Memorial in Agua Prieta for U.S. college student shot in back
by Border Patrol in Douglas, Arizona /Photo by Tom Barry
There’s renewed
bipartisan consensus in favor for some type of immigration reform. Yet this
emerging post-election bipartisanship exists in the shadows of an almost
enthusiastic bipartisanship in favor of increased border security.
Within Congress, there is
no – really absolutely none -- opposition to border security policy and
operations, despite persistent waste, lack of due diligence, corruption,
immigrant abuse, and inability to set forth a strategy and performance
measures.
In Congress, there are
differences about border security but these are largely limited to questions
about just how many more agents, drones, walls, and surveillance systems are
needed.
President Obama set the
bottom line of the debate, when speaking about the need for immigration reform.
In late November, he told the media: "I
think it [immigration reform] should include a continuation of the strong
border security measures that we've taken because we have to secure our borders.”
The
president will encounter no opposition on that point, although there were be
many congressional members in both parties who will be lobbying for even more
border security spending than the Obama administration has authorized – in part because border security has proved
popular politically and in part because of the infusion of pork-barrel spending
in border areas.
The broadening political
consensus for immigration reform is hopeful. Bipartisan border security,
however, is not a sign that political
gridlock is ending but rather a sure sign that the traditional bipartisanship
over security spending issues continues to taint politics and fiscal
responsibility.
Bipartisanship is the
rule not the exception when security issues are involved. That’s a sorry
tradition in U.S. politics – a tradition that since 9/11 has expanded beyond
national security to include homeland security and border security.
Uncritical Acceptance of
Border Security
At first, the post-9/11
fear of foreign terrorists drove the multi-billion dollar campaign to “secure
our borders.” The buildup continued even as the fear diminished, and as counterterrorism experts (and common
sense) concluded that it was unlikely that foreign terrorists or weapons of
mass destruction would enter the country across the southwestern border – the
focus of the new border security operations.
Yet Congress and the
White House kept increasing the border security budgets – not so much to
obstruct terrorists but to “secure our borders” against immigrants, driven by
the mounting anti-immigrant backlash during the second Bush administration.
More recently, border hawks – and the Obama administration – explain border
security operations mainly in terms of the drug war or what’s now called the
“combat against transnational crime.”
Since 2005, when Congress
began debating comprehensive immigration reform, a key factor in ensuring wide
support for the border security buildup was, oddly, the assumption that the
imperative to “secure our borders” was a necessary precondition for immigration
reform.
The uncritical – and
largely enthusiastic – backing for more border security has cost the nation
more than $100 billion over the last ten years. It has left a legacy of
national shame and monumental waste in the form of useless virtual fence
projects, embarrassing walls between north and south, a mounting toll of dead
and murdered immigrants, and an escalation drug war throughout the U.S. and
Mexican borderlands even as political pressure is mounting throughout the hemisphere
to end drug prohibition.
Aside from the near total
absence of strategic focus, the border security buildup has been an insult to
good governance. Again, the uncritical acceptance of border security has
resulted in systemic abuse of the standards of accountability, transparency,
and performance evaluations.
Rather than once again
giving a free rein to the border security hawks, the coming immigration
represents an opportunity to assess the assumptions and achievements of the
continuing border security buildup. Without such a critical examination of
border security, the proponents of immigration reform / border security become
accomplices of the waste, human rights abuses, and drug war escalation that
have become emblematic of the Border Patrol.
As part of the new
movement for immigration reform, advocates and activists need to stand up and
reject the implicit political marriage of immigration reform and the border
security buildup. That doesn’t mean open borders but rather a stance in favor
of sensible border control and regulation, not virtual militarization.
It would be unfortunate
if progress on immigration reform gives border security a free pass, leaving
mounting questions about the waste, militarization, misdirection, and lack of
accountability in U.S. border policy unaddressed and unresolved.
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