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May 26, 2017

For U.S. veteran, compassion for refugees is key to genuine security

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Scott Cooper can often be found in the corridors of the U.S. Capitol, speaking with lawmakers and aides and anyone else willing to listen. His mission: making sure refugees remain welcome in the United States of America.

Cooper, 46, is accustomed to fighting for his beliefs. He spent two decades as a fighter pilot with the U.S. Marine Corps, completing five tours of duty in Iraq and two in Afghanistan before retiring as a lieutenant-colonel. Now a civilian again, he continues to defend his country and the humane ideals upon which it was built.

“When you get out of the military you think, ‘What’s the next mission?’ Seeing those affected by war, protecting human rights and national security led me to start Veterans for American Ideals last year to advocate for military interpreters and Syrian refugees."

This nonpartisan group of former servicemen and women share the belief that America is strongest when its policies and actions match its principles. Its latest campaigns focus on protecting refugees, countering Islamophobia and saving the Special Immigrant Visa program for interpreters and translators who supported the U.S. military.

“Regardless of what you think about those wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, we should be welcoming those victims of those conflicts,” Cooper says. “As a veteran, this is about who we are – this is about our security.”

In response to plans to bar refugees from six war-torn countries from entering the United States, Cooper earlier this year led a delegation of refugees from four of the six countries affected to Capitol Hill.

Joined by a former officer of the U.S. Army's elite Green Beret unit, they met with staff in the offices of senators Ed Markey, Joe Manchin, John McCain and Marco Rubio, among others – to attest to the rigor of the U.S. refugee vetting process.

“If people were to understand the process of those vetted, we would be better off,” Cooper says. “There is a false narrative that refugees are somehow not vetted… Nothing could be further from the truth. Look at what they go through.”

Only a tiny fraction – less than one percent, only the most vulnerable – of refugees are ever resettled to a third country and they do not choose which. In the case of the United States, they are admitted only after exhaustive security checks that can take years and that are conducted by the U.S. government overseas before any refugee ever travels to the United States to begin a new life.

Cooper says he strives to live his beliefs every day. He has helped more than a dozen people, refugees as well as Iraqis and Afghans with special immigrant visas, resettle in the United States only after they have completed the rigorous U.S. government vetting process.

Cooper is the father of two daughters, both now in their 20s. Their safety and security, he says, is his paramount concern.

“We have always been a country with an open door,” he adds, voicing dismay at the way refugees have become politicized. “The symbol of the United States is the Statue of Liberty, not barbed wire or walls.”

By Joanne Levine

As an American fighter pilot, Scott Cooper served in Afghanistan and Iraq. Now out of uniform, he’s on a new mission: advocating for refugees on Capitol Hill.


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