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America
US Homeland Securitys "Operation Liberty Shield"
targets democratic rights
"Orange" terror alert designed to terrorize and
intimidate
By Kate Randall
26 March 2003
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One hour before President Bush went on television the evening
of March 17 to issue his ultimatum in preparation for war on Iraq,
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge made the decision to raise
the national terrorism threat level to orange, the second highest
level. At the same time, Ridge activated a security plan called
Operation Liberty Shield, which calls for unprecedented
domestic security measures, supposedly to protect American citizens
from impending terrorist attacks.
As with previous terrorism alerts issued by the Department
of Homeland Security and the Justice Department, no specific information
was provided on where the attacks could be expected or what the
governments intelligence sources were. Ridge only cited
highly reliable reports that terrorists would attempt
attacks against US and coalition targets worldwide in the
event of a US-led military campaign against Saddam Hussein.
FBI officials have also commented that the bureau is very
concerned about potential attacks from lone wolvesindividuals
disgruntled over government policy.
Since the events of September 11, 2001, the Bush administration
has repeatedly used such alerts, or vague advisories of impending
terrorist attacks, with one central objective in mind: to generate
an atmosphere of fear, anxiety and hysteria in the American population
in an attempt to make it more amendable to military aggression
abroad and further attacks on democratic rights at home. In this,
the government has been assisted by a pliant media, which has
bombarded the public with warnings of imminent terrorist attacks
without supplying the slightest substantiation.
With the US attack on Iraq now under way, the heightened terror
alert level is being utilized to justify increased repression
against actual or potential opponents of the Bush administrations
war policy.
In a move denounced by civil liberties groups and immigrants
advocates, the Homeland Security Department has also implemented
what is says is a temporary policy of detaining asylum-seekers
from 33 nations where Al Qaeda is reported to have operated. This
could result in hundreds of arrests, as some 600 people from these
countries seek asylum in the US each year. Up to 60 percent of
these asylum-seekers come from Iraq, and those targeted also include
immigrants from the West Bank and Gaza. All these asylum-seekers
will be jailed until their cases are adjudicated, which could
mean months in detention, and in some cases more than a year.
On March 20, the FBI began voluntary interviews
of Iraqi-born individuals living in the US. These interrogations
are not based on any evidence of criminal or terrorist activity,
but solely on ethnicity and national origin. FBI officials began
going door-to-door, with plans to question 400 Iraqi nationals
in Detroit, 200 in Philadelphia and similar numbers in other large
metropolitan areas.
By last Friday, teams of agents from the Homeland Security
Bureau of Immigration Enforcement in the Detroit area had arrested
about a dozen men, and were reportedly looking for hundreds more.
On Saturday, agents interviewed more than 20 Iraqi men, and detained
at least two who, they alleged, had criminal backgrounds. It is
unclear how many still remain in custody, and federal agents declined
to provide any details on why they suspected the men of being
terrorist threats.
Abed Ayoub, 23, a law student living in Dearborn, told the
Detroit Free Press, When they start picking and choosing
who they want to detain, it reminds you of what happened to Japanese-Americans
during World War II.
Since the US launched its war on Iraq, more than 3,000 antiwar
demonstrators have been arrested across the country. One of the
political aims of the Orange terror alert is to suggest that all
such protesters are aiding and abetting the terrorists,
and some local and state police departments have responded by
coming down hard on demonstrators.
Provisions activated by the Orange threat level
include: stepped-up surveillance at US ports, borders and airports;
Coast Guard escorts for watercraft near petrochemical plants;
tightened security at nuclear power plants; increased disease
monitoring to detect signs of bio-terrorism; and increased inspections
of imported foods.
In New York City, police have increased security outside major
Manhattan television news outlets, with the stated purpose of
preventing possible takeovers by terrorists seeking to broadcast
anti-American messages. The New York Police Department admits
that the step has not been prompted by any specific threat or
piece of intelligence information.
Unless the federal government specifically orders a call-up
of National Guard troops to patrol a national border, for instance,
the states foot the bill. The Department of Homeland Security
has urged state governors to deploy National Guard troops at nuclear
power stations and other potential terrorist targets, but has
provided no funding. States are also responsible for providing
increased funding for state and local police operations and private
security firms.
After months of pressure from state and local government leaders
who say that the Bush administration and Congressional Republicans
have reneged on promises to provide them with billions of dollars
to fund firefighting and rescue operations, the White House on
March 19 said it would ask Congress to pass an emergency domestic
counterterrorism spending package, including $1 billion for the
Transportation Security Administration, $200-700 million for the
Coast Guard and increases in grants for local police and fire
departments.
No rational person would deny that the threat of new terrorist
attacks is real. This danger has been further intensified by the
US war on Iraq, which will inflame anti-American sentiment worldwide.
A basic prerequisite for preventing such attacks in the future
is a thorough examination of the 9/11 hi-jack bombings, as well
as the anthrax attacks that targeted Congressional Democrats.
But the Bush administration has vigorously blocked any investigation
into these events, because they know that any such investigation
would be politically devastating. [ See One
year after the terror attacks: still no official investigation
into September 11]
At best, it would reveal criminal levels of negligence on the
part of US police and intelligence agencies in thwarting the attacks.
More likely it would uncover complicity at the highest levels
of the state with the terrorist forces that carried out the attacks,
including connections between the terrorists and US, British or
Israeli intelligence.
See Also:
US Air Force base authorizes deadly force
against antiwar protesters
[18 March 2003]
A monstrous attack on democratic
rights
US government mounts conspiracy frame-up of Palestinian activists
[22 February 2003]
The US terror alert
Washington employs fear and panic as instruments of war
[14 February 2003]
One year after the
terror attacks: still no official investigation into September
11
[12 September 2002]
Was the US government
alerted to September 11 attack?
[16 January 2002]
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