Undermining the War at Home
by Walid
Phares
19 December,
2005
"Use their systems, passports,
citizenship, laws, traditions, books and media, create internal
divisions among them, and inflict defeat on the kuffars
[infidels], for in the current balance of power, all we need to do
is to use their weaknesses as our strength."
- Abul ala', comment posted in the Al-Ansar chat room, September
2005.
Opening the first salvo in the
newly launched "battle of the terrorist surveillance," the
Associated Press wrote: "President Bush said Saturday he
personally has authorized a secret eavesdropping program in the
U.S. more than 30 times since the Sept. 11 attacks and he lashed
out at those involved in publicly revealing the program." When I
read this far in the report, I thought the article was about
finding who in America is helping al-Qaeda. The AP added: "He said
it is used only to intercept the international communications of
people inside the United States who have been determined to have
'a clear link' to al-Qaeda or related terrorist organizations." This would overlook homegrown jihadists, or those who
infiltrated the country years ago and aren't making international
phone calls. Moreover, well-trained terrorists would not reveal
their plans on international calls; hence, the administration will
likely be criticized for not spending enough resources
investigating internal networks of terror, those who will probably
produce the next terrorist strikes.
Obviously, the government - in a
full fledged state of war with al-Qaeda and its allies - should be
spending all possible resources to monitor, listen to, analyze,
and act against potential threats. Despite that, the intelligence
establishment has asked the president to only authorize 30
monitoring of possible cases since September 11. Most analysts
believe al-Qaeda has 200 cadres operating within the U.S. Former
Senator Bob Graham (D-Florida) of the Senate Intelligence
Committee cited this figure in 2002. The administration's ground
troops have only tracked 30 of them, 15 percent.
That's why I was surprised as I
continued reading the AP report that it did not criticize the
administration for not doing enough surveillance of terror-related
activities but for doing too much, or as it was framed in the
media later: Spying on U.S. citizens! The argument was coined in
pure theoretical - albeit erroneous- sculpture: The president was
ordering spying on Americans, inside the country. Hence, he had -
according to some - broken the law. Reading and listening to the
surreal new debate, I thought of how al-Qaeda must be laughing. In
one of his caves in middle earth, Osama bin Laden and Ayman
Zawahiri must be in disbelief, yelling, "By Allah, had we known we
were barely monitored; we could have pulled out the big one!"
But America's political debate is
happening on a different planet: it's about L.A. Law,
finding scandals, and who can get a story out; regardless of
reflecting on what we'll need to do to win the War on Terror. The
new "story" was given a title before it is investigated: it is
spying on Americans rather than being about gathering information
on terrorists. So if the terrorists happen to be U.S. citizens (a
citizenship no longer so difficult to obtain) their status of
terrorist is overridden by their legal status. But the critics
stated that it is not about the War on Terror, but about civil
liberties. A president must use the FISA Act's process: ask a
special court for authorization to wiretap a suspected terrorist.
Well, let's examine the legal
aspect before we look at the damage being made to Homeland
Security and all American liberties by the promoters of this
story.
The legal debate
The administration says the "program is reviewed every 45 days, using fresh threat
assessments, legal reviews by the Justice Department, White House
counsel and others, and information from previous activities under
the program." The president added that "it is designed in part to
fix problems raised by the Sept. 11 commission, which found that
two of the suicide hijackers were communicating from San Diego
with al-Qaeda operatives overseas." But Senator and likely 2008
presidential candidate Russ Feingold, D-WI, saw it otherwise:
"This is not the system of government we have and that we fought
for," he told the Associated Press in a telephone interview." Yes,
our system of government asks the chief executive to go through a
court before gathering information on U.S. citizens suspected of
illegal activities or crimes. But the issue isn't about crimes or
illegalities. And the issue isn't about Americans who may have a
connection with violent activities.
Indeed, testifying to the House
Select Committee on Intelligence on October 30, 2003 on "Collecting Intelligence under the law," former DOJ attorney John
Yoo wrote:
During wartime, the military engages in searches and
surveillance without a warrant. We do not, for example, require
the armed forces to seek a warrant when it conducts visual or
electronic surveillance of enemy forces or of a battlefield, or
when it searches buildings, houses, and vehicles for the enemy.
Nor must military operations within the United States operate
under a different rule.
The question is clear: Are we or
are we not at war with the terrorists? Osama bin Laden
declared that war in 1998. The bipartisan 9/11 Commission wondered
why the previous administration didn't declare it and the current
administration held off until October 2001. The jihadists
are present within the U.S., including those who carry U.S.
passports. So are other terror jihadists in Spain, Britain,
Holland, or France. By pure rationale, the U.S. government has the
duty to use all means (approved by war conventions) to resist the
penetration and infiltration of the United States. Doing otherwise
is unlawful, unconstitutional, and more importantly to the
detriment of the security, and therefore the liberty of the
American people. But regardless of any general legal argument,
attorney John Yoo provides us with a technical legal provision. He
writes:
Therefore, if al-Qaeda forces organize and carry out missions
to attack civilian or military targets within the United States,
government surveillance of terrorists would not be law
enforcement so much as military operations. In such
circumstances, when the government is not pursuing an ordinary
criminal law enforcement objective, the Fourth Amendment
requires no search warrant.
So, legally speaking, the
administration, while defending itself from a terrorist jihad,
had to grant our would-be killers civil liberties. One must
admit how difficult this task is: To fight a global and domestic
war against terrorists who reject all laws of infidels, while
using a legal system that wasn't designed for these enemies. The
American people have been left in the dark, because they do not
understand how the enemy exploits America's system. Now, instead
of discussing how to close those loopholes, the debate is framed
around "the government spying on Americans."
While jihadist cells are
constantly spying to find chinks in America's infrastructure,
President Bush's critics are concerned about how America is
watching the terrorists. So far, I haven't heard a critic asking
who are we watching? Or anyone requesting an update as to how many
terrorists are within the U.S. So, in sum, they want the
government to "catch" the terrorists but not to "watch" them. I
must admit that if the 9/11 Commission was right on target
regarding some fellow Americans; it is about "lack of
imagination." For till further notice, I am not able to figure out
how the U.S. can catch the jihadist terrorists if it
doesn't monitor them. And how can the defense and security
institutions monitor an enemy in a state of war, if it provides
them with the knowledge and the technology it is using.
The liberties of Americans are too
cherished to be infringed. It is the terrorists' freedom that
needs to be shrunk. We need to match our laws with the nature of
the conflict, not allow the terrorists to use them against us.
Laws are made to protect the people, not to be used against them
by the enemy.
Al-Qaeda and the jihadists
Were the terrorists communicating
among each other in the 1990s, and was the U.S. government able to
detect them and disrupt their operations before 9/11? Obviously
the terrorists of Mohammed Atta and their colleagues were free to
communicate, even meet on U.S. soil for years. There was no War on
Terror in the Clinton administration, no advice that a jihad
was happening in the research of most of academia, and no court
was instructed to indict Islamo-fascism before September 11, 2001.
Presidents didn't even need to develop techniques to monitor
jihadists, since no doctrine on jihad was taught in
military colleges. The country was on a different planet.
But Osama bin Laden changed the
rules of engagement four years ago. The geopolitical reality
changed, and laws had to serve the survival of Americans not to
obstruct their global freedoms. Many questions are still being
asked by the experts on terrorism: Are we fully prepared for them?
Is our legal system, even when best interpreted ready to meet
them? Apparently not: We are in a twilight zone. The Bush
administration, inheriting a pre-9/11 American legal system, is
struggling to balance between civil liberties and terror. But its
critics haven't moved past September 10th: They want to use a
system designed against the mafia to play with the most lethal
forces of the globe.
The public must be told the whole
story and be left to judge for itself. Americans must be rapidly
informed and educated as to the nature of this war, its length,
the enemy they are facing, and the real threats that are clouding
the future. I believe that the critics, in their rush to play
politics, may have given the opportunity to America to open its
eyes wide at Jihadism. Indeed, I'd be more than interested in
learning about "who the government has wire tapped and whose
surveillance was not reviewed through the FISA process." Only then
can we see the big picture.
Meanwhile, al-Qaeda is learning
more about our system - not about the fact that the U.S.
government has been monitoring them, but how little it has done
and how easy it is to attack these measures within the U.S.
system. The terrorists in charge of penetrating U.S. national
security are better off this week than last. They would have
learned how many times the president has authorized exceptional
surveillance; they would have understood why the pressure was
higher on terror between 2001 and 2005; and above all they would
have realized that politicians in America (and their academic
advisors) are detached from the reality of the post-9/11 world.
Al-Qaeda knew it was under
surveillance in America, but it didn't know much about that
system. Soon, it will know and will use this knowledge to its
advantage. While some among us are rotating their pre-9/11 planet
back in time, future jihad is railing against another of
its enemies' fatal weaknesses.
Dr
Walid Phares is the author of the newly released book
Future Jihad. He is
also a senior fellow with the Foundation for the Defense of
Democracies in Washington DC.
This article appeared in
FrontPageMagazine.com on December 19, 2005
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