Patrick Chappatte cartoon

(Patrick Chappatte cartoon / caglecartoons.com)

As with many immigration-related matters, too much information is purposely hidden from public view.

We recently witnessed an excellent example of President Joe Biden’s immigration subterfuge.

The must-pass continuing resolution bill to fund the federal government at its current level, and therefore avoid a government shutdown, included a completely unrelated $7 billion to help resettle evacuated Afghan nationals, mostly unvetted or, at best, superficially screened.

The breakout of how the $7 billion will be spent was kept secret from the public. As the late Sen. Everett Dirksen, R-Ill., said, perhaps apocryphally, “A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon, you’re talking real money.”

Americans know as confirmed fact that the arriving Afghans are unvetted because Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, contradicting his earlier claim, sheepishly admitted to the Senate Judiciary Committee that he had no idea how many evacuees had been vetted.

Pressed by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., Mayorkas confessed: “We are not conducting in-person, full refugee interviews of 100%” of Afghan evacuees.

Moreover, Mayorkas couldn’t provide specific data for how many Afghans went through full interviews. His testimony exposes White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki’s deceptive statement assuring that “no one” has entered the United States without “a thorough screening and background check process.”

The federal government’s failure to properly protect Americans has already, just weeks after the Afghan evacuation, had serious consequences.

In September in New Mexico, the FBI began an investigation into a small group of male Afghans who, temporarily housed at Fort Bliss’ Doña Ana Complex, allegedly sexually assaulted a female U.S. soldier.

Also in September, at Fort McCoy in Wisconsin, two evacuees were charged, separately, with the alleged sexual assault of a minor using force, and spousal assault by strangulation and suffocation.

The individuals identified in these crimes hardly sound like they belong as part of “Operation Allies Welcome,” most of whom arrived on the six-week-long airlift known as “Operation Allies Refuge” that moved 124,000 individuals out of Afghanistan, placing them around the country.

Some of their destinations will be in areas that are struggling to recover from the coronavirus pandemic, and have other long-standing societal woes ingrained in their fabric before the evacuees’ arrival.

State Department data for the Afghan Placement and Assistance program obtained by the Associated Pressed showed that California is expected to accept more Afghan evacuees than any state, 5,200. Three months ago, Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislative leaders requested $16.7 million in taxpayer funding to help resettle refugees.

Contradictory, the State Department promised to resettle Afghans in states with affordable housing. Yet California’s officials have for years bemoaned the shortage of that exact commodity.

California is also plagued by high average gas prices, $4.68, and above-average state and local taxes at 10.9% of adjusted personal income. The state’s income inequality level is among the five worst states, and the its K-12 public school system struggles with overcrowded classrooms that hamper teachers’ ability to effectively educate their students.

For Afghans starting a new life in California, they’ll face many obstacles before they can hope to get on their feet.

For Americans keeping score on the dollar cost of the Afghanistan resettlement, here’s a partial tally. The 20-year war cost $2.3 trillion, with the estimated interest payments on that sum coming in at $925 billion. By 2030, estimated interest costs will ratchet up to $2 trillion, and by 2050, $6.5 trillion.

Military equipment worth billions more dollars was abandoned during the hasty and incompetent U.S. retreat from Afghanistan.

Those are painfully high sums. But no dollar amount can be attached to the loss of 2,400 American lives, the lives of 3,800 U.S. contractors and the thousands left behind to face an uncertain and possibly deadly future.

Now Americans will be required to finance Afghan evacuees’ U.S. resettlement, the $7 billion in the continuing resolution, plus mounting federal, state and local costs.

The Center for Immigration Studies estimated that in their first five years of U.S. residency, each Middle Eastern refugee costs taxpayers $64,370, or 12 times what the United Nations estimates would be the cost to care for one refugee in a country close to his home.

Regional resettlement never occurred to the Biden administration. There’s no reason it should when it has U.S. taxpayers to rely on.

— Joe Guzzardi is an analyst and researcher with Progressives for Immigration Reform who now lives in Pittsburgh. He can be reached at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org, or follow him on Twitter: @joeguzzardi19. Click here to read previous columns. The opinions expressed are his own.

Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst who has written about immigration for more than 30 years. A California native who now lives in Pittsburgh, he can be reached at jguzzardi@ifspp.org. The opinions expressed are his own.