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Bushs new Department of Homeland Defense: the scaffolding
of a police state
By the Editorial Board
8 June 2002
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The sudden announcement by President George W. Bush that he
will seek the creation of a huge new federal Department of Homeland
Defense, to control most federal domestic policing and security
programs, must be understood on two levels. In its timing, it
is a transparent attempt to distract public attention from the
revelations of advance warnings to the government about the terrorist
attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center. In its substance,
the proposal represents an acceleration of the moves towards presidential
dictatorship that have characterized every step taken by the Bush
administration since September 11.
The consolidation of agencies such as the Coast Guard, the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, the Transportation Security
Agency and others22 in all, from five separate government
departmentsrepresents an unprecedented concentration of
police powers at the federal level. The new cabinet level department
would become overnight the third largest in the federal government,
in terms of manpower, with 170,000 workers, behind only the Department
of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
As outlined by Bush, it would carry out four main functions:
border and transportation security, emergency and disaster preparedness,
the development of countermeasures for nuclear, biological and
chemical warfare, and the centralized storage and analysis of
information on potential threats, to be supplied by the FBI, CIA,
NSA and other government spy services.
The Bush administration presented the plan as a measure to
protect the American people. But it would be more correct to say
that the new department will concentrate the police forces of
the government for the purpose of surveillance and repression
against the American people.
As the Washington Post noted, the agencies to be combined
in the new department go well beyond policing the borders.
The newspaper continued: They reach deep into American life,
doing everything from coordinating disaster relief to tracking
down foreigners working illegally in restaurants. Some experts
said this could prove controversial, because it blurs the boundaries
between gathering intelligence on foreigners and doing the same
with American citizens.
Perhaps the most ominous measure is the inclusion in the Department
of Homeland Defense of the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA), now headed by Bushs former campaign manager, Joseph
Albaugh. FEMA was designated as the lead agency in plans developed
20 years ago under the Reagan administration to impose martial
law in the event of a new and unpopular Vietnam-style war in Central
America. FEMAs brief included the establishment of prison
camps at mothballed military bases for the detention of hundreds
of thousands of US citizens and foreign immigrants.
Similar moves are now being considered against the Arab-American
and Asian-American population, and all other potential opponents
of a new US war against Iraq or elsewhere in the Middle Eastor
in Colombia, the Philippines, Georgia, or some other target of
US aggression. This has already been foreshadowed in the roundup
of thousands of immigrants after September 11 and their ongoing
mistreatment in jails and detention facilities.
Only three months ago the American media was filled with reports
about the Bush administrations decision to establish a shadow
government in the wake of September 11, with the dispatch
of designated executive branch officials to secret bunkers, without
the knowledge or approval of Congress. But today there is not
one comment from the media or the Congress connecting those preparations
of a behind-the-scenes dictatorship to this weeks unveiling
of the scaffolding for a police state.
Not a single voice in Congress opposes what amounts to a gross
violation of fundamental US constitutional principles: separation
of powers, checks and balances, congressional oversight of the
executive branch, and the right to privacy and freedom from government
prying. Congressional oversight of the new behemoth agency will
be far more limited than the current supervision of 22 separate
smaller agencies. Bush cited the lessened congressional scrutiny
as one of the main advantages of his reorganization plan.
The White House plan was greeted enthusiastically by former
Democratic vice presidential candidate Joseph Lieberman, Congresswoman
Jane Harman, and other influential congressional Democrats, as
well as by Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle and House Minority
Leader Richard Gephardt. All pledged speedy action on the plan,
and endorsed Bushs appeal for passage before the end of
2002a flagrant attempt to steamroll the changes through
Congress without any serious public discussion or debate.
The centralization of all federal domestic security forces
into a single agency parallels another major action by the Pentagon,
which in April won White House approval to set up a new four-star
command, dubbed the Northern Command, covering the North American
continent. For the first time in US history, all troops, planes
and ships on the territory of the United States and Canada will
be under the command of a single officeran action always
rejected in the past, even during World War II, for fear of its
dangerous implications for civilian control of the military and
democratic governance.
These measures are combined with constant alerts, warnings
and sensationalized publicity of alleged terrorist threats, aimed
at keeping the American population off balance and creating the
conditions where some new catastropheperhaps on an even
more terrible scale than September 11can become the occasion
for an outright suspension of democratic rights and the imposition
of martial law.
The secretive manner in which the plan was drawn up, and the
sudden and improvised manner in which it was released, have their
own significance. The process bespeaks an administration in enormous
crisis, concerned that its political support is eroding, that
the US and global financial situation is balanced on a knife edge,
and that emergency powers may be required to deal with domestic
social unrest.
Less than two months ago, top White House officials dismissed
Democratic Party proposals for a new cabinet department for homeland
security, calling it, at best, a possibility for the distant future.
Budget Director Mitch Daniels told the Senate Governmental Affairs
Committee April 11, The president has said from the outset
that the structure for organizing and overseeing homeland security
may evolve over time as we all learn more and as circumstances
change. The only circumstance that has changed significantly
since then is the credibility of the administration, shaken by
the wave of revelations of advance warnings of September 11 that
were ignored or suppressed.
The Washington Post, in what purports to be an inside
account of the decision, described what it called a seven-week
deliberative process secretive even by the standards of [the]
Bush administration. To call this process deliberative
is surely misleading. Who was deliberating? Only four top Bush
aides reportedly discussed and drafted the proposal: Bushs
present homeland security adviser Thomas Ridge, Budget Director
Daniels, White House chief of staff Andrew Card and White House
counsel Alberto Gonzalez. The plan then went to Bush and Cheney
for ratification.
The reorganization plan was unveiled with virtually no advance
notification to Congress, or even to the cabinet officers whose
departments and responsibilities would be radically altered. The
House and Senate Republican leaders were reportedly informed on
Wednesday evening, 24 hours before Bush gave his nationally televised
speech. Democratic congressional leaders learned of the plan the
same day it was presented to the country.
Bushs nationally televised speech Thursday evening was
true to form: a string of platitudes, non sequiturs and lies delivered
in a barely literate fashion. He spoke for only 11 minutes, with
less than half of this time devoted to the subject of what he
called the most extensive reorganization of the federal
government since the 1940s.
Bush declared his support for the important work of the
Intelligence Committees of Congress, which are now engaged
in a closed-door investigation into the performance of US intelligence
agencies before September 11. The administration, however, stalled
the investigation for nearly nine months, finally agreeing to
cooperate only after it became convinced that the joint House-Senate
panel was committed to a whitewash.
There must be no finger pointing, Bush insisted.
In other words, no leading figures in the government or state
apparatus are to be held accountable for actions that contributed
to the deaths of more than 3,000 peoplethe worst single
loss of civilian life in US history. But how can there be a serious
investigation if its premise is a free pass for high officials?
The outcome of such a proceduregeneral amnestyhas
been determined before any facts have been examined. This fits
the textbook definition of cover-up, and it makes a mockery of
the pretense that the establishment of a new super-police agency
is motivated by the need to protect the American people.
Bush stated: I do not believe anyone could have prevented
the horror of September the 11th. Yet we now know that thousands
of trained killers are plotting to attack us, and this terrible
knowledge requires us to act differently.
The first assertion is an absurdity, the second is pure sophistry.
Bush says that nothing could have prevented September 11: actually,
routine enforcement of air travel security precautions would have
sufficed, since the 19 alleged hijackers boarded planes armed
with box-cutters, in many cases after buying one-way first-class
ticketssomething that in and of itself is supposed to arouse
the suspicions of airport security. At least some of the alleged
hijackers paid cashanother occurrence that is supposed to
prompt special attention from security personnel.
This is to say nothing of the mounting revelations about FBI
and CIA knowledge of the identities and Al Qaeda affiliations
of many of the hijackers in the eighteen months leading up to
September 11.
As for the claim that we now know thousands
of trained killers are plotting to attack us, this would
suggest that the government was unaware of such terrorist threats
prior to September 11. This canard is in line with the basic pretense
that everything the Bush administration has done since that dayboth
abroad and at homewas entirely unpremeditated.
But on September 10, as the White House recently admitted,
a National Security Decision Directive calling for all-out war
on Al Qaeda, including an invasion of Afghanistan, was sitting
on Bushs desk awaiting his signature.
All the evidence suggests that, far from September11 being
unpreventable, it was foreseen by the US intelligence apparatus
and permitted to happen. The most innocent explanationalthough
not the most plausibleis government negligence on a colossal
scale, rising to the level of criminal negligence. The more plausible
explanation is deliberate complicity. A significant faction within
the American state viewed a major terrorist atrocity as a reasonable
price to pay to obtain the necessary pretext for a war in the
oil-rich regions of Central Asia and the Middle East.
See Also:
Bush administration cites September 11
"failures" to attack democratic rights
FBI gets blank check for domestic spying
[7 June 2002]
Government by provocation:
Bush administration escalates terror warnings
[24 May 2002]
Cover-up and conspiracy: The
Bush administration and September 11
[18 May 2002]
The shadow of dictatorship:
Bush established secret government after September 11
[4 March 2002]
Was the US government alerted
to September 11 attack?
[16 January 2002]
Bushs war at
home: a creeping coup détat
[7 November 2001]
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