February 28, 2008
Virtual Border Fence About As Effective As Katrina Levees—Can't Anybody Here Play This Game?
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
When
Woodrow Wilson went to Congress to
ask for a declaration of war in 1917, the U.S. Army
was ranked 17th in the world, behind Portugal.
On
Armistice Day, 19 months later, there were 2 million
doughboys in France, where they had helped to break the
back of Gen. Ludendorff's theretofore invincible army in
its final offensive, and 2 million more in the United
States ready to march on Berlin.
No
other nation could have done that.
After
Japan attacked
Pearl Harbor in
1941, FDR demanded that a disarmed America "build
50,000 planes" -- a seemingly impossible number, but one
America met and exceeded.
Starting from scratch in 1941, the Manhattan Project at
Oak Ridge and Los Alamos designed, built, tested and
detonated three atomic bombs by August 1945 to end the
war.
After
Sputnik humiliated America,
Wernher Von Braun and the boys at
Redstone Arsenal had a satellite up in three months.
In 1961, JFK
declared we were going to the moon and would be
there before the decade was out. Cynics scoffed. This
writer was at Canaveral to
watch Apollo 11 lift off in the summer of 1969.
Whatever became of that can-do nation?
In
August 2005, Katrina swept through New Orleans and left
30,000 people stranded at the Superdome and
Convention Center. Though the floodwater was shallow and
stagnant and New Orleans is a port city with boats all
over the place, it took six days and the 82nd Airborne
to rescue the stranded.
Compare our performance in Katrina with that of the
Brits in 1941, who sent hundreds of boats across the
Channel to pull 350,000 British and French troops
off the continent in one week in the
Miracle of Dunkirk. The Brits weren't going to let
Goering's fighters deter them from going across and
bringing their boys home.
What
occasions these reflections is this morning's lead story
in The Washington Post:
"'Virtual Fence' Along Border to Be Delayed: U.S.
Retooling High-Tech Barrier After 28-Mile Pilot Project
Fails."
The
opening paragraphs:
"The Bush administration has scaled back plans to
quickly build a 'virtual fence' along the U.S.-Mexico
border, delaying completion of the first phase of the
project by at least three years and shifting away from a
network of tower-mounted sensors and surveillance gear.
...
"Technical problems discovered in a 28-mile pilot
project south of Tucson prompted the change in plans.
..."
Thus,
building the first 100 miles of "virtual fence"
will take Bush longer than it took FDR to win World War
II. The admission of failure comes two years after Bush
announced plans for
"the most technologically advanced border enforcement
initiative in American history."
"The virtual fence,"
writes the Post, "was to complement a physical fence
that the administration now says will include 370 miles
of pedestrian fencing and 300 miles of vehicle barriers
to be completed by the end of this year. The GAO says
this portion of the project may also be delayed and that
its total cost cannot be determined. The president's
2009 budget does not propose funds to add fencing beyond
the 700 or so miles meant to be completed by this year."
In
short, these characters cannot build a virtual fence and
won't complete a physical fence. If the nation is fed up
with Republicans, who can blame them?
Securing a border
is not that difficult. In 1954, President Eisenhower
sent an Army general to Texas to do it. He began
repatriating thousands of Mexicans and had the situation
in hand within a year. Along the San Diego corridor, a
crude fence of corrugated steel matting from U.S.
airfields in Vietnam has stopped illegal trucks from
crossing,
cut back 90 percent on the illegal alien traffic,
and virtually eliminated murders and assaults in the
border area.
Measures taken lately at the state and federal level,
though grudgingly by the administration, have begun to
bear fruit.
After
Arizonans voted to cut off all social benefits to
residents who could not prove they were in the country
legally came reports of people pulling their
kids out of public schools and
leaving the state.
From
the border come reports that added Border Patrol agents
have reduced the number of illegal aliens apprehended,
suggesting word has gone out south of the border that it
is no longer so easy to walk in. And deportations of
criminal aliens, long demanded, are actually going up.
Let
it be said: Our border can be secured; the
illegal aliens can be sent home; the
magnets that draw them here can be turned off. This
crisis can be resolved if the courage and will are
there. Unfortunately, we have a government that does not
seem to care and probable nominees neither of whom is
committed in his heart to doing it.
Given
the manifest will of the people that this
invasion from the
south be halted and rolled back, the 2008 election
is shaping up as yet further confirmation that American
democracy is a fraud.
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction
to VDARE.COM readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from Amazon.com. His new book
is
Day of Reckoning: How
Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart.