With or without congressional authorization or oversight, the
executive branch is in charge and will let NAO use state-of-the-art
technology, including military satellite imagery, to spy on Americans
without their knowledge. Implementation is delayed, however, after
Committee on Homeland Security Chairman, Bennie Thompson, and other
committee members raised questions of "very serious privacy and civil
liberties concerns." In response, DHS agreed to delay operating
(officially) until all matters are addressed and resolved.
Given
its track record post-9/11, expect little more than pro forma posturing
before Congress signs off on what Kate Martin, the director of the
Center for National Security Studies, calls "Big Brother in the Sky"
and a "police state" in the offing.
DHS supplies this background
information on NAO. Post-9/11, the Director of National Intelligence
appointed an Independent Study Group (ISG) in May, 2005 to "review the
current operation and future role of the (1974) Civil Applications
Committee and study the current state of Intelligence Community support
to homeland security and law enforcement entities."
In
September 2005, the Committee produced a "Blue Ribbon Study," now
declassified. Its nine members were headed by and included three Booz
Allen Hamilton officials because of the company's expertise in spying
and intelligence gathering. Its other members have similar experience.
They all have a vested interest in domestic spying because the business
potential is huge for defense related industries and consultants.
ISG members included:
Keith Hall, Chairman Vice President, Booz Allen Hamilton
Edward G. Anderson LTG US Army (Ret) Principal, Booz Allen Hamilton
Thomas W. Conroy Vice President National Security Programs Northrop Grumman/TASC
Patrick M. Hughes LTG US Army (Ret) Vice President, Homeland Security L-3 Communications
Kevin O'Connell Director of Defense Group Incorporated (DGI) Center for Intelligence Research and Analysis (CIRA)
CIRA
is a think tank that calls itself "the premier open source and cultural
intelligence exploitation cell for the US intelligence community." Its
business is revolutionizing intelligence analysis.
Jeff Baxter Independent Defense Consultant with DOD and industry ties Dr. Paul Gilman Director Oak Ridge Center for Advanced Studies Oak Ridge National Laboratory US Department of Energy Kemp Lear Associate Booz Allen Hamilton, and Joseph
D. Whitley, Esq Alston & Bird LLP, Government Investigations and
Compliance Group, former Acting Associate Attorney General in GHW Bush
administration, and former General Counsel for DHS under GW Bush
The
ISG's report produced 11 significant findings and 27 recommendations
based on its conclusion that there's "an urgent need for action because
opportunities to better protect the nation are being missed." It
"concluded a new management and process model (is) needed to
effectively employ IC (Intelligence Community) capabilities for
domestic uses."
In March 2006, DHS unveiled the new agency to
implement ISG's recommendations called the National Applications
Office. In May, 2007, Director of National Intelligence (DNI), Michael
McConnell, named DHS as its executive agent and functional manager. At
least in principle according to DHS, Congress agreed with this approach
and to provide funding for it, beginning in the fall of 2007.
The
public knew nothing about this until a feature August 15, 2007 Wall
Street Journal story broke the news. It was headlined "US to Expand Use
of Spy Satellites." It noted that for the first time the nation's top
intelligence official (DNI's McConnell) "greatly expanded the range of
federal and local (civilian law enforcement agencies that) can get
access to" military spy satellite collected information. Until now,
civilian use was restricted to agencies like NASA and the US Geological
Survey, and only for scientific and environmental study.
The Journal explained that key objectives under new guidelines will be:
— border security,
— securing critical infrastructure and helping emergency responders after natural disasters,
— working with criminal and civil federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, and
— unmentioned by the Journal, the ability to spy on anyone, anywhere,
anytime domestically for any reason - an unprecedented act using
state-of-the-art technology enabling real-time, high-resolution images
and data from space.
NAO will also oversee classified
information from the National Security Agency (NSA), the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) and other US agencies involved in
dealing with all aspects of national security, including "terrorism."
NSA
was established in 1952, is super-secret, and for many years was never
revealed to exist. Today, its capabilities are awesome and worrisome.
It eavesdrops globally, mines a vast amount of data, and does it
through a network of spy satellites, listening posts, and surveillance
planes to monitor virtually all electronic communications from landline
and cell phones, telegrams, emails, faxes, radio and television, data
bases of all kinds and the internet.
NGA is new and began
operating in 2003. It lets military and intelligence analysts monitor
virtually anything or anyone from state-of-the-art spy satellites. Both
NSA and NGA coordinate jointly with the National Reconnaissance Office
(NRO) that designs, builds and operates military spy satellites. It
also analyzes military and CIA-collected aircraft and satellite
reconnaissance information.
Combined with warrantless
wiretapping, pervasive spying of all kinds, the abandonment of the law
and checks and balances, intense secrecy, and an array of repressive
post-9/11 legislation, Executive Orders and National Security and
Homeland Security Presidential Directives, NAO is another national
security police state tool any despot would love. It's now established
and may be operating without congressional approval.
Using spy
satellites domestically "is largely uncharted territory," as the Wall
Street Journal noted. Even its architects admit there's no clarity on
this, and the ISG's report stated "There is little if any policy,
guidance or procedures regarding the collection, exploitation and
dissemination of domestic MASINT (Measurement and Signatures
Intelligence)."
The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) is the
main DOD spy agency. It manages MASINT that's ultra-secret and
sophisticated. It uses state-of-the-art radar, lasers, infrared
sensors, electromagnetic data and other technologies that can detect
chemicals, electro-magnetic activity, whether a nuclear power plant
produces plutonium, and the type vehicle from its exhaust. It can also
see under bridges, through clouds, forest canopies and even concrete to
create images and collect data. In addition, it can detect people,
activity and weapons that satellites and photo-reconnaissance aircraft
miss, so it's an invaluable spy tool but highly intrusive and up to now
only for military and foreign intelligence work.
Further,
military spy satellites are state-of-the-art and superior to civilian
ones. They record in color as well as black and white, use different
parts of the light spectrum to track human activities and ground
movements and can detect chemical weapons traces and people-generated
heat in buildings.
This much we know about them. Their full
potential is top secret and available only to the military and
intelligence community. The Journal quoted an alarmed Gregory Nojeim,
senior counsel and director of the Project on Freedom, Security and
Technology, that advocates for digital age privacy rights saying: "Not
only is the surveillance they are contemplating intrusive and
omnipresent, it's also invisible. And that's what makes this so
dangerous."
Anyone for any reason may be watched at all times
(through walls) with no way to know it, but a June 2001 (before 9/11)
Supreme Court decision offers hope. In Kyllo v. United States, the
Court ruled for petitioner 5 to 4 (with Scalia and Thomas in the
majority). It voided a conviction based on police use of thermal
imaging to detect heat in his triplex to determine if an illegal drug
was being grown, in this case marijuana.
The Court held:
"Where, as here, the Government uses a device that is not in general
public use, to explore details of a private home that would previously
have been unknowable without physical intrusion, the surveillance is a
Fourth Amendment 'search," and is presumptively unreasonable without a
warrant....To withdraw protection of this minimum expectation would be
to permit police technology to erode the privacy guaranteed by the
Fourth Amendment" protecting against "unreasonable searches and
seizures."
In 1981, Ronald Reagan seemed to agree in Executive
Order 12333 on United States Intelligence Activities. It bars the
intelligence community from most forms of home eavesdropping while
providing wide latitude to all government agencies to "provide the
President and the National Security Council with the necessary
information (needed to) conduct....foreign, defense and economic policy
(and protect US) national interests from foreign security threats.
(Collecting this information is to be done, however,) consistent with
the Constitution and applicable law...."
That was then, and this
is now. It's hard imagining congressional concern or DHS meaning that
NAO will "prioritize the protection of privacy and civil liberties" and
citing the Reagan Executive Order and the 1974 Privacy Act. That law
mandates that no government agency "shall disclose any record (or)
system of records by any means of communication to any person, or to
another agency, except pursuant to a written request, or with the prior
written consent of, the individual to whom the record pertains." The
Privacy act requires the US government to maintain an administrative
and physical security system to prevent the unauthorized release of
personal records.
Post-9/11, the Patriot Act ended that
protection, so DHS is shameless saying NAO must comply with civil
liberties and privacy laws and be subject to "oversight by the DHS
Inspector General, Chief Privacy Officer, and the Officer for Civil
Rights and Liberties" plus additional oversight. No longer post-9/11
when the national security state got repressive new tools to erode the
constitution, ignore democratic principles, and give the President
unrestricted powers in the name of national security. NAO is the latest
one watching us as our "Big Brother in the Sky." Orwell would be proud.
Real ID Act Update - Another Intrusive Police State Tool
The
Read ID Act of 2005 required states to meet federal ID standards by
May, 2008. That's now changed because 29 states passed or introduced
laws that refuse to comply. They call the Act costly to administer, a
bureaucratic nightmare, and New Hampshire said it's "repugnant" and
violates the state and US Constitutions.
The federal law
mandates that every US citizen and legal resident have a national ID
card that in most cases is a driver's license meeting federal
standards. It requires it to contain an individual's personal
information and makes one mandatory to open a bank account, board an
airplane, be able to vote, get a job, enter a federal building, or
conduct virtually all essential business requiring identification.
States
balked, and that doomed the original version. On January 11, changes
were unveiled when the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued
binding new rules. Under them, states have until 2011 to comply
(instead of 2008), until 2014 to issue "tamper-proof licenses" to
drivers born after 1964, and until 2017 for those born before this
date. DHS said the original law would cost states $14 billion. The new
regulations with an extended phase-in cuts the amount to around $3.9
billion or $8 per license.
These numbers may be bogus,
however, the true costs may be far higher, and that's why the
Information Technology Association of America (ITAA) is lobbying for
Real ID's passage. Its members include high-tech card makers like
Digimarc and Northrup Grumman and data brokers like Choicepoint and
LexisNexis that profit by selling personal information to advertisers
and the government.
Under new DHS rules, licenses must include a
digital photo taken at the beginning of the application process and a
filament or other security device to prevent counterfeiting. They must
also have three layers of security that states can select from a DHS
menu. In addition, states must begin checking license applicants'
Social Security and immigration status over the next year.
As of
now, a controversial radio frequency identification (RFID) technology
microchip isn't required. It may come later, however, and here's the
problem. It'll let cardholder movements and activities be tracked
everywhere, at all times - in other words, a police state dream along
with other pervasive spying tools.
Even worse would be mandating
human RFID chip implants. It's not planned so far (but not ruled out),
and three states (California, Wisconsin and North Dakota) preemptively
banned the practice without recipients' consent.
Think it can't
happen? Consider a January 13 article in the London Independent
headlined "Prisoners 'to be chipped like dogs.' " The article states
that civil rights groups and probation officers are furious that
"hi-tech 'satellite'.... machine-readable (microchip) tagging (is)
planned (for thousands of offenders) to create more space in jails."
Unlike ankle bracelets now sometimes used, tiny RFID chips would be
surgically implanted for monitoring the way they're currently used for
dogs, cats, cattle and luggage. They're more reliable, it's believed,
as current devices can be tampered with or removed.
Ken Jones,
president of the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO), was
quoted saying: "We have looked at....the practicalities and the ethics
(and we concluded) its time has come." The UK currently has the largest
prison population per capita in western Europe. It sounds like
authorities plan to expand it using fewer cells. It also sounds like a
scheme to tag everyone after testing them first on prisoners. And
consider the possibilities. RFID technology is advancing, and one
company plans deeper implants that can vibrate, emit electroshocks,
broadcast a message to the implantee, and/or be a hidden microphone to
transmit conversations. It's not science fiction, and what's planned
for the UK will likely come to America. In fact, it's already here.
In
2004, the FDA approved a grain-of-rice sized, antenna-containing
VeriChip for human implantation that allows vital information to be
read when a person's body is scanned. The company states on its web
site that it's "the world's first and only patented, FDA-cleared,
human-implantable RFID microchip....with skin-sensing capabilities."
Reportedly, about 2000 test subjects now have them, but it may signal
mandatory implantation ahead. Consider for whom for starters -
prisoners, military personnel and possibly anyone seeking employment.
After them, maybe everyone in a brave new global surveillance world.
It
gets worse. Katherine Albrecht authored a report called
"Microchip-Cancer Report - Microchip-Induced Tumors in Laboratory
Rodents and Dogs: A Review of the Literature 1990-2006." After reading
it, Dr. Robert Benezra, Director Cancer Biology, Genetics Program,
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center said: "There's no way in the
world, having read this information, that I would have one of those
chips implanted in my skin, or in one of my family members. Given the
preliminary animal data, it looks to me that there's definitely cause
for concern."
Albrecht's report evaluated 11 previously
published toxicology and pathology studies. In six of them, up to 10.2%
of rats and mice developed malignant tumors (typically sarcomas) where
microchips were implanted. Two others reported the same findings for
dogs. These tumors spread fast and "often led to the death of the
afflicted animals. In many cases, the tumors metastasized and spread to
other parts of the animals. The implants were unequivocally identified
as the cause of the cancers."
Report reviews, conclusions and
recommendations were to immediately stop further human implantations,
inform people with them of the dangers, offer a microchip removal
procedure, and reverse all animal microchipping mandates.
Debate Ahead on New DHS ID Rules
DHS
Secretary Michael Chertoff said new ID rules require states to verify
each cardholder's personal information (including a person's legal
status in the country) by matching it against federal Social Security
and passport databases and/or comparable state ones.
States have
time to adjust, but Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy wasted no
time saying he'll recommend legislation to ban Real ID drivers' license
provisions because "so many Americans oppose" them. They're intrusive,
burdensome, and federal databases are full of false or out-of-date
information that's hard to disprove, but unless it is Americans will be
denied their legal right to a driver's license.
The ACLU also
strongly opposes Real ID because it violates privacy, lets government
agencies share data, and its "tortured remains" represent an "utterly
unworkable" system that will "irreparably damage the fabric of American
life." An ACLU January 11 press release further states that DHS "dumped
the problems of the statute on future presidents like a rotting corpse
left on (its) steps (and) whoever is president in 2018." Congress must
"recognize the situation and take action." The Real ID Act and new DHS
rules must be "repealed and replaced with a clean, simple, and vigorous
new driver's license security law that does not create a national ID"
or violate Americans' privacy.
Futuristic Hi-Tech Profiling
On
January 14, Computerworld online revealed more cause for concern in an
article called "Big Brother Really is Watching." It's about DHS
"bankrolling futuristic profiling technology...." for its Project
Hostile Intent. It, in turn, is part of a broader initiative called the
Future Attribute Screening Technologies Mobile Module. It's to be a
self-contained, automated screening system that's portable and easy to
implement, and DHS hopes to test it at airports in 2010 and deploy it
(if it works) by 2012 at airports, border checkpoints, other points of
entry and other security-related areas.
Here's the problem. If
developed (reliable or not), these devices will use video, audio, laser
and infrared sensors to feed real-time data into a computer using
"specially developed algorithms" to identify "suspicious people." It
would work (in theory) by interpreting gestures, facial expressions and
speech variations as well as measure body temperature, heart and
respiration rate, blood pressure, skin moisture, and other
physiological characteristics.
The idea would be detect
deception and identify suspicious people for aggressive interrogation,
searches and even arrest. But consider what's coming. If developed, the
technology may be used anywhere by government or the private sector for
airport or other checkpoint security, buildings, job interviews,
employee screening, buying insurance or conducting any other type
essential business.
Aside from Fourth Amendment issues, here's
the problem according to Bruce Schneier, chief technology officer at
security consultant BT Counterpane: "It's a good idea fraught with
difficulties....don't hold your breath" it will work, and a better idea
is to focus on detecting suspicious objects. Schneier further compares
the technology to lie detectors that rely on "fake technology" and only
work in films. They're used because people want them although it's
acknowledged, even when well-administered, their median accuracy
percentage is 50% at best.
This technology is worse, it may
never be reliable, but may be deployed anyway in the age of "terror."
Something to consider next time we blink going through airport
security, and ACLU Technology and Liberty Project director Barry
Steinhardt states the concern: "We are not going to catch any
terrorists (with it), but a lot of innocent people, especially racial
and ethnic minorities, are going to be trapped in a web of suspicion."
Even so, DHS spent billions on this and other screening tools
post-9/11. Expect lots more ahead, and here's the bottom line:
As
things now stand, Washington, post-9/11, suspended constitutional
protections in the name of national security and suppressed our civil
liberties for our own good. This article reviewed their newest tools
and wonders what's next. This writer called it Police State America in
December that won't change with a new White House occupant in 2009
unless organized resistance stops it. Complacency is unthinkable, and
unless we act, we'll deserve Aleksandr Herzen's curse of another era -
to be the "disease," not the "doctors."
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit
his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.