|
U.S.:
Bush Expands the Infrastructure of a Police
State
|
While
claiming democracy and freedom as the goal of its
invasion and occupation of Iraq, the Bush administration
is moving step by step to restrict freedom and undermine
democracy at home, building up the infrastructure
of a police state with essentially unlimited powers
to spy on, interrogate and arrest American citizens.
World Socialist - May 5, 2003
By Patrick Martin
5 May 2003
While
claiming democracy and freedom as the goal of its
invasion and occupation of Iraq, the Bush administration
is moving step by step to restrict freedom and undermine
democracy at home, building up the infrastructure
of a police state with essentially unlimited powers
to spy on, interrogate and arrest American citizens.
These
measures have repeatedly received enthusiastic support
from the Democratic and Republican politicians in
Congress and from the federal courts: all three branches
of the government joining in a concerted assault on
the democratic rights of the American people.
The
latest action was taken by the Senate Select Committee
on Intelligence, which voted unanimously May 1 to
approve a huge increase in funding for spying activities
by the US government, including authorization for
the creation of a government-wide "watch list"
of suspected "terrorists," defined so broadly
that virtually any immigrant from the Middle East
or a predominantly Islamic country, and virtually
any left-wing political opponent of American imperialism,
could fall under suspicion.
The
actual amount spent by the US government to fund the
CIA, National Security Agency, the National Reconnaissance
Office, the Defense Intelligence Agency and other
spy programs is classified, but press estimates suggest
that the new legislation will raise spending from
about $35 billion a year to well over $40 billion,
making intelligence one of the largest federal expenditures,
greater than any domestic social program except Social
Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
The
bill passed the committee by a bipartisan 19-0 vote.
Chairman Pat Roberts, a Republican from Kansas, declared,
"This nation has been and remains at war, and
I believe that this bill reflects that reality."
According to ranking Democratic member Jay Rockefeller,
the spending bill "dramatically increases funding
to improve collaboration and data-sharing, analysis
and penetration of terrorist organizations."
One
provision in the authorization bill would establish
an $8 million program to recruit future agents for
the CIA and other intelligence agencies on US college
campuses.
National security letters
Another
provision would have given the CIA and the Pentagon
the same authority to obtain personal information
on American citizens that is presently available only
to the FBI. Longstanding historical precedents have
barred the intelligence agencies and the military
from issuing "national security letters,"
formal orders to credit card companies, libraries,
telecommunications companies and Internet service
providers to produce records on their customers and
users.
The
Bush administration attempted to slip the extended
authority into the financing bill, but there were
objections by some members of the Senate panel, and
the provision was dropped, at least for the time being.
Administration officials told the New York Times that
the change in legal language was not that important,
because the CIA and the military can still obtain
personal information by asking the FBI to request
it for them.
But
a spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union
said that the proposal went beyond even the practices
of the McCarthy witch-hunt of the 1950s, when the
CIA was barred from collecting information on the
domestic activities of US citizens.
On
the same day, May 1, the administration launched the
new Terrorist Threat Integration Center. The TTIC
is charged with preparing the Daily Threat Matrix
used by the White House and the Department of Homeland
Security for deciding when to issue security alerts
based on the five-color scale established after the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
The
new center is nominally an interagency task force,
but it is headed by a 23-year CIA veteran, the former
chief of staff to CIA Director George Tenet, and it
is located at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia,
giving the CIA a key role in domestic security operations
for the first time.
The
FBI has launched a $600 million computer system called
Trilogy to help it create a massive database on American
citizens. Some 26 million agency records will be centralized
in a database containing 100 terabytes (100 million
megabytes) of information. Much of this information
will be funneled from the National Crime Information
Center (NCIC), the FBI's principal criminal database.
The
Justice Department recently exempted the NCIC database
from the Privacy Act of 1974, which mandates that
information can only be entered if proven accurate
and relevant. This opens the way to incorporating
gossip, slander and rumor in the files that will be
used to target suspected "terrorists" who
are potentially subject to arrest and indefinite detention.
Other
forms of FBI spying are on the rise, especially bugging
and wiretapping. In a recent report, Attorney General
John Ashcroft revealed that the Justice Department
had filed 1,228 applications during 2002 for secret
wiretapping warrants under the FISA law, an increase
of 30 percent over the previous year. The secret federal
court that hears such requests did not turn down a
single one of these applications.
Ashcroft
has also signed more than 170 "emergency foreign
intelligence warrants" since September 11, 2001,
compared to only 47 authorized in the previous 23
years. These emergency warrants authorize wiretaps
and physical searches of suspected terrorists for
up to 72 hours before review by the secret FISA court.
Those targeted by these warrants never have the opportunity
to contest them, because they are applied for and
approved in secret, and the FBI is not required to
reveal their existence unless evidence obtained is
using in a criminal case.
Under cover of war
A
new barrage of measures strengthening the powers of
the state and undermining democratic rights began
under cover of the war with Iraq, with the Bush administration
counting on the acquiescence of the Democratic Party
and the judiciary, as well as the silence of the media.
Some
of the most important measures adopted or initiated
over the six weeks include:
*
March 17-The Bush administration began detaining asylum-seekers
from Iraq and 33 other countries. These refugees were
to be held in federal custody until the end of legal
proceedings on their asylum pleas.
*
March 19-The administration announced it would seek
an emergency spending package for domestic counterterrorism
programs, after a month of criticism from congressional
Democrats that not enough money was being provided
for such programs, especially for state and local
police departments and for monitoring air and sea
traffic.
*
March 19-The Justice Department revealed that Attorney
General Ashcroft had ordered FBI agents and US marshals
to detain immigrants for alleged immigration violations
in cases where there was not enough evidence to charge
them under criminal laws.
*
March 21-Federal authorities announced they were seeking
to arrest any Iraqi immigrants suspected of criminal
actions or immigration violations. That date was also
the deadline for thousands of Pakistani and Saudi
immigrants to present themselves for registration
at INS offices, under penalty of arrest.
*
March 24-The Supreme Court declined to allow the ACLU,
the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers,
and two Arab-American groups, AADC and ACCESS, to
intervene in FISA proceedings. The civil liberties
and immigrants' rights groups sought to gain standing
to represent those who are unwittingly being subjected
to FISA wiretaps and bugging.
*
March 25-President Bush issued an order halting for
three years the implementation of a Clinton administration
executive order, signed in 1995, which called for
automatic declassification of most government documents
more than 25 years old, with the burden of proof on
those seeking to keep them secret. The Clinton order
would have taken effect April 17, but was delayed
to December 31, 2006. The Bush order also gives the
vice president the power to classify information for
the first time, an issue which bears directly on the
corrupt relations between the administration and the
energy industry.
*
March 31-The FBI announced plans to open 10 additional
overseas field offices, all of them in capitals of
countries which are either Muslim majority or located
in the oil-rich regions of Central Asia and the Persian
Gulf: Kabul, Jakarta, Tashkent, Belgrade, Sarajevo,
Abu Dhabi, Kuala Lumpur, Tunis, Sanaa, Tbilisi. Baghdad
will undoubtedly be added to that list.
*
April 17-In a decision with sweeping implications
for immigrants fleeing oppression and poverty, Attorney
General Ashcroft denied release on bond to an 18-year-old
Haitian, David Joseph, who came ashore in Florida
last October with more than 200 other refugees on
a foundering ship. Ashcroft overruled an appellate
panel of immigration judges, arguing that there was
a "national security" reason to keep Joseph
jailed indefinitely, even though he is not a terrorist
or suspected of any criminal activity whatsoever.
Ashcroft
advanced the argument that releasing Joseph and similar
refugees "would tend to encourage further surges
of mass migration from Haiti by sea, with attendant
strains on national and homeland security resources."
He also claimed that Pakistani and Palestinian refugees,
possibly linked to terrorist groups, would use Haiti
as a transshipment point.
Immigrant
advocacy groups said that this ruling marks an unprecedented
extension of the concept of "national security,"
applying it to any conduct that impinges in any way
on the functioning of the federal government. By the
same logic, nonviolent civil disobedience on the Mall
in Washington could be portrayed an attack on "national
security," because the ensuing mass arrests would
distract Washington police and the FBI from their
anti-terrorist operations.
The
attorney general's war against immigrants received
further support from the Supreme Court in a ruling
issued April 29, upholding a seven-year-old federal
law that permits the federal government to detain
immigrants indefinitely, including permanent resident
aliens, if they have been arrested and convicted of
a crime. The law has even been applied retroactively,
with long-established resident aliens arrested, detained
indefinitely and then deported for infractions committed
decades ago.
Civil
liberties groups petitioned the high court to rule
that legal resident aliens should have the same constitutional
right as US citizens to a court hearing before being
jailed or deported. The same 5-4 majority of the Supreme
Court which installed Bush as president in 2000 upheld
Bush's repression of immigrants, overturning four
separate decisions by appeals courts around the country.
Backed
by Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Anthony Kennedy
and Sandra Day O'Connor, Chief Justice William Rehnquist
wrote in his majority opinion that "this court
has firmly and repeatedly endorsed the proposition
that Congress may make rules as to aliens that would
be unacceptable if applied to citizens."
While
civil liberties and legal groups have vehemently attacked
such decisions-Alfred P. Carlton Jr., president of
the American Bar Association, attacked the latest
Supreme Court ruling for "ignoring 100 years
of legal precedent"-the Democratic Party has
largely supported these anti-democratic measures.
Some
prominent Democrats, including several presidential
candidates, have criticized the Bush administration
from the right, demanding even greater resources to
build up the repressive powers of the state.
Senator
John Edwards of North Carolina has called for the
creation of new domestic intelligence agency modeled
on Britain's MI5. Senator Joseph Lieberman, the original
sponsor of the proposal to establish the Department
of Homeland Security, has called for the new department
to become the center for gathering domestic intelligence,
not just responding to threats once they are identified.