A new government audit
confirms what Judicial Watch has been reporting for years, that Islamic
terrorists are operating in Mexican border towns and infiltrating the
United States to carry out attacks. In a report issued this month by the
Texas Department of Public Safety, the agency notes that the state
faces a full spectrum of threats and “due to the recent actions of lone
offenders or small groups affiliated with or inspired by the Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and other foreign terrorist
organizations, we assess that the current terrorism threat to Texas is
elevated.”
Safety officials in the Lone Star State also write in the 86-page
document that they are “especially concerned about the potential for
terrorist infiltration across the U.S.-Mexico border, particularly as
foreign terrorist fighters depart Syria and Iraq and enter global
migration flows.” They also express worries about Syrian refugees that
have been sent to Texas under President Obama’s settlement program
because the government doesn’t have a system to properly vet them.
Judicial Watch has also reported extensively on that national security
crisis. Read the latest stories here and here.
“We see a potential that these challenges may leave the state exposed
to extremist actors who pose as authentic refugees, and who are
determined to later commit violent acts,” the Texas report states.
In the same manner that ISIS deployed operatives to their targets in
European capitals, the terrorist group could implement the same tactics
to infiltrate operatives across the Texas-Mexico border, the new report
points out. “Human smugglers, working along established Latin American
routes, have long transported Syrians, Iraqis and other immigrations
from countries where terrorist groups operate to our land border with
Mexico,” Texas safety officials write in the report. The U.S. government
calls them Special Interest Aliens (SIA) and in past few years they
have come from Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Lebanon, Egypt and
many other “countries of interest” in the Middle East, North Africa and
South Asia where terrorist groups are active.
The southern border has become a hotbed of Islamic terrorism in
recent years and Judicial Watch has exposed the national security
disaster as part of an ongoing investigation into the dangerously porous
region. In 2015 Judicial Watch reported
that Mexican drug cartels are smuggling SIAs from countries with
terrorist links into a small Texas rural town near El Paso. Sources on
both sides of the border confirmed to Judicial Watch that the smugglers
use remote farm roads—rather than interstates—to elude the Border Patrol
and other law enforcement barriers. Once they clear the border, the
SIAs are transported to stash areas in Acala, a rural crossroads located
around 54 miles from El Paso on a state road – Highway 20. Then the
SIAs wait for pick-up in the area’s sand hills just across Highway 20.
Also in 2015 Judicial Watch broke a story
about ISIS operating a camp just a few miles from El Paso, Texas in an
area known as “Anapra” situated just west of Ciudad Juárez in the
Mexican state of Chihuahua. Judicial Watch’s sources include a Mexican
Army field grade officer and a Mexican Federal Police Inspector who also
revealed that another ISIS cell is located to the west of Ciudad
Juárez, in Puerto Palomas. A year earlier Ft. Bliss, the U.S. Army post
in El Paso, implemented increased security measures following a Judicial
Watch report
about an Islamic terrorist plot in the Mexican border city of Ciudad
Juárez to attack the United States with car bombs or other vehicle borne
improvised explosive devices (VBIED).
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