The Washington Times makes some interesting points in an editorial today (EXCERPTS):
Put plainly, when Mr. Bush talks tough on border security and enforcement, conservatives don’t believe him, and they have the facts to back them up. Last week’s address to the nation, during which Mr. Bush proposed adding 6,000 Border Patrol agents by 2007, wasn’t the first time he’s made such a promise. When one considers that it was just a couple of years ago when Mr. Bush promised to add 2,000 agents every year for the next five years, only to submit a 2006 budget calling for only 210, it’s no wonder why conservatives remain wary.
Here’s one instance where the administration can reverse its abysmal
record on employer sanctions, which dropped from 417 who had been fined
for hiring illegal aliens in 1999 to just three in 2004.Also, the administration should stop advertising how many illegal
aliens it has apprehended and start telling Americans how many it has
deported. Mr. Bush’s trumpeting of his administration’s arrest and
deportation of 6 million illegal aliens is actually a decline compared
to any five-year period under Mr. Clinton.
These points can play a potentially useful role in getting the Bush administration to get serious about border security. A "Bush weaker than Clinton on border security" meme would do a lot of good right now. Hopefully the blogosphere will start percolating the idea.
The points that the Washington Times raises illustrate why I simply do not trust President Bush on the subject of the border. All his tough talk about putting the national guard on the border (in a neutered form that won’t let them do hardly anything) and beefing up border patrol agents means nothing. It’s just empty show.
The same goes for his declarations about ending "catch and release." It’s easy for politicians to talk tough about what they’re going to do with personnel, but personnel can fall through the cracks at budget time or get de-funded later on or get reassigned or be forbidden by policy to do their jobs or simply be unable to respond to the magnitude of the problem they’re facing given limited resources. Personnel is too variable and too easy to reassign or neuter by policies of inaction.
That’s why I’m not going to be satisfied with anything less than a fence that completely seals the border. Fences can’t be reassigned or used as part of a shell game nearly as easily as personnel can. They stay there and do their job until structural damage is done to them. They’re not perfect, but they are effective and less susceptible to political subversion than personnel is.

