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The U.S. is failing to fulfill its “modest pledge” to resettle 10,000 Syrian refugees by September 2016, according to the most recent government figures and a damning new report (pdf) from Human Rights First, prompting sharp critique from observers.
“Words can hardly capture the U.S. response to the Syrian refugee crisis, at least any words I can think of.”
—Noam Chomsky
Only 1,736 Syrians have been resettled within U.S. borders—fewer than one-fifth of the country’s stated goal—in the seven months since Secretary of State John Kerry’s original announcement in September of last year.
“The United States cannot lead by example unless the administration meets this year’s very modest goal and sets a more meaningful and ambitious goal for next year,” said Eleanor Acer, senior director for refugee protection at the human rights non-profit to the New York Times on Tuesday.
Germany, Canada, and Brazil have all resettled far more Syrian refugees than the United States, despite those countries’ smaller populations and even though it is U.S. foreign policy that has been characterized by many observers as largely responsible for the flood of global migration in the first place.
And as millions are displaced around the world, U.S. treatment of refugees has been decried and condemned by many—including prominent White House officials, who urged President Obama to increase his Syrian refugee resettlement goal a full tenfold when it was first announced.
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