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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (40264)1/6/2010 12:25:36 PM
From: Peter Dierks1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
One 'Allegedly' Too Many
In her raw and disastrous way, Janet Napolitano is revealing.
JANUARY 5, 2010, 11:06 P.M. ET.

By DOROTHY RABINOWITZ
Shocking though it was, the Christmas Day terror attempt by a 23-year-old Nigerian has only hardened Americans' awareness that they confront an implacable enemy in a war whose end is nowhere in sight. It is a hard-won new sense of reality and an invaluable one, achieved event by embittering event. The holy warrior assigned to blow up that passenger plane and who almost succeeded has, we learn, been granted the chance to strike a deal. His attack effort had come on the heels of the all-too-successful terror assault by that other Soldier of Islam, Maj. Nidal Hasan who murdered 13 fellow members of the American military. This, even as it was becoming clear that the number of our homegrown jihadis involved in terror plots, or who had enlisted in training toward that goal, had increased markedly.

It wasn't always easy to preserve a healthy sense of reality about terrorism in the years since 9/11, as the comments of ethical counselors, privacy advocates and civil liberties sentinels aghast at the possibility of government snooping have reminded us in the last week. They were around in force for media interviews, equipped as ever with a variety of arguments for the sanctity of privacy rights, warnings against surveillance that threatened the rights of citizens in a democracy. Day after day came the same breezy assurances—we had only to balance our security needs with privacy rights. As though, in this deadly war or any other, sane people could consider the values equivalent. The latest threat to privacy rights, advocates charged, was the use of full body scanners: the technology that would have immeasurably decreased the chances someone like Umar Abdulmutallab would have been able to get past security wearing his terror panties—intimate underwear, that is, in which 80 grams of PETN had been concealed.

It was that prospect of images revealing intimate areas of the body that apparently disturbed Rep. Jason Chaffetz, Utah Republican and sponsor of a House measure banning the use of full body scanners other than as a "secondary device"—i.e. to be used on select subjects. He didn't think, he told a New York Times reporter, "anybody needs to see my 8 year old naked in order to secure that airplane." A useful bit of reassurance, that, for the plotters of terror assaults who have in the past shown no compunction about the use of children as suicide bombers.

Another argument we heard frequently held that no matter what technology was put in place, our dauntless enemies would find ways to get around it. The picture was clear. With an unbeatable, ever resourceful enemy working night and day devising ingenious strategies, what point could there be in developing better detection capacities? Historians of the future may one day well ponder the powerful streak of defeatism in the U.S. in the era of its terrorist wars—and the superhuman characteristics Americans ascribed to their enemies in that 21st century battle against terrorism: a view in no small way nurtured in their media and political culture.



No guardians of privacy rights had weighed in earlier against the body imaging scanners than the American Civil Liberties Union. In October, 2007, the ACLU issued a statement decrying the use of this technology as "an assault on the essential dignity of passengers." "We are," the agency declared, "not convinced it is the right thing for America." This reasoning is clear. The right thing is for America to reject the scanners. Its citizens may then face increased risk of being blown up in mid-air but their privacy would remain inviolate to the end. Who could ask for anything more?

It took the president a second speech to weigh in on the issue of the security, or lack thereof, that had nearly led to tragedy. The first speech, two and a half days after the event, was in its own way noteworthy. In it the president observed that a passenger on the plane had "allegedly tried to ignite explosives. . . ." Mr. Obama's use of a familiar legalistic evasion would, it was soon clear, raise hackles—though the term is one routinely used in crime reporting. No matter. It was one "allegedly" too many in the world, jarring coming from the president in this circumstance.

Consider the justly famed speech an enraged American president delivered the day after Pearl Harbor. Then try imagining that address by Franklin Roosevelt—a leader to whom Mr. Obama has been compared—as it would sound in Obama language.

"Yesterday, December 7, 1941, a date that will live in infamy, the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces allegedly from the Empire of Japan . . . Yesterday the Japanese government allegedly launched an attack on Malaya. Last night Japanese forces allegedly attacked Hong Kong. Last night Japanese forces allegedly attacked Guam . . ."

Still it wasn't the president's comments but those of Janet Napolitano that reverberated. It wasn't the first time the Homeland Security chief's struggles to utter the kind of views she understood to be fitting for an Obama administration official ended in trouble—this time with interviews in which she made her now famous assertion that the airport security system had worked. She followed up, the next day, with retractions and clarifications that ended, as such things do, sounding worse than the original.

Asked in an interview with the German magazine "Der Spiegel" last March why she had avoided using the word "terrorism" in her testimony to Congress, she explained that she had instead preferred to use another term: "man-caused disasters." That choice of words demonstrated, she said, that "we want to move away from the politics of fear." The idea now, she added mysteriously, was to be prepared for all risks that could occur. There was nothing mysterious about the intended point. In the new forward looking administration she served—its leader had after all travelled far tendering apologies for his country's past sins and arrogance toward other nations—emphasis on terrorism was to be dispatched, along with the words war on terror and terrorists. The use of such references was to be equated with the low, the deceitful, the politics of fear, with indeed, a false claim of danger.

Ms. Napolitano would go on in other ways to prove the potency of man-made disasters—of which she was clearly proving one. In April, she issued a report seeming to target military veterans as potentially dangerous right-wing extremists. She soon apologized. In the same month she managed to suggest that the 9/11 terrorists had entered the U.S. through Canada, which appalled Canadian leaders. Apologies and clarifications followed.

Mr. Obama can't be happy with his Homeland Security chief. It's fair to say no president deserves an appointee so extravagantly unequipped for her job. Still there is much in Ms. Napolitano's attitudes and pronouncements, including talk of "the politics of fear," that reflect with glaring accuracy the Obama team's values, ideology and prime political targets. In her disastrous and raw way she is its voice revealed.

Terrorism will continue to provide its hardening education, though not entirely from terrorists themselves. We have before us now the spectacle of Jihadi Abdulmutallab, lawyered up, with full rights as though a U.S. criminal defendant. The impossibly expensive, dangerous, and unavoidably chaotic trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and associates still lies ahead, slated for a Manhattan courtroom. Even now a majority of Americans can't fathom the reason for their government's insistence that the agents chiefly responsible for the 9/11 attack be tried under the U.S. criminal justice system with all due rights and constitutional privileges, instead of in a military court. That insistence itself is answer enough—an unforgettable testament to the ideological drives and related evasions of reality that shape this administration's view of the world.

Ms. Rabinowitz is a member of the Journal's editorial board.

online.wsj.com



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (40264)1/7/2010 10:44:08 AM
From: Peter Dierks  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 71588
 
Brennan Behind ‘Terrorism as Crime’ Policy
by Rowan Scarborough

01/07/2010

John O. Brennan, the closest advisor to President Obama on how to fight al Qaeda, has emerged as a key promoter of dumping much of George Bush's tough war policies and embracing the White House's legalistic approach to terrorism.

The nation got its first extended long look at Brennan on Sunday when he appeared on TV talk shows to defend the administration's response to al Qaeda's Christmas Day would-be airline bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.

It was during his appearance on Fox News that he made several astounding policy statements.


"Brennan has said a number of disappointing things on Sunday," said Rep. Peter Hoekstra, senior Republican on the House Intelligence Committee. "If you take a look at the policies he is advocating, they clearly are policies that run totally counter to what the former president had in place."

But in truth, Brennan has been an internal Bush critic going back to his days in the CIA, which culminated in him serving as chief of staff to director George Tenet, then setting up the first National Counter-Terrorism Center.

Brennan came from the CIA's dovish wing. He served at Langley at a time when senior analysts began a war against the White House by leaking damaging charges against Bush officials to a compliant news media. Most charges turned out to be untrue.

Brennan left the agency in 2005, formed his own company and quickly fell into the Obama campaign where he became the candidate's chief adviser on intelligence matters.

Brennan opposed used of the word "war" to describe the battle against al Qaeda. Sure enough, once Obama took office, the administration largely dropped the word. It called the conflict an "overseas contingency."

Brennan also opposed the special prison for terrorists at Guantanamo Bay. Sure enough, one of Obama's first pronouncements was a deadline for closing Gitmo, even before a new prison was located.

Brennan told me in 2007 that the U.S. needed to reach out to Lebanese Hizballah's kinder side. He noted that the U.S.-designated terror group runs medical clinics and hands out food. I countered that Hizballah operates like the mafia, controlling a neighborhood so that everyone has to come to it for jobs, food, care. It's a great recruiting mechanism for finding new terrorists.

His Sunday TV talk show performances opened up these views to the American people and political Washington.

He was asked why Abdulmutallab was provided a lawyer, instead of being turned over to the FBI for days of interrogation to learn everything possible about al Qaeda's activities in Yemen, where he was trained.

Brennan answered that you can get good information through plea-bargaining with al Qaeda terrorists through their lawyers.

"As you talk with the lawyers and you talk with the individuals, as they recognize what they're facing as far as the charges, conviction and possible sentence, there are opportunities to continue to talk about it," Brennan said on Fox News Sunday.

When host Chris Wallace said, "But once he gets his Miranda rights, he doesn't have to speak at all," Brennan answered: "He doesn't have to, but he knows that there are certain things that are on the table, and if he wants to, in fact, engage with us in a productive manner, there are ways that he can do that."

In other words, the U.S. can get better information working through Abdulmutallab's defense attorney, than through trained FBI-CIA interrogators. And his answer indicates the Obama administration is willing to give the terrorist a lenient sentence, putting him back on the street sooner rather than later.

"Heaven forbid that we ever plea bargain with a terrorists," Hoekstra told HUMAN EVENTS. "Wow. This was a guy who was going to kill 300 Americans in the air, who knows how many on the ground. I've got to believe al Qaeda, when they hear statements like that, they're just laughing. It's kind of like, 'how stupid are these Americans. We try to blow up an airplane and they're going to plea bargain with us.'"

Brennan also said the administration would continue to release Gitmo terrorists to Yemen, even in the face of evidence that at least three ex-prisoners renewed their al Qaeda ties in that country, one as the group's leader.

Two days later, Obama said such transfers were being suspended.

Brennan emphatically justified closing the military prison on the grounds that al Qaeda uses it as a propaganda tool.

"Guantanamo facility must be closed," he said. "It has served as a propaganda tool for Al Qaida. We're determined to close it. We're not going to, though, do anything that is going to put American security at risk.

In fact, al Qaeda, and leader Osama bin Laden, uses everything America does as a propaganda tool, from its support of Israel overseas to its embrace of liberty at home.

Brennan's reach on intelligence issues extends to keeping the wraps on briefings to Congress.

"The guy has treated us like crap," Hoekstra said.

The White House has allowed one intelligence committee briefing on the Fort Hood massacre, and none so far on the attempted airline bombing.

The stonewalling extends to congressmen overseas.

Hoekstra traveled to Yemen News Year's Day for a firsthand look at the al Qaeda enemy and efforts to defeat it.

To his amazement, he found out the White House had instructed the ambassador not to brief him on military operations. Worse, Hoekstra said, the White House ordered CIA Director Leon Panetta to instruct his Yemen station chief not brief Hoekstra on certain operations.

He later called the director. "Leon's response was very clear," the congressman recalled. "'Pete, I was contacted by the White House and instructed to call my chief of station that if he wanted that information he had to get it out of Washington and you couldn't get it from the people actually on the ground implementing these policies."

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Mr. Scarborough is a national security writer who has written books on Donald Rumsfeld and the CIA, including the New York Times bestseller Rumsfeld's War.

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humanevents.com