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Guilty "Resettled" Muslim Iraqi Refugee Plotted to Bomb Houston Malls

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Obama Inc. claims that their Muslim refugee resettlement program is bulletproof. It isn't. And neither are we. 

Here's the latest Muslim refugee who turned out to be a ticking time bomb. In the most literal sense.

- The U.S. Department of Justice said a 24-year-old Iraqi refugee living in Houston pleaded guilty on Monday to supporting the Islamic State.

Omar Faraj Saeed al-Hardan, who was born in Iraq, entered the United States in 2009. He was in at least two refugee camps in Jordan and Iraq prior to reaching the United States and being granted permanent legal residence status in 2011.

"Al-Hardan also said he wanted to be trained in building remote transmitter/receiver detonators for improvised explosive devices, wanted to learn to use cell phones as the remote detonators and wanted to build remote detonators for ISIL," the Justice Department wrote.

The Justice Department also said Hardan made statements about his plans to travel to Syria to fight alongside the Islamic State "and become a martyr."

"In one instance he said: 'I want to blow myself up. I want to travel with the mujahedin. I want to travel to be with those who are against America. I am against America,'" the Justice Department wrote, quoting Hardan's statements.

#RefugeesWelcome.

But Hardan didn't limit himself to terror plans abroad. The Muslim settler also wanted to kill Americans right here.

A Houston man who pledged his allegiance to ISIS and plotted to detonate homemade bombs in local shopping malls pleaded guilty Monday to a terrorism-related charge.

Omar Faraj Saeed Al Hardan, a 24-year-old father, stockpiled circuitry components, wireless remotes and other bomb-making implements in his west Houston apartment,according to court documents.

The whole thing is another reminder of how poisonous the Muslim refugee resettlement trade really is.

Omar Faraj Saeed Al Hardan’s case is a black eye for the Syrian refugee program, which officials said they modeled on the Iraqi program, using lessons learned to create the vetting system that President Obama and other top officials have promised would weed out terrorists.

But Al Hardan managed to get into the U.S. in 2009 as a teenager after spending time in refugee camps in Jordan and Iraq. Two years after he arrived, he was granted a green card by the Obama administration and quickly began to plot to join one of the terrorist networks fighting in the Middle East.

Al Hardan was one of two men admitted as refugees from Iraq who face criminal terrorism-related charges.

Aws Mohammed Younis al-Jayab, 23, was indicted this year in federal court in California on charges of lying about his terrorist background to immigration officials. He was later indicted in federal court in Illinois for attempting to aid terrorists.

#TerrorismWelcome.

The best way to fight ISIS and Islamic terrorism is to end the transportation of enemy agents into our country.


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