Oppressing You for Your Own Good
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Nick Turse
by Tom Engelhardt and
Nick Turse
Okay,
under the rubric of "the war on terror" (which turns out to be just
so versatile, so useful for so many much-desired but once
back-burner policies, programs, and products), the military is having
a grand old time protecting us from the Enemy up close and personal,
right in our own, previously unlawful-to-occupy backyards. But,
as Dr. Seuss would have said, that is not all… oh no, that is not
all. Read Part II of Nick Turse's report on our developing Homeland
Security State if you want to find out just what busy little homeland-security
bees exist on the civilian side of the equation. ~ Tom
Bringing
It All Back Home: The
Emergence of the Homeland Security State
By Nick Turse
The
Civilian Half
When we last left this story, we were knee-deep in the
emerging Homeland Security State, a special place where a
host of disturbing and mutually reinforcing patterns have emerged
among them: a virtually unopposed increase in military, intelligence
and "security" agencies intruding into the civilian sector of
American life; federal abridgment of basic rights; denials of
civil liberties on flimsy or illegal premises; warrant-less, sneak-and-peek
searches; and the undermining of privacy safeguards.
But our last cast of characters: NORTHCOM, the Office of the National
Counterintelligence Executive, the FBI and the Air Force only
represent the usual (if expansive) suspects. To make America a
total Homeland Security State will take more than the combined
efforts of the military and intelligence establishments. The civilian
side of government, the part of the private sector that is deeply
enmeshed in the military-corporate complex, and America's own
citizens will have to pitch in as well if a total-security state
is to truly take shape and fire on all cylinders.
The good news is if, at least, you're a Homeland Security bureaucrat
this process is already well underway, thanks, in large part,
to the creation of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) which
brought a dazzling array of agencies together under one roof,
including the United States Customs Service (previously part of
the Department of Treasury), the enforcement division of the Immigration
and Naturalization Service (Department of Justice), the Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service (Department of Agriculture),
the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (Department of Treasury),
the Transportation Security Administration (Department of Transportation),
the Federal Protective Service (General Services Administration),
the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the Strategic
National Stockpile and the National Disaster Medical System (Health
and Human Services), the Nuclear Incident Response Team (Energy),
Domestic Emergency Support Teams (Justice), the National Domestic
Preparedness Office (FBI), the CBRN Countermeasures Programs (Energy),
the Environmental Measurements Laboratory (Energy), the National
Biological Warfare Defense Analysis Center (Defense), the Plum
Island Animal Disease Center (Agriculture), the Federal Computer
Incident Response Center (General Services Administration), the
National Communications System (Defense), the National Infrastructure
Protection Center (FBI), the Energy Security and Assurance Program
(Energy), the Secret Service (Treasury), and the Coast Guard (Defense
and Transportation).
The DHS is, not surprisingly, the poster-child for the emerging
Homeland Security State. But the DHS itself is just the tip of
the iceberg an archetype for a brave new nation where the lines
between what the intelligence community and the military do abroad
and what they do in the U.S.A. are increasingly blurred beyond
recognition. Today, a host of agencies on the civilian side of
the government are also setting up new programs; expanding their
powers; gearing up operations and/or creating "Big Brother" technologies
to more effectively monitor civilians, chill dissent; and bring
the war back home to America.
Freedom
of the Road
Recently, it was disclosed that the Department of Homeland Security
had deployed an x-ray van, previously used in cargo searches at
America's borders, in a test run taking X-ray
pictures of parked cars in Cape May, New Jersey. While, the
DHS claimed all X-ray surveillance was conducted on empty cars
with their owners' consent, one wonders how long this will last.
After all, American Science & Engineering Inc, the manufacturer
of the Z Backscatter Van (ZBV), notes that "it
maintains the outward appearance of an ordinary van," so it
can stand unnoticed and peep into cars as they drive past, or
with its "unique ‘drive-by' capability [it] allows one or two
operators to conduct X-ray imaging of suspect vehicles and objects
while the ZBV drives past." Since we're all increasingly suspects
(in our "suspect vehicles") in the Homeland Security State, it
seems only a matter of time before at least some of us fall victim
to a DHS X-ray drive-by.
But what happens after a DHS scan-van x-ray shows a dense white
mass in your car (which could be any "organic material" from explosives
or drugs to a puppy, a baby, or a head of lettuce)? Assuming that
the DHS folks will be linked up with the Department of Transportation
(DOT), soon they might be able to call on DOT's proposed Intelligent
Transportation Systems' (ITS) Joint Program Office (JPO)'s "Vehicle-Infrastructure
Integration (VII)" system for help.
According to Bill Jones, the Technical Director of the ITS JPO,
"The concept
behind VII is that vehicle manufacturers will install a communications
device on the vehicle starting at some future date, and equipment
will be installed on the nation's transportation system to allow
all vehicles to communicate with the infrastructure." In other
words, the government and manufacturers will team up to track
every new automobile (x-rayed or not) in America. "The whole idea,"
says Jones, "is that vehicles would transmit this data to the
infrastructure. The infrastructure, in turn, would aggregate that
data in some kind of a database."
Imagine it: The federal government tracking you in real time,
while compiling a database with information on your speed, route,
and destination; where you were when; how many times you went
to a certain location; and just about anything else related to
your travels in your own car. The DOT project, in fact, sounds
remarkably like a civilian update of the "Combat Zones That See"
program developed by the Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA). Noah Shachtman, writing for the Village
Voice, reported in 2003 that DARPA was in the process of instituting
a project at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, whose aim was "to track 90
percent of all of cars within [a] target area for any given 30-minute
period. The paths of 1 million vehicles [w]ould be stored and
retrievable within three seconds." It gives a whole new meaning
to "King of the Road."
Pssst…
Wanna Hear a Secret (Law)
In November 2004, "the
Transportation Security Administration ordered America's 72
airlines to turn over their June 2004 domestic passenger flight
records." With only a murmur of concern over the privacy of passengers'
credit-card numbers, phone numbers and health information, the
airlines handed the requested information over so the agency could
test its new Secure Flight system an expanded version of the
much-maligned terrorist watch list.
More recently, the Transportation Security Administration has
made headlines with
a change in its pat-down policies. Following public outcry,
airport security screeners have been instructed to no longer grope
the breasts of female passengers as an anti-terror measure. Pat
downs, however, apparently remain part of TSA airport protocol
in some cases, although we have no idea which ones. This is because
the Transportation Security Administration has begun to dabble
in "secret law" by subjecting passengers to special screenings
including "pat-down searches for weapons or unauthorized materials,"
while denying the public the right to know under what law(s) such
methods are authorized. As Steven
Aftergood of the Project on Government Secrecy recently observed,
"In a qualitatively new development in U.S. governance, Americans
can now be obligated to comply with legally-binding regulations
that are unknown to them, and that indeed they are forbidden to
know."
When
Big Brother Goes to College
Since it was enacted in the rough wake of 9/11, the Patriot Act
has enabled the government to undermine privacy safeguards like
those once protected by the Family Education Records Privacy Act.
The government is now allowed access, without a warrant, to a
student's personal, library, bookstore, and medical records, and
any disclosure that such records have either been sought or turned
over is prohibited.
Now, the Department of Education has suggested upping the ante
with a proposal to create a national registry that would track
every one of the estimated 15.9 million college students in America
through yet another "massive
database" this one containing everything from college students'
academic records, tuition payments and financial aid benefits
to social security numbers and information on participation in
varsity sports.
Right
now, students have to give written consent for educational
and personally identifiable data to be transferred out of the
college. "With this new proposal, most of that power is given
to the federal government," says Sarah Flanagan, the vice president
for government relations at the National Association of Independent
Colleges & Universities. Moreover, if this new database comes
to pass, says Jasmine L. Harris, legislative director at the United
States Students Association, it would further erode various remaining
privacy safeguards, allowing government agencies other than the
Education Department to have greater access to student records.
Bright
Lights, Big Cities
With the federal government casting off the Geneva Conventions
as "quaint," employing secret law at home, and tasking average
Americans to become Peeping Toms and undercover informants, its
little wonder that those in the private sector have now taken
up the task of helping the Feds in fashioning a Homeland Security
State. After all, with surveillance bureaucracies burgeoning and
security budgets growing, there's suddenly a fortune to be made.
Last year, alone, under the Urban Area Security Initiative, the
DHS doled out $675 million to
50 large cities across America. This year, the total will
jump to $854.6
million.
With money flowing in and representatives of the District of Columbia
Metropolitan Police Department, the New York Police Department,
and the Los Angeles Police Department, among others, sitting beside
operatives from the NSA, CIA, DIA, FBI and other defense and intelligence
agencies at the DHS's Homeland Security Operations Center, its
little wonder that major urban centers like Chicago
(which is getting $45 million in Urban Area Security Initiative
funds this year), Los
Angeles ($61 million in UASI money) and New
York City (which is raking in a cool $208 million) have moved
toward implementing wide-ranging, increasingly sophisticated covert
surveillance systems.
In Chicago, a program, code-named Operation Disruption, consists
of at least 80 street surveillance cameras that send their feed
to police officers' laptop computers in squad cars and "a
central command center, where retired police officers… monitor
activity." The ultimate plan, however, is to use a grant from
the Department of Homeland Security and city monies to purchase
250 new cameras and link them to "some
2,000 unnetworked video cameras installed around the Chicago
(and at O'Hare International Airport) to create a network of as
many as "2,250 surveillance cameras throughout the Windy City."
"We're so far advanced than [sic] any other city," said Chicago's
Mayor Richard M. Daley of the program, "sometimes the state and
federal governments they come here to look at the technology."
In New York, Mayor Michael
Bloomberg recently announced a "major upgrade" for the city's
high-tech crime-tracking system, Compstat, through the creation
of a "Real Time Crime Fighting Center" to provide "same-day information"
for tracking and analysis purposes.
Private
Eyes
While the doings of "private contractors" still pop up in articles
about prisoner abuse in Iraq, what such mercenary outfits are up
to on the homefront is hardly ever mentioned. For example, CACI
International Inc., whose employees were linked
in news accounts to the Abu Ghraib torture scandals, boasts
that its customers include not only a "majority
of U.S. defense and civilian agencies and the U.S. intelligence
community," but "44 U.S. state governments" and "[m]ore than 200
cities, counties and local agencies in North America." CACI proclaims
that it plays "many roles in securing our homeland" and that it
"support[s] law enforcement agencies such as the Department of Justice
[and] design[s] and prototype[s] systems that collect intelligence
information." One of CACI's fellow contractors, Titan Corp (which
was also linked in news accounts to the Abu Ghraib torture cases)
is at work in the "Defense of the Homeland" with programs such as
Data
Warehousing and Data Mining for the Intelligence Community and
a Command
and Control Concept for North American Homeland Defense.
Of course, these are only two of the many companies helping to
secure the homeland (and fat contracts). In 2003 alone, the DHS
spent "at
least $256.6 million in 1,609 separate contracts or amendments
to contracts to hire what the [General Services Administration]
described as ‘security guards and patrol services'" and doled
out $6.73 billion dollars in total. This year the DHS has raked
in a cool $28.9
billion in net discretionary spending including $67.4 million
"to expand the capabilities of the National Cyber Security Division
(NCSD), which implements the public and private sector partnership
protecting cyber security"; $104.7 million for "Aerial Surveillance
and Sensor Technology" projects; and $340 million for the United
States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology program
(US –VISIT) which "expedites the arrival and departure of legitimate
travelers."
Your
Role in the Homeland Security State
In the latter years of the Vietnam era, a series of exposures
of official lies regarding the FBI's various COINTELPROs, a host
of surveillance and dirty tricks programs aimed at American activists,
and the analogous CIA program known as MHCHAOS; of domestic spying
by military intelligence agents and of the Nixon administration's
various Watergate surveillance and illegal break-in operations
brought home to Americans at least some of the abuses committed
by their military, intelligence, and security establishments.
Congressional bodies like the Church Commission and the Senate
Watergate Committee even helped to rein in some of the most egregious
of these abuses and to reinforce the barriers between what the
CIA and military could do overseas and what was permissible on
the homefront.
In the 1980s and 1990s, however, oversight and constraints on
illegal domestic activities by the military and intelligence community
slowly began to drain away; and with the 9/11 attacks, of course,
everything changed. Three years later, what was once done on the
sly is increasingly public policy and done with pride though
much of it still flies under the mainstream media radar as the
Bush administration transforms us into an unabashed Homeland Security
State.
Today, freedom to be spread abroad by force of arms is increasingly
a privilege that can be rescinded at home when anyone acts a little
too free. Today, America is just another area of operations for
the Pentagon; while those who say the wrong things; congregate
in the wrong places; wear the wrong t-shirts; display the wrong
stickers; or just look the wrong way find themselves recast as
"enemies" and put under the eye of, if not the care of, the state.
Today, a growing Homeland Security complex of federal, local,
and private partners is hard at work establishing turf rights,
garnering budgetary increases, and ramping up a new security culture
nationwide. And, unfortunately, the programs and abuses highlighted
in this series are but the publicly known tip of the iceberg.
For example:
It was recently revealed through the Freedom of Information Act
that "the
FBI obtained 257.5 million Passenger Name Records following
9/11, and that the Bureau has permanently incorporated the travel
details of tens of millions of innocent people into its law enforcement
databases."
Outgoing DHS chief, Tom Ridge recently called for U.S. passports
to include fingerprints in the future. While OTI, a Fort Lee,
N.J.-based subsidiary of the Israeli company On Track Innovations
was just selected to provide
electronic passports which utilize a biometrically-coded "digitized
photograph, which is accessed by a proximity reader in the
inspection booth and compared automatically to the face of the
traveler."
In November 2004, California passed the Orwellian-sounding "DNA
Fingerprint, Unsolved Crime and Innocence Protection Act" which
"allows
authorities to take DNA samples from anyone adult or juvenile
convicted of a felony" and "in 2009… will expand to allow police
to collect DNA samples from any suspect arrested for any felony…
whether or not the person is charged or convicted. It's expected
that genetic data for 1 million people including innocent suspects
will be added to California's DNA databank by 2009."
The Department of Housing and Urban Development announced plans
to "use
the latest in database technologies" to store information
on and count the homeless which, the Electronic Privacy Information
Center notes, "lay[s]
the groundwork for a national homeless tracking system, placing
individuals at risk of government and other privacy invasions."
According
to a recent report in ISR
Journal, "the publication of record for the global network-centric
warfare community," a "high-level advisory panel recently told U.S.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld" that the Pentagon needs ultra-high-tech
tracking tools that "can identify people by unique physical characteristics
fingerprint, voice, odor, gait or even pattern of iris" and
that such a system "must be merged with new means of ‘tagging' so
that U.S. forces can find enemies who escape into a crowd or slip
into a labyrinthine slum."
Imagine if this last program were integrated with any of the aforementioned
ventures in our increasingly brave new (blurred) world. Yet,
for all their secret doings, vaunted programs, futuristic technologies
and their powerful urge to turn all American citizens into various
kinds of tractable database material, our new Homeland Security
managers require one critical element: us. They require our "Eagle
Eyes," our assent, and if not our outright support then
our ambivalence and acquiescence. They need us to be their dime-store
spies; they need us to drive their tracking device-equipped cars;
they need us to accede to their revisions of the first amendment.
That
simple fact makes us powerful. If you don't dig the Homeland Security
State, do your best to thwart it. Of course, such talk, let alone
action, probably won't be popular but since when has anything
worthwhile, from working for peace to fighting for civil rights,
been easy? If everyone was for freedom, there would be no need to
fight for it.
January
31, 2005
Tom Engelhardt [send him
mail] is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Nick Turse is a doctoral candidate
at the Center for the History & Ethics of Public Health in the Mailman
School of Public Health at Columbia University. He writes for the
Village Voice and regularly for Tomdispatch on the military-corporate
complex.
Copyright
© 2005 Nick Turse
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