants. When it came time to pursue charges against some employers, Ms. Meissner said, she started receiving frantic calls from Nebraskans on Capitol Hill.

The politics gets hot and heavy, Ms. Meissner said. These are communities that are heavily reliant on these industries. This is the major employer. These are the major consumers at the stores and the bowling alleys.

Ms. Meissner says work-site raids dont work in the long term because they fail to address the real magnet drawing people into the country: a need for laborers.

Cracking down on employers who violate the law is crucial, she said, and it isnt right to employ people who are here illegally. But without a visa system allowing unmet labor needs to be addressed with foreigners, she said, ICE shouldnt expect patchwork enforcement stings to persuade farms, hotels or meatpackers to stop employing unauthorized workers.

When your laws dont align with the market, then the market is always going to win, Ms. Meissner said.

Audits of employers were favored early in the Obama administration as an immigration enforcement tool, but their use then declined.

Advocates for immigrant workers said the raids were just the most recent source of a quiet terror reverberating across factory floors since Mr. Trump took office.

When you have such a public thing happening close to home, folks feel the presence of ICE constantly, said Mariela Martinez, the organizing director of the Garment Worker Center in Los Angeles. But her clients have families and children here, Ms. Martinez said, so they cant just pack their bags and go.

Its not motivating people to self-deport, she said. Its motivating people to not use their labor rights. Its causing people to distrust government agencies.

Ms. Martinez helps people in the garment industry file claims for back pay with the state when their employers pay them less than theyre owed. She said far fewer workers asked for restitution last year compared with 2016, partly because of concern that their bosses would call ICE if they spoke up.

That was the punishment one manufacturer meted out to Pablo, a 36-year-old sewing worker in Los Angeles who would not give his last name because he lacks papers and fears being identified by ICE. When he received a check for $92 after working three 11-hour days at a garment factory last month, Pablo insisted that he deserved more.

His boss responded by offering to pay him what he was owed, but only if Pablo offered up his home address. After signing another check, Pablo said, the factory owner said that he would call immigration officials and direct them to Pablos door.

You feel terrible. You feel uncomfortable, Pablo said. I was so scared. He called Ms. Martinez and they returned together the next day to tell the employer that the threat constituted illegal retaliation under California law. The employer backed down.

The 7-Eleven raids will give garment bosses even more control over their workers, Pablo said.

Now they know the president is on their side, he said, so they feel like they can intimidate people and treat them badly and they will never talk.

Still, Pablo has been here since he was 17, and has no plans to leave yet. He has bills to pay.

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Mr. Trump, fund, start, and finish the wall before you …

The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which defers deportation for about 700,000 illegal immigrants brought to the U.S. as children, has been the topic of intense negotiations between President Trump and members of Congress this week. But this discussion is premature. Action to improve border security must come first.

The president wants to begin phasing out the existing DACA program in March though a federal judge this week temporarily blocked ending the program while a lawsuit is pending. The Trump administration is challenging that order. But the possible end to the program in coming weeks has driven Democrats to seek legislation to change the law to allow DACA recipients to stay in America.

Our country is filled with generous people. Each year we let over 1 million people legally immigrate to our country. More come legally for school and work. But at the same time, hundreds of thousands enter our country illegally by crossing our southern border.

It has been a longtime problem that, once again, became a huge campaign issue in 2016 elections. Republicans, led by President Trump, recommitted to building a wall along our southern border to stem the tide of illegal border crossings with its attendant problems. Democrats promised to grant legal status to DACA recipients and urged even broader changes to immigration laws leading to amnesty for the estimated 11 million illegal aliens in our country today.

We need to enforce our internal immigration laws and remove the incentives to enter and stay in America illegally. Only after all these things have been done should we start to debate further immigration reforms.

The American people elected Donald Trump as president and Republican majorities in the House and Senate. In keeping with the electoral outcome and the long-term health of America, we should not put the DACA cart before the build-a-wall horse.

Before Congress passes any legislation on DACA or a broader amnesty bill for those who are in the United States illegally, we must fund, start, and complete building of the border wall. Congress must also add additional infrastructure on the border to make sure it is as secure as possible.

We also need to enforce our internal immigration laws and remove the incentives to enter and stay in America illegally. Only after all these things have been done should we start to debate further immigration reforms.

In 1986, amnesty was granted to 3 million illegal aliens. We were promised secure borders, strong enforcement, and a host of other immigration reforms in exchange for what was billed as a one-time amnesty program. The amnesty was quickly given but we have been waiting for more than 30 years for the other promises to be delivered.

If there is one thing I have learned in my brief time in D.C., it is to make sure the other party upholds its promises before giving up the leverage I hold. Somehow, the other side is never capable of fulfilling its end of the bargain.

Today DACA delays the appropriate legal action against people who are in America illegally.

DACA has a plethora of problems, and most recipients arent the valedictorians that the media would like the public to believe. Pro-DACA sources admit that more than 20 percent of self-described DACA recipients have already dropped out of school.

Insiders warn that there is a severe lack of vetting within the program. Further, a person receiving DACA benefits can be a criminal, committing up to two crimes without being disqualified, and can be up to age 36 when applying!

DACA distracts the public and fails to meet the objectives the American people expressed support for in the voting booth. Voters indicated the desire for a border wall or fence and other border security measures. Thats a big reason many Americans made Donald Trump president.

Moreover, permanent DACA status does not satisfy the DACA recipients I have talked to. Why? Because it is, ostensibly, only a benefit for these illegal aliens and is not citizenship.

Instead, DACA recipients want a pathway to citizenship full amnesty and all the benefits that come along with it for themselves, their parents (who brought them here illegally in the first place), and the entire group of people in the chain migration scheme a long list of extended family members, their spouses and children.

As a result, the movement to provide a fix for DACA recipients has morphed into the passage of the clean DREAM Act a plan to allow millions of illegal aliens to remain in the United States. DACA recipients have been dubbed Dreamers.

Even if Congress extends or makes permanent the DACA program, Democrats and Dreamers wont rest until they achieve full amnesty with passage of the DREAM Act. They want illegal aliens to move ahead of the millions of people have been waiting to enter the country legally or who have been here legally for many years on temporary visas.

I cant help but think of the many friends I have who have become naturalized American citizens. Most have taken 10 to 12 years. They did it the right way. Is it humane to reward people who broke the law over those who have waited years and followed all the rules?

Extending DACA or passing a larger amnesty bill before we build the promised border wall, before we take other actions to improve border security, before we beef up internal enforcement of our immigration laws, and before we remove the incentives to come and stay in America illegally would be a colossal mistake.

President Trump has said it would only take a year to complete the wall, though others estimate it would take longer. Lets take that year or more of construction and complete the wall before we discuss DACA and immigration reforms. I will do all I can to keep the commitments to uphold the law that I made to my constituents on the immigration issue.

Republican Andy Biggs represents the 5th Congressional District of Arizona.

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Rand Paul: Trump isn’t prejudiced against Haiti because he …

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul brushed off suggestions that President Trump holds a racial animus against Haitians because he once supported Pauls trip to the Caribbean nation to do eye surgeries on poor Haitians.

Paul said on NBCs Meet The Press Sunday that Trump donated money to a medical mission trip Paul took before he was president. Paul did about 200 surgeries on Haitians that allowed them to see while he was on the trip, and he said thats evidence Trump isnt prejudiced against the country.

It is unfair to draw conclusions from a remark that I think wasn't constructive is the least we can say and I think it is unfair to all of a sudden, paint him, well, he's a racist, when I know for a fact he cares very deeply about the people in Haiti because he helped to finance a trip, we were able to give vision back for 200 people in Haiti, Paul said.

The comments come days after Trump reportedly said Haiti and some African nations are shithole countries.

That remark has led to an onslaught of Democratic lawmakers calling Trump a racist. Paul said thats not going to help Congress come to a deal on immigration.

There are a lot of questions that this ultimately intersects with policy, and the only thing I regret from all of this, other than I think some people in the media have gone completely bonkers with, you know, just ad hominem on the president, I want to see an immigration compromise and you can't have an immigration compromise if everybody is out there calling the president a racist, he said.

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