US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem suggests that a suspect involved in a National Guard shooting last week may have been radicalized after arriving in the United States.
According to Noem, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, who is an Afghan national and had worked with the CIA during the US war in Afghanistan, may have undergone inadequate vetting by the Biden administration. Lakanwal was granted asylum in April this year under Operation Allies Welcome, a program aimed at resettling Afghan nationals who worked with the US government.
Noem claimed that Lakanwal's asylum claim application started under the Biden administration and that the responsibility for his vetting lies with them. However, others familiar with the process have disputed her claims, saying that Afghans who resettled in the US were indeed vetted against classified and unclassified intelligence.
A senior US official told ABC News that Lakanwal had been vetted at one point by the National Counterterrorism Center and "nothing came up" during that review. The suspect's arrangement with the CIA during the war would have almost certainly required him to be vetted by the agency at the time.
Senator Chris Van Hollen also pushed back against Noem's assertion, saying that there is no evidence that the Biden administration's vetting procedures led to the attack. He criticized the Trump administration's announcement on Friday that it was pausing all asylum decisions following the shooting as "collective punishment" for Afghan nationals who worked with the US government.
The incident has raised concerns about the vetting process for Afghan nationals who resettled in the US after the Taliban takeover in 2021.
According to Noem, Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, who is an Afghan national and had worked with the CIA during the US war in Afghanistan, may have undergone inadequate vetting by the Biden administration. Lakanwal was granted asylum in April this year under Operation Allies Welcome, a program aimed at resettling Afghan nationals who worked with the US government.
Noem claimed that Lakanwal's asylum claim application started under the Biden administration and that the responsibility for his vetting lies with them. However, others familiar with the process have disputed her claims, saying that Afghans who resettled in the US were indeed vetted against classified and unclassified intelligence.
A senior US official told ABC News that Lakanwal had been vetted at one point by the National Counterterrorism Center and "nothing came up" during that review. The suspect's arrangement with the CIA during the war would have almost certainly required him to be vetted by the agency at the time.
Senator Chris Van Hollen also pushed back against Noem's assertion, saying that there is no evidence that the Biden administration's vetting procedures led to the attack. He criticized the Trump administration's announcement on Friday that it was pausing all asylum decisions following the shooting as "collective punishment" for Afghan nationals who worked with the US government.
The incident has raised concerns about the vetting process for Afghan nationals who resettled in the US after the Taliban takeover in 2021.