|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Operation TIPS: Bush plan to recruit 1 million domestic spies
By Kate Randall
22 July 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Your new cable television service was just hooked up. The local
utility worker came by to read your meter. A package was delivered
to your doorstep. Under a new program proposed by the Bush administration,
the workers who visit your home to provide such services may have
been recruited by the government to spy on you. They may have
already made a toll-free call to a national hotline to report
suspicious activity.
Operation TIPSthe Terrorism Information and Prevention
Systemis one of the latest initiatives of the Bush administrations
war on terrorism. According to a statement posted
as recently as last week on the governments web site, TIPS
will be a nationwide program giving millions of American
truckers, letters carriers, train conductors, ship captains, utility
employees, and others a formal way to report suspicious terrorist
activity.
The program is one component of the administrations USA
Freedom Corps and Citizens Corps, announced by Bush in his State
of the Union address last January, when he called for each American
to donate two years, or 4,000 hours, in his or her lifetime to
the service of your neighbors and your nation. In
the case of Operation TIPS, workers are being called upon to serve
their neighbors by spying on them for the US Justice Department.
Rachel King, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties
Union, described it as a program that will turn local cable
or gas or electrical technicians into government-sanctioned Peeping
Toms.
So clearly does the proposal smack of police-state measures
reminiscent of Nazi Germany or Stalins GPU that a draft
proposal last week from the House Select Committee on Homeland
Security sought to block it, stating: To ensure that no
operation of the [Homeland Security] Department can be construed
to promote citizens spying on one another, this draft will contain
language to prohibit programs such as Operation TIPS.
Following discussions with Homeland Security officials, the
United States Postal Service announced that it would opt out of
Operation TIPS, at least for now, eliminating letter carriers
from the potential pool of spies.
The scope of this new domestic spying program as envisaged
by the Bush administration would be truly breathtaking. In its
pilot stage, the plan calls for recruiting 1 million workers in
ten as yet unnamed cities. The Citizens Corps web site has already
begun accepting queries on the program and asks those interested
to check back frequently for updates. Recruits are sought whose
routines make them well-positioned to recognize unusual events,
to report suspicious activity. They are to receive special
training.
The government does not spell out what would qualify as suspicious
terrorist activity. But it is obvious that US citizens would
be spied on in their homes, their schools, their places of business,
at public venues, on public transport or traveling in their private
vehicles.
The Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution, part of the Bill
of Rights, reads: The right of the people to be secure in
their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants
shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation,
and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the
persons or things to be seized.
Operation TIPS stands in direct violation of this Amendment.
No warrant would be required for volunteer agents to spy on citizens
in their homes. TIPS spies could be expected to take note of subversive
titles on residents bookshelves. Somesuch as cable
or Internet service installerswould have access to home
computers and could potentially scout out suspicious
Internet browsing practices.
People of Arab descent or Muslim belief could be singled out.
Any hint of anti-government sentimentspecifically, opposition
to Bushs war on terrorfound in peoples
homes could be grounds for a TIPS agent to make a call to the
hotline.
The plan calls for information gathered by these domestic spies
to be entered into a government database, to be available not
only to the Justice Department, but to a broad array of police
agencies. Furthermore, because this information would be gathered
surreptitiously, the targeted individuals would have no knowledge
of the existence of intelligence files gathered on them, nor their
contents.
While in its initial stages the Bush administrations
anti-democratic measures in the wake of September 11 were aimed
against immigrants of Middle-Eastern and Central Asian descent,
it was only a matter of time, as the World Socialist Web Site
warned, for these methods to be used more widely. This program
is one of the new elements in the governments expansion
of spying targeted against citizens and non-citizens alike.
In testimony July 11 before the House Select Committee on Homeland
Security, Attorney General John Ashcroft made it clear that the
government aims to break down barriers that hinder surveillance
of citizens. He stated: In the late 1970s, reforms were
enacted in our judicial system reflecting a cultural myth that
we could draw an artificial line at the border to differentiate
between the threats we faced. In accordance with this myth, officials
charged with detecting and deterring those seeking to harm Americans
were divided into separate and isolated camps.... FBI agents were
forced to blind themselves to information readily available to
the general public, including those who seek to harm us.
The reforms the attorney general is referring to
are restrictions imposed in 1976 in the aftermath of the Watergate
crisis, when a vast domestic spying operation by J. Edgar Hoovers
FBI, the CIA, army intelligence and other government agencies
was exposed. A series of Attorney General Guidelines
was established which stated that political dissent or unpopular
ideas could not serve as the basis for an investigation, and which
limited the scope of acceptable surveillance and infiltration
of political and religious groups. This is the cultural
myth Ashcroft and the Bush administration now seek to junk.
There are other indications that the Bush administration seeks
to broaden its anti-terror dragnet. A July 12 Associated
Press (AP) story reports the following: While law enforcement
looks broadly for terrorists, some FBI agents are working closely
with Treasury agents to conduct a more specialized search for
US residents who might be working in an advisory capacity. As
part of the effort, federal investigators are conducting extensive
checks into the backgrounds of longtime citizens who fall under
suspicion. AP quotes an anonymous law enforcement official
who says agents are looking for people who have an affinity
toward or sympathy for those carrying out terrorist attacks and
provide any kind of support.
The proposal for Operation TIPS has provoked no objections
from the leadership of unions whose members would be potential
informants. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters has enthusiastically
backed the plan as part of its support for Bushs war
on terrorism. On June 21, Teamsters President James P. Hoffa
said he would ask union truck operators to take part in a grass-roots
homeland security effort to look for suspicious activity
on the road.
We have 500,000 truck drivers on the road at any one
time, and these people can be the eyes and ears of the homeland
security office, Hoffa said. The Teamsters organize 250,000
workers in United Parcel Service, the nations largest package
carrier.
As with all of the other anti-democratic measures put into
effect by the Bush administration following the September 11 terror
attacks, there has been no public discussion or debate on Operation
TIPS. The government has offered little information on the program,
and it is unclear whether it must be approved by Congress or can
be implemented by executive fiat.
Whatever the immediate fate of Operation TIPS, the plan serves
as a chilling warning of the police-state methods being adopted
by the political establishment.
See Also:
The case of Yaser Esam
Hamdi
Bush claims right to jail US citizens indefinitely, without charges
or hearing
[24 June 2002]
New Jersey appeals court upholds
secret detentions
[17 June 2002]
Bushs new Department
of Homeland Defense: the scaffolding of a police state
[8 June 2002]
Bush administration cites
September 11 failures to attack democratic rights
FBI gets blank check for domestic spying
[7 June 2002]
Bush administration lifts restriction
on domestic spying by FBI
[31 May 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |