Advertisement

Donald Trump is working on a new ‘streamlined’ travel ban: John Kelly

Click to play video: 'New U.S. travel ban to spare green card holders: Homeland Security boss'
New U.S. travel ban to spare green card holders: Homeland Security boss
WATCH ABOVE: U.S. Secretary for Homeland Security, John Kelly, says new version of a U.S. travel ban will not stop green card residency holders. He adds the president is "contemplating issuing a tighter, more streamlined version of the first executive order." – Feb 18, 2017

MUNICH – President Donald Trump is working on a “streamlined” version of his executive order banning travel from seven predominantly Muslim nations to iron out the difficulties that landed his first order in the courts, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said Saturday.

Speaking on a panel about combating terrorism at the Munich Security Conference, Kelly said Trump’s original order was designed as a “temporary pause” to allow him to “see where our immigration and vetting system has gaps – and gaps it has – that could be exploited.”

READ MORE: Immigrants in US eye Canada as Trump threatens new travel ban

He said the Trump administration was surprised when U.S. courts blocked it from implementing the executive order and now “the president is contemplating releasing a tighter, more streamlined version” of the travel ban.

Kelly said this next time he will be able to “make sure that there’s no one caught in the system of moving from overseas to our airports.”

Story continues below advertisement

Asked whether that meant Trump’s new executive order would allow people with green cards and visas to come into the United States, Kelly said “it’s a good assumption.”

Breaking news from Canada and around the world sent to your email, as it happens.

READ MORE: Donald Trump’s administration to revise travel ban ‘in near future’

But he went on to say that only people with visas who were already in transit would be allowed in. For others, he said, “we will have a short phase-in period to make sure that people on the other end don’t get on airplanes.”

He did not elaborate on whether this would apply to green card holders as well.

Among the security challenges, Kelly said, was that the U.S. does not have “strong counter-terrorism partnerships” with the countries in question or “robust information on individuals travelling from these countries” to be able to make a good risk assessments before their citizens travelled to the United States.

Story continues below advertisement

The nations affected by the original ban were Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. Kelly mentioned “seven nations” again on Saturday, leading to speculation they will all be included in Trump’s next executive order.

READ MORE: Digital searches at the US border: what you need to know

The U.S. needs to “find ways to vet in a more reliable way to satisfy us that the people that are coming to the United States are, in fact, coming for the right reasons,” he said.

Asked about the effectiveness of a blanket ban on seven countries, fellow panelist Thomas de Maiziere, Germany’s top security official, suggested it could be counter-productive.

“To ban whole countries perhaps could create more collateral damage, and perhaps does not produce more security,” he said. “The more precise you do it, the more effective you are.”

Sponsored content

AdChoices