World | Syria 10K Syrian Refugees? We Once Did 80 Times That The US once accepted 800K war refugees: Max J. Rosenthal By Evann Gastaldo Posted Sep 11, 2015 5:24 PM CDT Copied A Syrian woman holds her child after they arrived aboard a dinghy with others refugees from Turkey to Lesbos island, Greece, Friday, Sept. 11, 2015. (AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris) The US will accept at least 10,000 Syrian refugees over the next year, and that's great—but it's a drop in the bucket compared to the 800,000 Southeast Asian refugees we accepted after the Vietnam War. That's the argument in Mother Jones today, as writer Max J. Rosenthal quotes experts and activists who want to see the US do more. "Even if the US doesn't accept a large number of refugees—the 10,000 that will now be allowed into the US is about half the number of refugees who arrived in Munich from Hungary last weekend—merely taking action could help convince other nations to pitch in," Rosenthal writes. Click for his full piece. Read These Next Country star cancels rest of his tour: 'I am mentally unwell.' One critical island in Iran has remained unscathed in airstrikes. FBI alert alleges Iran might have its eye on a US state. Report finds uninjured cop took an ambulance as a dying man waited. Report an error