Here,
at NPR.
I see that the Right wing media is arguing along the lines of "Hey - Obama put a halt on Iraqi visas for 6 months in 20
0911 and no one freaked out. Why freak out over Trump doing something similar?"
The reasons:
* the fact that most people had forgotten Obama's action indicates that, unlike Trump, Obama wasn't throwing it out as red meat to his base, and drumming up their fear and despising of all Muslim refugees. What's more, he had
a specific reason for his actions. Trump, as we well know, even conflates terrorism from Muslims born in America with the risk of terrorism from refugees - a dishonest and stupid thing to to.
* Recent attacks show the issue of "self radicalised" terrorism is a real problem. Going over the top with publicising actions readily interpreted as attacks on Islam generally is, if anything, likely to make the home grown problem worse.
From the NYT:
“In
my opinion, this is just a huge mistake in terms of counterterrorism
cooperation,” said Daniel Benjamin, formerly the State Department’s top
counterterrorism official and now a scholar at Dartmouth. “For the life
of me, I don’t see why we would want to alienate the Iraqis when they
are the ground force against ISIS.”
At
home as well, Mr. Benjamin said, the president’s order is likely to
prove counterproductive. The jihadist threat in the United States has
turned out to be largely homegrown, he said, and the order will
encourage precisely the resentments and anxieties on the part of Muslims
that fuel, in rare cases, support for the ideology of the Islamic State
or Al Qaeda.
“It
sends an unmistakable message to the American Muslim community that
they are facing discrimination and isolation,” Mr. Benjamin said. That,
he said, will “feed the jihadist narrative” that the United States is at
war with Islam, potentially encouraging a few more Muslims to plot
violence.
For
an action aimed at terrorism, the order appeared to garner little or no
support among experts and former officials of every political stripe
with experience in the field. Jonathan Schanzer, the vice president for
research at the conservative Foundation for the Defense of Democracies,
said that if the temporary visa ban was used to review and improve
immigration vetting procedures, it might be justified.
But
he added that he knew of no obvious problems with those procedures, and
no specific plans to address such issues over the 120-day ban. “The
order appears to be based mainly on a campaign promise,” he said.
Update: the
Washington Post deals with how the Obama response to the Iraqi visa issue in 2011 is completely different to Trump's pandering to his base, and refusing to help Europe with the Syrian problem.