Mossad
in America
by Phil Giraldi
Recently
by Phil Giraldi: Mossad
in America
It is not far
fetched to speculate that the United States has, over the past ten
years, been sliding into a form of authoritarianism that retains
only some aspects of the constitution and a limited rule of law.
America's president can, for example, commit soldiers to combat
overseas without a constitutionally mandated declaration of war
by congress while it is quite possible to be detained by the authorities
and locked up without any prospect of trial or opportunity to defend
oneself. The government even believes it can kill American citizens
based only on suspicion. I prefer to think of this transformation
as the National Security State because it rests on a popular consensus
that liberties must be sacrificed in exchange for greater public
safety from various threats, international terrorism being the most
prominent. It might just as well be called the National Warfare
State as it also requires constant conflict to justify its existence.
Three elements
are necessary for the creation of a National Security State. First,
there must be a narrative that can be sold to the public justifying
the transformation. Second, a system of laws and regulations must
be created that enable the state to act with impunity and also to
protect the government from challenges to its authority. Third,
technology must be harnessed to enable the state to surreptitiously
monitor and control the activities of its citizens. All of these
elements have fallen into place over the past decade.
A recent example
of abuse of authority by the government demonstrates how several
of the key elements can come together. On September 24th, the Obama
Administration declared
that it would ask a federal court to block a lawsuit filed by the
American Civil Liberties Union in opposition to the government's
contention that it has the authority to assassinate American citizens
overseas if they are suspected of involvement with a terrorist group.
The White House has invoked the state secrets privilege, contending
that vital national interests would be betrayed if the case were
to proceed and further that the president has the authority to target
anyone for death in time of war. The state secrets privilege is
the ultimate weapon to avoid exposure of government wrongdoing.
It has been used frequently by the Obama administration in spite
of Obama-the-candidate's pledge that he would run an open and accountable
government.
The ACLU case
focused on the one US citizen known to be on the administration's
assassination list, Yemeni cleric Anwar al-Awlaki. Now, by all accounts
al-Awlaki is an unsavory character, involved with at least one extremist
group in Yemen, but the evidence that he is an actual terrorist
or that he has been closely involved with plotting terrorist attacks
has not been made public. At this point, he appears to have been
condemned to death without any due process and without any opportunity
to defend himself. The Obama Administration abuse of the state secrets
privilege in this case is little more than justifying the practice
of extrajudicial murder at the whim of a government bureaucrat.
It also assumes that the whole world is a battlefield without any
declaration of war by congress. If all of that is so, al-Awlaki
can be killed and so can any other American for any reason or no
reason.
State secrets
is only one weapon in the arsenal employed by the government to create
a framework of regulation that permits the government to act with
impunity. The Military Commission Act, which candidate Obama vowed
to let expire, was renewed
in 2009 with virtually no changes. Under the MCA, someone can
be imprisoned indefinitely on suspicion that he or she has provided
material support to terrorism. Material support is not defined and
can be interpreted to mean nearly anything. If accused, right to a
trial by peers does not apply as the detainee is subject to a military
tribunal and habeas corpus is null and void. And how does the government
determine if someone is a "terrorism supporter?" Through
evidence derived from Patriot Act authorized National Security Letters,
which the FBI can obtain without any judicial process whatsoever to
look into the private lives of each and every citizen. Nearly 25,000
National Security Letters were issued
in 2008 alone. When someone receives a letter demanding that information
be provided to the authorities it is a felony to reveal to the subject
of the investigation that he or she is being looked at.
Read
the rest of the article
October
12, 2010
Philip M. Giraldi,
Ph.D. is a contributing editor to The
American Conservative and executive director of the Council
for the National Interest He is a former CIA counter-terrorism specialist
and military intelligence officer who served 18 years overseas in
Turkey, Italy, Germany, and Spain.
Copyright
© 2010 Campaign for
Liberty
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