On Wednesday, State Department spokesman John Kirby finally acknowledged a well-known truth: ISIS is attempting to infiltrate the United States via the Obama administration’s refugee resettlement program.
"I wouldn't debate the fact that there's the potential for ISIS terrorists to try to insert themselves, and we see that in some of the refugee camps in Jordan and in Turkey, where they try to insert themselves into the population," Kirby told the hosts of "Fox and Friends.”
Many of the refugees the US plans on accepting are supposedly “vetted” at these very refugee camps in Jordan and Turkey.
In a moment of unexpected candor, Kirby even went on to confess that the federal government’s vetting process isn’t “foolproof."
"Is it perfect? Can it be perfect? Can it be foolproof? Well, probably not, no,” he admitted.
While the State Department spokesman qualified his revealing remarks by insisting that the process is “very, very stringent,” a new report by the Homeland Security Department’s Inspector General calls into question the fed’s ability to accurately identify immigrants gaining entrance into the United States with forged documents or fake passports.
As The Daily Wire recently reported, 858 immigrants from countries “of concern to national security” were mistakenly granted citizenship in the last few months, bypassing the scrutiny of immigration and customs agencies with forged documents.
The Inspector General’s report exposed the fact that the FBI’s fingerprint database was woefully incomplete, allowing immigrants to enter the United States without being properly identified.
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