-Caveat Lector-

(Out Clintoning-Clinton, Bush is creating a Gestapo for the New American Police State. 
 And the "more braindead than a liberal" conservatives say, well it must be ok, he's a 
republican. The next step is a National ID, a National Police Force, and total 
disarmament. Wake up people, it's 1936 Nazi Germany.  Learn from history.)

Do Dots Connect to Police State?
By Farhad Manjoo

2:00 a.m. June 7, 2002 PDT
In a televised address to the nation Thursday evening, President Bush proposed the 
creation of a cabinet-level domestic security office to act as a clearinghouse for 
intelligence collected by many existing federal agencies.

Like several other law enforcement changes proposed by the Bush administration during 
the past two weeks, this move was sharply criticized by civil libertarians, one of 
whom cautioned that Bush was leading the country toward a "police state."

The new agency, which requires congressional approval, would have the thorny job of 
protecting "the homeland," an effort that the FBI and CIA have lately been criticized 
for botching. Although details on the new agency's specific mandate were fuzzy, it was 
clear that the administration expected its modus operandi to be centered around easy 
interagency information sharing.

The "new entity will be one place where information will get pulled together," said 
Ari Fleischer, the White House press secretary.

One of the main criticisms of the FBI and CIA is that they did not share intelligence 
leads they'd collected before Sept. 11, preventing each agency from seeing a full 
picture of terrorist activity and potentially disrupting the attackers' plans.

The FBI and the CIA would not be replaced by the new agency, but some of their 
operations could be given over to it. The agency would envelop 22 other federal 
agencies, including the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the Customs Service, 
the Coast Guard, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Border Patrol, Lawrence 
Livermore National Lab, the FBI's National Infrastructure Protection Program, the Drug 
Enforcement Agency and the Secret Service.

The White House called it the biggest government restructuring plan since the creation 
of the CIA in 1947.

Civil liberty and privacy watchdog groups were grim upon hearing the news, which was 
only the latest bit of government security tightening to occur in the last couple 
weeks.

Last week, Attorney General John Ashcroft scrapped the guidelines that govern the 
FBI's conduct, allowing the bureau to monitor websites, public gatherings and 
religious institutions that aren't under criminal investigation.

On Wednesday, Ashcroft said the government would photograph and fingerprint up to 
100,000 foreigners entering the country from Arab and Muslim countries.

"I think we've reached the point in the debate where we need to ask larger questions 
about where this administration is taking the U.S. government," said Marc Rotenberg, 
director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. He added that "someone needs to 
apply the brakes" or the United States will become a "police state."

Jerry Berman, executive director of the Center for Democracy & Technology, said that 
not only were these moves potentially censorial, but they would ironically make it 
more difficult to protect the homeland.

"When the government collects monumental amounts of information, it may not be able to 
find anything it needs," Berman said. "The problem they had (before Sept. 11) wasn't 
in finding information, it was in analyzing information, and if they have more 
information they'll have more analytic problems."

Berman allowed that the new agency could improve analysis, but he said it wasn't 
obvious that it would. "The public is saying 'please do what is necessary' -- and the 
government is saying 'take off the shackles.' But I really believe that in 90 percent 
of the cases, they're saying 'let's blame the law rather than the fact that we had a 
massive intelligence failure.' What the public needs is a better FBI," not fundamental 
changes in government, Berman said.

Several experts have noted that intelligence centrality of the sort proposed by Bush 
was the main goal of the creation of the CIA -- an agency now best known for not 
letting the FBI know before Sept. 11 that two members of al Qaida had entered the 
United States. Those men, Nawaf Alhazmi and Khalid Almihdhar, were on the plane that 
crashed into the Pentagon.

Stratfor.com, a Web-based "intelligence provider," said in an analysis prepared last 
month that "a centralized intelligence capability is essential if the United States is 
to have a single, integrated, coherent picture of what is happening in the world. A 
bureaucratically fragmented intelligence community will generate a fragmented picture 
of the world. That is currently what we have."

Stratfor.com added that cultural and institutional differences within the CIA and 
between the CIA and the FBI caused the fragmentation that is apparent today.

Others echoed this theme.

Thomas Sanderson, deputy director of the Transnational Threats Initiative at the 
Center for Strategic & International Studies, said in a statement that the creation of 
the new department "is a positive, timely, though incomplete, step that will generate 
as much rancor as it does cooperation and results.

"Centralizing security and preparedness efforts is essential for coping with the 
terrorism threat. However, despite new funding and presidential backing, there are 
bound to be budgetary and turf battles with other bureaucracies that will slow the new 
department's efforts. The American people should be encouraged by this development, 
but should not expect this to be the panacea that many are seeking."

It's unclear what kind of reception the new agency will receive in Congress, but 
several members were very supportive of the move, with Richard Gephardt, the 
Democratic leader in the House, telling Reuters the move is "precisely what I think 
should be done."
-end article-
-----------------
-InfoWarz
Lead, Follow, or Get Out of the Way.

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