Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

U.S. Homeland Security Head Expressed Little Concern About Border With Canada

Darpan News Desk, 06 Apr, 2017 11:52 AM
    WASHINGTON — U.S. Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly offered more soothing words Wednesday for Canadians concerned about border security when he appeared before a Senate committee and was asked what concerns he had about security along the Canada-U.S. frontier.
     
    Kelly replied that he's not as concerned as he is with the southern border with Mexico and would actually like to see the northern border "even thinner," reiterating comments he made during a visit to Ottawa last month.
     
    The questions to the retired Marine general were posed by a couple of senators from border states who have been known to call for more stringent security, including Montana Democrat Jonathan Tester.
     
    He queried Kelly on his level of concern, noting that while Americans are "focused like a laser on the southern border," the northern border also has its challenges.
     
    "Not as obviously concerned with what comes with the northern border as the southern border, but it is our border, so I'm concerned with all the borders," Kelly replied.
     
     
    "The absolutely great news story in the northern border is that we have Canada there, that it's a friend and ally. They interact with us at every level, they're very careful about who comes into their country."
     
    Asked by Republican Senator John Hoeven of North Dakota if he agreed more must be done to secure the northern border, Kelly replied that Canada has "tremendous law enforcement" and the U.S.-Canada partnership "just couldn't be stronger, so that's the advantage."
     
    Kelly also told the Homeland Security committee there's been a "little bit of increase in Mexicans" entering the U.S. illegally from the north.
     
    "I'm on the phone with my counterparts in places like Canada all the time but we obviously have to watch the threat," Kelly said.
     
    Kelly said after his Ottawa meetings on March 10 that the Trump White House wants "as thin a border as we can create" and that he was "very comfortable with the level of security on the border.''

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nova Scotia Shootings Underscore Need For Better Veterans' Services: Ombudsman

    Nova Scotia Shootings Underscore Need For Better Veterans' Services: Ombudsman
    OTTAWA — Canada's military watchdog urged the federal government Wednesday to do more for soldiers forced out of the Canadian Forces for medical reasons after an Afghan war veteran and three family members were found shot dead in Nova Scotia.

    Nova Scotia Shootings Underscore Need For Better Veterans' Services: Ombudsman

    Officer-Involved Shooting In Surrey, IIO investigating

    Officer-Involved Shooting In Surrey, IIO investigating
    No information has been released but one person was loaded onto an ambulance on a stretcher.

    Officer-Involved Shooting In Surrey, IIO investigating

    Canadian Man Fighting ISIS In Syria Has Been Killed, Kurdish Group Says

    Canadian Man Fighting ISIS In Syria Has Been Killed, Kurdish Group Says
      The Kurdish People's Defense Units, also known as YPG, says in a statement that Nazzareno Tassone died in the city of Raqqa on Dec. 21.

    Canadian Man Fighting ISIS In Syria Has Been Killed, Kurdish Group Says

    Canadian Woman Dies In Italian Hiking Incident

    Canadian Woman Dies In Italian Hiking Incident
    A young Ontario woman who had recently moved to Europe with her fiance died on New Year's Day after falling off a mountain path during a hike near the Italian-Austrian border.

    Canadian Woman Dies In Italian Hiking Incident

    Military Veteran, Three Family Members Found Shot Dead In Rural Nova Scotia Home

    Military Veteran, Three Family Members Found Shot Dead In Rural Nova Scotia Home
    UPPER BIG TRACADIE, N.S. — An Afghanistan war veteran and three females, including his wife, mother and 10-year-old daughter, have been found shot to death in a home in rural Nova Scotia.

    Military Veteran, Three Family Members Found Shot Dead In Rural Nova Scotia Home

    Quebec Man Identified By Family As Victim After New Year's Eve Party In Thailand

    Quebec Man Identified By Family As Victim After New Year's Eve Party In Thailand
    MONTREAL — Relatives of a Canadian man who died after a New Year's Eve party in Thailand are remembering him as a "bright light" whose sudden death has devastated them.

    Quebec Man Identified By Family As Victim After New Year's Eve Party In Thailand