-Caveat Lector-

With the 'war on terrorism' turning into a 'war against  the American people' by
our own government, I am confused - are we becoming a Police State or a Miltiary
Dictatorship? Guess Rumsfeld and Ashcroft will have to duke this one out.
flw

9 Mar 2004 04:00 GMT WSJ(3/9)

Is Military Creeping Into Domestic Law Enforcement?
Copyright � 2004, Dow Jones Newswires

   (From THE WALL STREET JOURNAL)
   By Robert Block and Gary Fields

IN A LITTLE-NOTICED side effect of the war on terrorism, the military is edging
toward a sensitive area that has been off-limits to it historically: domestic
intelligence gathering and law enforcement.

Several recent incidents involving the military have raised concern among
student and civil-rights groups. One was a visit last month by an Army
intelligence agent to an official at the University of Texas law school in
Austin. The agent demanded a videotape of a recent academic conference at the
school so that he could identify what he described as "three Middle Eastern men"
who had made "suspicious" remarks to Army lawyers at the seminar, according to
the official, Susana Aleman, the dean of student affairs.

The Army, while not disputing that the visit took place, declined to comment,
saying the incident is under investigation.

Last year, the Office of Naval Intelligence, the nation's primary source of
global maritime intelligence, demanded access to the U.S. Customs Service's
database on maritime trade, saying it needed information to thwart potential
terrorist activity. Customs officials initially resisted the Navy's demands but
eventually agreed to give naval intelligence much of what it wanted.

In an interview earlier this month, U.S. Customs and Border Protection chief
Robert C. Bonner said he shares data only after getting Navy assurances that the
information won't be abused. Navy spokesman Jon Spiers says the Office of Naval
Intelligence first approached customs about sharing inbound foreign cargo
information in December 2002, and he denies there is anything improper about the
request. The agency "has not overstepped any authority or crossed the line
dividing law enforcement from military operations," he says.

Lt. Spiers adds that when the Navy's top spy agency gains access to data about
American companies and individuals, the information will be "subjected to a
meticulous legal review" and will be retained only if it is directly related to
the agency's mission to identify potential foreign threats.

In another sign of military interest in domestic information-gathering, the
Defense Intelligence Agency's new antiterrorism task force is looking to share
information with law-enforcement officials in California and New York City,
according to an August 2003 General Accounting Office report.

Historically, Americans haven't trusted the military to do domestic police work.
The 1878 Posse Comitatus Act, passed in response to abuses by federal troops in
the South after the Civil War, prohibits the use of the military "to execute the
laws" of the U.S. That's been widely interpreted as a ban on searching,
arresting or spying on U.S. civilians by federal troops.

But the law has been violated, notably during the Vietnam War, when Army
operatives spied on antiwar activists on campuses. Meanwhile, Congress has eased
the law's limits to allow the military to help prosecute the war on drugs.

After the Sept. 11 attacks, the White House sought to further loosen
restrictions to allow the military to take on a new domestic-security role. It
has mostly been rebuffed. In May the House refused to approve a White
House-backed proposal to give the Central Intelligence Agency and the military
authority to scrutinize personal and business records of U.S. citizens. And the
Senate last year blocked funding for a Pentagon project known as the Total
Information Awareness program, which was supposed to collect a vast array of
information on individuals, including medical, employment and credit-card
histories.

The issue of an expanding military role in domestic affairs also surfaced last
year with the Pentagon's creation of the Northern Command, or Northcom, based in
Colorado Springs, Colo. The new command, the first such military command
designed to protect the U.S. homeland from a terrorist attack, has
responsibility for the U.S, Canada, Mexico, portions of the Caribbean and U.S.
coastal waters. Northcom's commander, Gen. Ralph "Ed" Eberhart, is the first
general since the Civil War with operational authority exclusively over military
forces within the U.S.

Gen. Eberhart has stoked concern among civil-liberties advocates by saying that
the military and civilians should be involved in developing "actionable
intelligence" for the government. In September 2002, he told a group of National
Guardsmen that the military and the National Guard should "change our radar
scopes" to prevent terrorism. It is important to "not just look out, but we're
also going to have to look in," he said, adding, "we can't let culture and the
way we've always done it stand in the way."

Northcom officials and other military leaders play down his remarks. "No one ran
out after that speech and started snooping," one official says. Gen. Eberhart
echoed that last September on PBS's "News Hour": "We are not going to be out
there spying on people, " he said, though he added, "we get information from
people who do."

Further evidence of the blurring of the lines between the civilian and military
worlds comes in a job-vacancy notice for a senior counterintelligence advisor to
Northcom. The duties, according to the notice, include providing advice that
goes beyond potential terrorism to include "other major criminal activity, such
as drug cartels and large-scale money laundering" -- work usually under the
purview of the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the Secret Service.

Another little-known Pentagon group, the Counterintelligence Field Activity, was
set up two years ago. With 400 service members and civilians stationed around
the globe, the CIFA was originally charged with protecting the military and
critical infrastructure from spying by terrorists and foreign intelligence
services. But in August, Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy defense secretary, issued a
directive ordering the unit to maintain a "domestic law-enforcement database
that includes information related to potential terrorist threats directed
against the Department of Defense."

The CIFA also works closely with the FBI and is conducting some duties for
civilian agencies. For example, according to Department of Agriculture
documents, the CIFA is in charge of doing background checks on foreign workers
and scientists employed by the department's agricultural-research service. The
group also provides information to the Information and Security Command, or
Inscom, the Army's main intelligence organization, based at Fort Belvoir, Md.

The Army intelligence agent who investigated the law-school conference was
assigned to Inscom. Army officials reviewing the Texas incident concede that the
agent may have overstepped his boundaries and should have tried to win the
voluntary cooperation of the faculty and students. But they say that he was
reacting to a possible counterintelligence threat to the military. It isn't
clear why there were Army lawyers at the conference in the first place, though
some officials say the attorneys wanted to learn more about Muslim traditions
and Islamic law.

Civil-rights advocates are skeptical. Robert Pugsley, professor of law at the
Southwestern University School of Law in Los Angeles, says the Texas incident is
"a chilling example" of the military's overreaching. "It'll multiply like fleas
on a dog" if left unchecked, he says.

"What we are starting to see is 50 years of legal refinement and revisions for
oversight being quietly jettisoned," adds Steven Aftergood, an intelligence
policy specialist at the Federation of American Scientists, a nonprofit,
left-leaning think tank in Washington.

But James Carafano, a policy analyst with the Heritage Foundation in Washington,
 says he believes the military has honored posse comitatus. His concern is that
hard distinctions have been created between who has jurisdiction in homeland
defense versus homeland security. It's distinctions terrorists might exploit, he
says. "We may potentially be creating vulnerabilities."
(END) Dow Jones Newswires

March 08, 2004 23:00 ET (04:00 GMT)

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