The Biden border and refugee chaos has produced yet another deadly consequence, and this time it cost a young National Guard soldier her life.
A former Trump intelligence leader is sounding the alarm, revealing that the Afghan national now accused of murdering a U.S. service member on Thanksgiving week was allowed into America without the most basic security review.
Joe Kent, the Trump-era director of the National Counterterrorism Center, confirmed Friday what many suspected about the Biden administration’s 2021 Afghan airlift: it was a rushed free-for-all that bypassed years of standard vetting procedures. Kent said Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the man accused in the deadly Washington D.C. ambush, was “not vetted” before entering America — a decision he directly linked to Biden’s policies.
Kent described a mass inflow of over two million foreign nationals from “Muslim-majority nations and regions” during that period, noting that many were allowed through with “minimal scrutiny amid record border crossings.” He highlighted that roughly 85,000 Afghans were granted entry “rapidly” during the administration’s rushed evacuation following the collapse of Kabul.
According to Kent, the suspect was approved only for wartime service overseas — something very different from approving an individual to live freely in the United States. As he put it, the man “was only vetted to serve as a soldier to fight against the Taliban, AQ, and ISIS in Afghanistan.” Kent stressed that “was not vetting for life in America,” adding that Lakanwal was never assessed “in terms of being a neighbor, a resident, or a prospective citizen.”
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