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One day in 1954, Border Patrol agent
Walt Edwards picked up a newspaper in Big Spring, Texas, and saw some
startling news. The government was launching an all-out drive to oust
illegal aliens from the United States.
The orders came straight from the top,
where the new president, Dwight Eisenhower, had put a former West Point
classmate, Gen. Joseph Swing, in charge of immigration enforcement.
General Swing's fast-moving campaign
soon secured America's borders - an accomplishment no other president
has since equaled. Illegal migration had dropped 95 percent by the late
1950s.
Several retired Border Patrol agents who
took part in the 1950s effort, including Mr. Edwards, say much of what
Swing did could be repeated today.
"Some say we cannot send 12 million
illegals now in the United States back where they came from. Of course
we can!" Edwards says.
Donald Coppock, who headed the Patrol
from 1960 to 1973, says that if Swing and Ike were still running
immigration enforcement, "they'd be on top of this in a minute."
William Chambers, another '50s veteran,
agrees. "They could do a pretty good job" sealing the border.
Edwards says: "When we start enforcing
the law, these various businesses are, on their own, going to replace
their [illegal] workforce with a legal workforce."
While Congress debates building a fence
on the border, these veterans say other actions should have higher
priority.
1. End the current practice of taking
captured Mexican aliens to the border and releasing them. Instead,
deport them deep into Mexico, where return to the US would be more
costly.
2. Crack down hard on employers who hire
illegals. Without jobs, the aliens won't come.
3. End "catch and release" for
non-Mexican aliens. It is common for illegal migrants not from Mexico to
be set free after their arrest if they promise to appear later before a
judge. Few show up.
The Patrol veterans say enforcement
could also be aided by a legalized guest- worker program that permits
Mexicans to register in their country for temporary jobs in the US.
Eisenhower's team ran such a program. It permitted up to 400,000
Mexicans a year to enter the US for various agriculture jobs that lasted
for 12 to 52 weeks. |