It's in-season in the Florida Keys. Not for tourists or
lobsters, but for human smuggling. Smuggling that makes big bucks
for criminals, drains scarce Coast Guard assets from other vital
maritime missions and risks the lives of desperate people trying to
escape the tyranny of Castro's Cuba. And it's all encouraged by the
U.S. government.
The Cuban Adjustment Act is well-intentioned. It recognizes an
important fact: The regime in Cuba is despicable. It crushes
individual liberty and suppresses economic freedom. Small wonder
that every year thousands brave any danger to escape. With that in
mind, the Adjustment Act ensures that any Cuban who legally or
illegally touches American soil has a right to claim refugee status
(with the attendant entitlements and benefits) and, after one year,
can petition to live permanently in the United States.
Here's the problem. That promise guarantees human smugglers a
lucrative market of customers -- so lucrative they can charge about
$10,000 for the 90-mile trip to the U.S. They know that every
refugee they successfully land on American shores will get a
guaranteed welcome from Uncle Sam -- and that means money. Last
year, 600 Cubans illegally entered in the United States through the
Florida Keys. That's about $6 million going straight into the
pockets of criminals.
The smugglers are smart, efficient and ruthless. It costs $250,000
for a boat that can outrun the fastest Coast Guard cutter. They can
hire a recent client to make the run to Cuba in exchange for
services rendered. Not a bad deal, since, if they get caught, the
worst they'll be charged with is a misdemeanor. The boat's owner
will then report the boat stolen. That way if the authorities stop
the boat, it can be quickly reclaimed, then sent out again. The
favorite target for the smugglers is the Dry Tortugas, a strip of
nearly deserted islands in U.S. territory. Once a Cuban touches
ground there or anyplace on American soil, he is permitted to
remain in the United States.
And here's the irony: While the government encourages the smuggling
with this legislation, it also insists that the Coast Guard do
everything possible to stop the smuggling -- creating the
conditions for a perfect storm at sea.
Smuggling runs are made in the dead of night, in overcrowded boats,
without running lights, lifejackets or safety gear of any kind.
When the Coast Guard spots the "go-fast" boats, a desperate race
begins. The only way to stop the smugglers' boats is to shoot out
their motors, no easy task on a pitch-black night on rolling seas,
racing along at up to 55 miles per hour.
Knowing that the Coast Guard will make every effort to avoid
injuring anyone, smugglers tell refugees to lay across the boat
engines, an incredibly reckless act. If they're near shore, they
will beach the craft at full speed. During a recent intercept, the
smugglers did just that, and every one of the three-dozen refugees
aboard suffered cuts and broken bones.
The smuggling fostered by the Cuban Adjustment Act not only fuels a
growing criminal enterprise and needlessly risks the lives of
legitimate refugees, but also significantly detracts from the
ability of the Coast Guard and Customs and Border Protection to
accomplish other missions.
For instance, the Joint Interagency Task Force South, which is
responsible for detecting drug trafficking in the Caribbean,
estimates that the United States has fewer than half the ships and
two-thirds of the planes it needs to stop all the drug smugglers it
detects through intelligence and monitoring. And short staffing
there means short staffing for the port security and maritime
missions that combat terrorism.
Finally, this growing problem is jeopardizing the lives of young
Coast Guard personnel and Customs and Border agents. Interdictions
at sea are as potentially risky for them as they are for the
refugees.
Congress needs to amend the Cuban Adjustment Act in a way that
doesn't reward "for-profit" human traffickers. For that matter, why
treat Cuban refugees differently than those from other countries
run by ruthless dictators? Either we stand for freedom or we
don't.
At the same time, Congress has to start providing the Coast Guard
and Customs and Border Protection the kinds of planes and aircraft
they need and in the numbers they need. It makes little sense to
encourage smugglers and give money away in port security grants
that actually add little security, but leave the men and women who
are responsible for keeping us safe without the resources they need
to do the job right.
James Jay Carafano,
Ph.D., is a senior research fellow for defense and homeland
security at The Heritage Foundation (heritage.org) and co-author of
"
Winning the Long War: Lessons from the Cold War for Defeating
Terrorism and Preserving Liberty."
Distributed nationally on the Knight-Ridder Tribune wire