From the Los Angeles Times
A terrorist on every corner?
JAMES BOVARD
JAMES BOVARD is the author of "Attention Deficit Democracy" and eight
other books.
February 8, 2006
PRESIDENT BUSH and Atty. Gen. Alberto Gonzales insist that the National
Security Agency's warrantless wiretapping of American citizens is a
necessary "terrorist surveillance program." And polls show that most
Americans support permitting the government to tap the phone calls and
e-mails of those considered "suspicious."
But what exactly does that mean? A close look suggests that the feds'
definition of a "suspected terrorist" may not meet the laugh test.
In the mass roundup of more than 1,200 people shortly after 9/11, for
example, it took very little for a Muslim or Arab illegal immigrant to
be considered a "suspected terrorist," according to a 2003 report by
the Justice Department's inspector general. Arab students were locked
up as suspected terrorists for working at pizza parlors (in violation
of their student visas); a Pakistani immigrant was jailed after
attracting attention because he and his Queens housemates let their
grass grow long and hung their underwear out to dry on the fence; and
one Muslim was arrested because "he had taken a roll of film to be
developed and the film had multiple pictures of the World Trade Center
on it but no other Manhattan sites," the inspector general noted. Some
FBI agents were even instructed to look in phone books to find Arab- or
Muslim-sounding names, according to Newsweek columnist Steven Brill.
The Department of Homeland Security in May 2003 urged 18,000 local and
state police departments to treat critics of the war on terror as
potential terrorists, according to a confidential DHS memo made public
in 2004. Suicide bombers, the feds told local lawmen, could be detected
by such traits as a "pale face from recent shaving of beard"; they "may
appear to be in a 'trance' "; their eyes may "appear to be focused and
vigilant"; and their clothing may either be "out of sync with the
weather" or just "loose."
The Transportation Security
Administration is also extremely arbitrary in how it designates names
for its "no-fly" list. There are an estimated 70,000 names in the
registry — many of them stuck there for reasons that even the
government cannot explain. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Rep.
John Lewis (D-Ga.) were placed on the list. Everyone with the common
name of "David Nelson" is treated like a would-be bomber — as are
4-year-old children unlucky enough to have a name matching one on the
list.
Since December, according to media reports, TSA agents
have been chatting up airline passengers to determine if they are
terrorists, looking for such warning signs as "involuntary physical and
psychological reactions" — including whether people appear stressed
out, frightened or deceptive. The number of people who fear flying
outnumber Al Qaeda associates by at least a few thousand-fold, yet
visible anxiety will be enough for the TSA to justify taking people
aside for far more intensive examination.
And the Pentagon has
its own catchall definitions of suspicious and/or terrorist-related
behavior. Its "counterintelligence field activity" program, ostensibly
set up to protect domestic military bases and personnel, has been
covertly gathering information on Americans who have done nothing more
suspicious than protest against the Iraq war, including at last year's
antiwar rally at Hollywood and Vine. Names gathered in such fishnets
are being added to a Pentagon database involving the "terrorism threat
warning process," according to Newsweek.
When Americans hear
Bush say "terrorism surveillance program," they should recognize that
the crosshairs may very well be on them. The more expansive and
arbitrary the definition of "suspected terrorist," the more of our
rights the feds can violate. Invoking the word "terrorism" must not
raze all limits on the government's power to target citizens who pose
no threat to public safety.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times