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< Return To Hearing
Statement
of
The Honorable John Cornyn
United States Senator
U.S. Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security and Citizenship "The Southern Border in Crisis: Resources and Strategies to Improve National Security." Tuesday, June 7, 2005, 2:30 p.m., Dirksen Senate Office Building Room 226 Thank you Mr. Chairman for holding today's hearing. I know that both you and Senator Feinstein have spent significant time working on the issues associated with our southern border and I appreciate your staffs taking the lead on setting up this hearing. I look forward to working with the both of you to provide better security along for our nation's borders. I also want to thank the ranking member of the Immigration subcommittee, Senator Kennedy, for working with me to bring about several productive immigration hearings this year. I look forward to working with Senator Kennedy and the rest of our Senate colleagues as we now move towards comprehensive immigration reform. Senator Kyl and I have been working together to identify and develop solutions to the critical problems plaguing our immigration system. We are conducting a top to bottom review of our nation's border security and enforcement efforts. That review has provided important information that we have used to draft the proposed enforcement provisions that will better secure our nation. I look forward to continuing our work in this area as we move towards crafting a comprehensive immigration reform bill. Our immigration and border security system is badly broken and has suffered from years of neglect. This leaves our borders unprotected, threatens our national security, and makes a mockery of the rule of law. We cannot continue to ignore our border security in a post-9/11 world. Additionally, my state, which has 65% of our nation's common border with Mexico, has seen an increase in the number of OTM arrests. In fact, a majority of this year's OTM apprehensions have occurred in the Texas sectors. This year the border patrol has apprehended approximately 96,000 OTMs, 90 % of these arrests have occurred at the southwest border. And, of the southwest border arrests more than 76,000 have been made in the Texas sectors. These examples highlight the concerns raised by former Deputy Homeland Security Secretary James Loy when he testified that intelligence information suggests that al Qaeda believes that illegally crossing the southwest border through Mexico "is more advantageous than legal entry for operational security reasons." Accordingly, as Congress debates various proposals to both enforce and reform our immigration laws, we must all remember: Undetected border crossings by unknown individuals from suspect nations pose a clear threat to the national security of the United States, and any comprehensive solution to our immigration problems must deal with that threat. I look forward to hearing from our witnesses today about what we should do to confront this problem and ways in which we can further strengthen and enforce our borders. I also look forward to continuing our hearings and working to provide effective comprehensive immigration reform that better serves our national security, our national economy, and our national commitment to the rule of law. Thank you Mr. Chairman.
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