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Transcript: CBS News contributor Sam Vinograd on “Face the Nation,” June 16, 2024

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The following is a transcript of an interview with CBS News contributor Sam Vinograd, a former Homeland Security official, on “Face the Nation” that aired on June 16, 2024.


MARGARET BRENNAN: We’re joined now by Samantha Vinograd, a former high counterterrorism official on the Department of Homeland Security below President Biden and he or she is now a nationwide safety contributor right here at CBS. Good to have you ever again, I’d wish to have you ever assist us digest a few of what we talked about with this arrest of those eight people who made all of it the way in which from Central Asia by means of the southern border, and had been arrested this previous week by the FBI and ICE. There was no derogatory info discovered on them after they had been scooped up initially. How thorough is the vetting completed by federal border brokers? 

SAMANTHA VINOGRAD: Well Margaret, let me put vetting in context, I used to be liable for screening and vetting coverage at DHS, each particular person encountered at our borders is vetted. What which means is people’ identities are run in opposition to sure knowledge units or watch lists of terrorism associated and different derogatory info. However, the vetting is just nearly as good because the underlying content material in these watch lists. And I do imagine that we have now under-resourced international terrorism associated intelligence assortment, evaluation, and distribution in a approach that’s adversely impacting the standard of these watch lists themselves. We do have gaps when it comes, for instance, to info on dangerous actors in Central Asia. So in the present day, I’m much less involved about a person on our watch listing one way or the other sneaking by means of our southern border than I’m a few dangerous actor who’s unknown to us. And that is why we have to urgently prioritize deepening intelligence partnerships, with, for instance, international locations in Central Asia, and guaranteeing that we’re absolutely exploiting all the intelligence that had been collected up to now on dangerous actors, their journey patterns and extra.

MARGARET BRENNAN: And once you say under-resourced, Congress controls the purse strings and the allocation of that, together with Chair Turner’s committee would have a voice in that, appropriate? 

VINOGRAD: Yes, that’s true. At the identical time, the federal authorities has made choices about different intelligence priorities, for instance, nice energy competitors with China and Russia has taken assets away from international terrorism priorities like ISIS and Al-Qaeda, and I do imagine has led to considerably of a mis-assessment of the targets of what had beforehand been considered as regional associates of ISIS, like ISIS-Okay, ISIS-Khorasan, which we now assess, does have actually international ambitions slightly than staying targeted on Afghanistan, Pakistan and Central Asia.

MARGARET BRENNAN: And- and also you increase an necessary level there that we have now simply to attach for individuals, we not have a presence in Afghanistan and the intelligence capabilities we as soon as did when there was a navy presence on the bottom. So these surrounding international locations that we’re speaking about whether or not it is Tajikistan or Uzbekistan, these are the locations you are speaking about ISIS-Okay emanating out of, proper? 

VINOGRAD: Well, we did lose what we name battlefield intelligence once we withdrew from Afghanistan and Iraq. We additionally know that ISIS has actually leveraged a world franchise mannequin, if you’ll, the place they’ve constructed up regional associates. For instance, in elements of Central Asia, ISIS-Okay is a regional affiliate in that a part of the world. But what we are actually seeing is these regional associates conducting assaults in an ever increasing geographic scope. What which means is we’d like extra and higher intelligence on people in these areas, as a result of they do search to do hurt. In Europe, we had a worldwide risk advisory a number of months in the past issued by the State Department, in addition to doubtlessly right here within the homeland.

MARGARET BRENNAN: You had the State Department and defined that the US and Turkey had been sanctioning three people who had ties to ISIS-Okay and a community of human smugglers making an attempt to convey individuals right here to the US. That brings us again to the southern border. You know, how a lot of a vulnerability is it? 

VINOGRAD: Well, Turkey has been a comparatively uneven counterterrorism associate however has lately stepped up and brought some essential motion to primary sanction people who could pose a terrorism associated risk, and attempt to tackle some recognized facilitation routes for human smugglers. Our southern border does current a safety threat in the case of dangerous actors making an attempt to realize entry to this nation. To tackle the dangers at our southern border, we have to make sure that federal brokers are appropriately resourced. We want to make sure once more that we have now the proper intelligence feeding our watch lists. So we all know what to be careful for and we have to disincentivize people from making an attempt to return right here within the first place.

MARGARET BRENNAN: So does- provided that the President simply had this govt order that could be challenged in courtroom, however making an attempt to close down asylum and crossing the border. Does he even have the authority to close down journey from these areas of concern and particular international locations? 

Could he–

VINOGRAD: Well–

MARGARET BRENNAN: –try this? 

VINOGRAD: Well, simply to make clear, the President is not making an attempt to close down asylum on the border, he’s making an attempt to limit asylum between people’ means to say assignment- asylum between ports of entry- entry, which is barely totally different. The President below Section 212(f) of the Immigration Nationality Act does have the authority to limit entry of sure non-citizens below particular circumstances. Mr. Trump did beforehand use that authority throughout COVID. That is the authority that President Biden is counting on in his newest govt order. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: Could he direct it extra narrowly in the direction of these areas of concern? I imply, why is it that the data you are saying that feeds these watch lists is so poor in the case of a rustic like Tajikistan?

VINOGRAD: Well, President Biden once more, may attempt to use this authority to limit the journey of sure non-citizens below varied circumstances. He may select to take that route, I do assume it might be challenged in courtroom like this present govt order is, however by the identical token, I believe it is important that he works, and I do know the administration is doing this, to deepen intelligence cooperation with these international locations. So for instance, final summer season, we did have this risk stream that you simply talked about emanating from Uzbekistan, and that led to a deepened intelligence and regulation enforcement partnership between the United States and Uzbekistan. There have been for instance, removing flights of Uzbek nationals again to Uzbekistan, I do imagine the identical method is being taken with Tajikistan however that can take time. And concurrently, we do have Customs and Border Protection and ICE who’ve broad discretion to make operational modifications on the border to, for instance, detain all people from these international locations slightly than, for instance, releasing them into the homeland.

MARGARET BRENNAN: Sam, all the time good to have you ever right here. 

VINOGRAD: Thanks. 

MARGARET BRENNAN: We’ll be proper again.



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