To: jlallen who wrote (278813 ) 7/22/2002 1:27:07 PM From: greenspirit Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667 Saudi Visa Policy Revoked July 19, 2002 by Deroy Murdock At last, a head has rolled since the September 11 terrorist attacks.hudson.org Mary Ryan, Assistant Secretary for Consular Affairs, has “retired” from the State Department. She was pressured out on July 9 after suffering severe criticism for a program she pioneered called Visa Express. Unique to Saudi Arabia, it fast-tracked visa applications for Saudi citizens and alien residents hoping to come to America. Rather than visit U.S. diplomatic posts, visa applicants were expected to hand their papers to Saudi travel agents who would deliver them to American consular personnel. So long as they could afford passage and did not have criminal records or appear on watch lists, these applicants were greenlighted to enter America, usually with neither interviews nor any other contacts with U.S. officials until they actually landed here. This program was particularly convenient for Salem Alhamzi, Khalid Almihdar and Abdulaziz Alomari. These Saudi citizens were among the 19 hijackers who killed 3,056 innocents on September 11. Without even being interviewed, these three mass murderers reached U.S. shores through Mary Ryan’s brilliant initiative. Visa Express is gone. So is Ryan and her “I’m OK, You’re OK” approach to visa applicants from a hostile, anti-western, anti-American, anti-Semitic country that she embraced like a sandier, flatter Switzerland. Ryan’s departure should force State to practice vigilance rather than hospitality when it screens people eager to come to America-not to see the sights, but to detonate them. State now says it will interview Saudi visa applicants. While it is hard to believe this was not always the case, it is unforgivable that this did not become policy on September 12, 2001, rather than July 10, 2002. Better yet, visa approval, at least for applicants from pro-terrorist nations like Saudi Arabia, would be better shifted to the new Homeland Security Department. Congress is weighing this radical, but prudent, reform of U.S consular operations. If Mary Ryan is this tale’s vanquished villain, its hero is Joel Mowbray, my colleague at National Review Online (NRO). He deserves enormous credit and the nation’s gratitude for discovering the Visa Express story and sinking his teeth into it as if he were a pit bull that caught up with a jogger. His initial piece, “Catch the Visa Express,” was published in National Review’s July 1 issue, which appeared on June 17. The State Department that day changed the program’s name and its description on State’s web page. Ignoring such cosmetics, Mowbray followed up his scoop with additional NRO and newspaper dispatches, media appearances and testimony before a House panel eager to learn more about the idiocies he unearthed. The fruits of Mowbray’s intrepid journalism are stunning: America’s longest-serving career diplomat is out on her duff. A foolish and deadly federal program has been spiked. And Congress may yank one of State’s core functions from its clutches. This may explain why a State Department official and four armed guards detained Mowbray for 30 minutes after he challenged spokesman Richard Boucher at a July 12 briefing. Mowbray cited a classified diplomatic cable regarding Visa Express that was discussed on NRO and in the Washington Post. State’s goons pressed Mowbray to name his source, even though the document he was furnished merely embarrasses State without jeopardizing national security. Senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) and Representative Dave Weldon (R-Florida) greeted this outrage with a July 16 letter to Secretary of State Powell. They complained that “the actions of State Department security officials effectively chilled the work of the media and the whistleblowers who are so vital to exposing problems in our government.” The eye of this hurricane is no veteran reporter, but a 26-year-old who just two years ago worked on Capitol Hill for former Rep. Mark Sanford (R-South Carolina). Mowbray began writing articles only last November. NRO first posted his work in April. Since then, he has rocked a key bureaucracy and, in Ryan, nailed quite a fancy scalp to his wall. Amid this summer’s chaos and crashing disappointments, from pedophile priests to WorldCom to the Dow, Joel Mowbray reminds Americans that one man truly can make a difference. Now, if he simply would aim his magic keyboard at the FBI and the CIA. . . .