Smoke billows from the twin towers of the World Trade Center after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001
By Philip Bobbitt | NEWSWEEK
Published Jan 2, 2010
From the magazine issue dated Jan 11, 2010
Critics of the administration on the right have been quick to cite the attempted bombing over Detroit on Christmas Day as proof that President Obama's antiterror policies have put the country at greater risk. Those at the other end of the spectrum have criticized Obama for retaining too many of the previous administration's counterterror programs by endorsing the use of military tribunals, suggesting that at least some prisoners held at Guantánamo ought to remain in custody even if they cannot be successfully prosecuted in ordinary criminal trials, trying to prevent the disclosure of photographs of torture and its victims, refusing to renounce renditions, and escalating targeted killings. Which critique is correct?
They actually have a lot in common. [snip]
[SNIP]
It is often asked, "How can we win a war against terror? Who would surrender? How can we make war against an emotion (terror) or a guerrilla technique (terrorism), neither of which are enemy states?" These questions assume that victory in war is simply a matter of defeating the enemy. In fact, that may be the criterion for winning in football or chess, but not warfare. Victory in war is a matter of achieving the war aim. The war aim in a war against terror is not territory, or access to resources, or conversion to our political way of life. It is the protection of civilians within the rule of law. Not coincidentally, this is what General Petraeus realized was necessary in Iraq, and it is what General McChrystal has testified will be his goal in Afghanistan.
If the laws are inadequate, then they must be reformed to take account of the new strategic context rather than be ignored or twisted. Failing to do this traps us in the Cheney/ACLU world, in which we either act lawlessly to protect our people and thus turn every success into failure, or we await the next attack with the very practices and rules that invited the last one. When Obama promised in his speech at the National Archives to go to Congress for new statutory counterterror authorities, he made a decision as important strategically as it was constitutionally.
A short list of initiatives to accompany the successful reform of electronic surveillance laws passed by Congress earlier last year should include:
Statutory rules to authorize preventive detentions, which Obama recognizes we need and which our European allies already have, but which the administration has mistakenly backed away from under pressure.
A special Article III court to try terrorists, with the appropriate evidentiary rules and safeguards for defendants.
Regulations strengthening external oversight of data mining so that this valuable tool can be more usefully employed: if the government had taken the names it already had on its terrorist watch list and swept airline reservations, then cross-checked these with street addresses, telephone numbers, postal and immigration records, frequent-flier and credit-card numbers, all 19 of the hijackers would have been identified and seen to be flying together on 9/11.
Addressing the privacy concerns that have prevented the installation of millimeter-wave scanners and other body-scanning devices at U.S. and international airports.
A national ID card law that requires a template for all state driver's licenses and sets rules for the inclusion of biometrics and safeguards for the use of personal information. (Can most policemen in New York really tell a proper Idaho driver's license from a forgery?)
Adoption of the isolation-and-quarantine statutecrafted by the Centers for Disease Control, which would provide federal legal authority and rationalize the hodgepodge of current state and local laws in order to prevent the potentially fatal confusion that would ensue if a significant biological attack or epidemic should strike.
Establish new laws to govern the use of federal troops in disasters and provide for disaster relief. Current laws—beyond the inexperience and incompetence of managers—bedeviled rescue operations during Hurricane Katrina.
Mandatory insurance for critical infrastructure, which is largely in private hands and is highly vulnerable to cyberattacks.
New rules governing the replacement of members of Congress, the Supreme Court, and the executive branch in case of mass attacks on these institutions: to take just a single example, the fourth plane on 9/11 would have hit the Capitol during a roll-call vote in the House, quite possibly requiring months before a quorum could be legitimately reestablished by elections and thus forcing the U.S. into an extended period of martial law.
These are controversial proposals, and I have no illusions that they will effortlessly win support from Congress. [snip]
I agree with the author's premise that we get into trouble when we move too far to the right or the left. The extreme left is childishly idealistic in its willingness to extend unlimited rights and privileges to terrorists. The extreme right often adopts a cowboy mentality, which breeds even more hatred.
Obviously, to deny that we are being targeted on an on-going basis by radical islamic operatives is dangerous. To refuse to acknowledge that leaves us wide open to attack. On the other hand, to assume that every person of Middle Eastern descent is out to bomb us, also places us in danger - not only from terrorist attack by those who have slipped through because security efforts are stretched too thin, but also, in danger of loss of freedoms and rights.
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It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less. ~Susan B. Anthony
The vast majority is in the center and yet there is no real "centrist" party as such... I wonder whether being a moderate is not a defensible/promotable position vs. polarized positions of far left/right. Media certainly seems to cater to the polarized discussions..
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Democracy needs defending - SOS Hillary Clinton, Sept 8, 2010 Democracy is more than just elections - SOS Hillary Clinton, Oct 28, 2010