Carson says jihadists will try to enter U.S. with Syrian refugees

DES MOINES, Iowa — Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson said the U.S. should bar refugees from war-torn Syria because they are “infiltrated with Jihadists,” who seek to harm America.

The comments come as Carson has taken an increasingly aggressive stance toward Muslims, and a day after national GOP poll leader Donald Trump pledged he would support deporting Syrian Muslims.

“To bring into this country groups infiltrated with Jihadists makes no sense,” Carson told about 150 people at the Des Moines Rotary Club’s monthly morning breakfast meeting. “Why would you do something like that?”

Instead, Carson recommended that the U.S. help settle Syrian refugees in the Middle East, in places such as Turkey. In Carson’s view, the U.S. could assist financially, but not open its doors.

Germany’s top security official said Friday that authorities so far had found no cases of terrorists with instructions to carry out attacks in the country mixing into the flow of incoming migrants.

Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said authorities had received tips from intelligence services that this could happen, but so far such concerns haven’t been confirmed.

Carson later told reporters that, despite the German official’s comments, terrorists “would be fools not to” try to enter the United States with Syrian refugees.

“At some point you have to use common sense and judgment,” Carlson said before headlining a town hall meeting at a community college north of Des Moines. “If you are part of the global Jihadist movement, and you see large numbers of people from your area moving into the United States, wouldn’t you want to infiltrate them?”

Carson’s comments echo Trump, who Thursday said, “If I win, they’re going back,” referring to Muslim Syrian refugees.

However, Carson has taken an increasingly skeptical view of Muslims in his public comments in recent days, as his political fortunes have improved. Carson now finds himself atop national Republican preference polls with Trump, and reported raising an impressive $20 million for his campaign in the third quarter of the year.

Carson has also launched a petition challenging the tax exempt status of the largest Muslim advocacy group, part of an escalating rift with the U.S. Muslim community.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations last month called for Carson to quit the presidential race after he said a Muslim should not serve as president. He has since clarified his position, stating he wouldn’t support a radical Muslim who did not support the Constitution. And in a Thursday radio interview, Carson said the same standard should apply to a Supreme Court justice.

Carson has repeatedly warned that officials needed to carefully screen for potential terrorist ties Syrian refugees seeking to enter the United States, but went further Friday.

Despite anxiousness among some Republicans about the appearance of intolerance in a party trying to reach more minority voters, Carson’s team has said publicly it works to his advantage in segments of the GOP electorate, especially in Iowa.

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