LEXIS-NEXIS® Academic
Copyright 2001 Newsweek
Newsweek
October 1, 2001,
U.S. Edition
SECTION: CIVIL LIBERTIES; Pg. 58
LENGTH: 1753 words
HEADLINE: What
Price Security?
BYLINE: By Sharon Begley; With Lynette Clemetson and Adam Rogers in Washington, Steven
Levy and Peter McGrath in New York, Joanna Chen in Jerusalem and William
Underhill in London
HIGHLIGHT:
As America vows 'never again,' it is launching a series of antiterrorism
measures--from ethnic profiling to snooping through your personal e-mail
BODY:
Here is why profiling is so alluring: of the suspected skyjackers responsible
for upwards of 6,000 deaths on Sept. 11, 19 out of 19 were Arab. And here is
why profiling is anathema to a just society: more than 3 million Arab-Americans
live in the United States. Even if the government's worst fears are correct and
50 members of terror cells remain at large, that means that more than 99.99
percent of Arab-Americans are no more connected to terrorism than is the
dowager whose ancestors arrived on the Mayflower.
And yet... Last week in Minneapolis, Northwest Airlines officials hauled three
Arab-Americans off a flight to Salt Lake City when other passengers refused to
fly with them; the men were grilled and allowed to board a later flight. In
Trenton, N.J., a nervous driver called authorities when two
"suspicious" men speaking
"little English" got on his bus; the police held the men at gunpoint before releasing them.
Such profiling, which critics say makes a mockery of the constitutional notion
of equal protection, is only one of the challenges to civil liberties emerging
in the wake of the terrorism attacks. From cops to lawmakers to ordinary
citizens, Americans seem more willing to sacrifice civil liberties on the altar
of security than we have been at any time since President Lincoln suspended the
right of habeas corpus during the Civil War or President Roosevelt rounded up
110,000 Japanese-Americans for preventive detention after Pearl Harbor. The
United States, vowed Attorney General John Ashcroft, will
"use every legal means at our disposal to prevent further terrorist activity."
In an executive action requiring no congressional approval, the Bush
administration is quickly expanding what
"legal means" includes. Last week it gave the Immigration and Naturalization Service the
power to detain immigrants suspected of crimes, and to hold them indefinitely
during an
"emergency or other extraordinary circumstance." Before this, the government had had 24 hours to charge immigrants with a crime
or visa violation or release them. The administration also requested expanded
surveillance authority to tap phones, obtain voice-mail messages, monitor
computers and obtain customers' credit-card information from Internet providers
with minimal judicial oversight. To coordinate antiterrorism efforts, the
president last week created the cabinet-level Office of Homeland Security, to
be headed by Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge.
Although Ashcroft promised to "do everything we can to harmonize
the constitutional rights of individuals" with the new security push, the
civil liberties of nonnaturalized immigrants are in the cross hairs. The
1996 Antiterrorism Act, passed after the Oklahoma City bombing, authorized
a new INS court to conduct deportation proceedings against aliens suspected
of terrorism. The accused have no right to be informed of the evidence against
them. Until Sept. 11, political momentum was building to repeal at least
that part of the law: as a candidate, George W. Bush criticized the unfairness
of "secret evidence." Last week, however, the administration asked Congress
for power to detain and possibly deport terrorism suspects with no evidentiary
requirement. It also asked for new powers to detain immigrants on the vague
charge of being a risk to national security, and to limit their court appeals.
Although civil-liberties advocates call the proposals "unacceptable," as
a Senate aide put it, they are drawing support. "It would be nice if we
were able to accord extensive due process to noncitizens, but we don't have
that luxury right now," says Mark Krikorian of the Center for Immigration
Studies. "More than 5,000 people [sic] were blown up by noncitizens."
Yet detaining large masses of people can backfire, as Britain learned when it
put Irish Republican Army suspects into preventive detention in the 1970s.
"It can be successful in the short term by taking known terrorists off the
street," says Andrew Garfield of the International Centre for Security Analysis in
London.
"But it creates a great deal of animosity. And for younger members of the IRA it
was almost like a training camp."
Targeting noncitizens seems likely to include profiling. "If I see
someone come in that's got a diaper on his head and a fan belt [wrapped]
around [it], that guy needs to be pulled over and checked," Louisiana Rep.
John Cooksey told a radio interviewer last week. While the desire for vengeance
seems tragically prevalent, as witnessed by the assaults on and even murders
of Sikh Americans and Arab-Americans after the terror attacks, crude profiling
is largely ineffective. In 1998 the U.S. Customs Service eliminated racial
and gender profiling. "What we told people is that broad racial profiling
doesn't make sense," says former Customs commissioner Raymond Kelly, now
a senior manager for global security at Bear Stearns in New York. Instead,
Customs implemented a "passenger analysis" system that scours manifests
looking for passengers' embarkation points and their full itineraries. Last
year, under the new system, Customs conducted 70 percent fewer searches
than it did in the late 1990s but increased its yield of illegal drugs and
other contraband 25 percent.
Israel, too, has opted for profiling that goes beyond crude ethnic
criteria, but that still tramples American-style civil liberties. Shin Bet,
Israel's secret service, handpicks El Al's security personnel, choosing
almost no one but former officers of elite combat and undercover units.
As soon as someone buys a ticket, explains Defense Ministry spokesman (and
former El Al guard) Shlomo Dror, the security service runs his or her name
through Interpol. "We're not just looking at Palestinians," says Dror, "but
also Japanese Red Army, Kurdish underground--any connection to organizations
like these makes them high priority." At the airport, guards routinely question
all El Al passengers. Palestinians and Arabs, including Israeli Arabs who
have been citizens since birth, are grilled far more intensely than Israeli
Jews. So are tourists with little money and no apparent destination, as
well as young singles, especially those traveling solo. One American college
student, returning home alone after visiting Israel with her parents, was
questioned for more than an hour: Where had she stayed? Whom had she met?
What was the purpose of her trip? When security forces found a single shoe
in her suitcase--she had been so rushed that she left the other in her parents'
hotel room--the questioning intensified. Security guards scanned her toothpaste,
made her take a photo with her camera to be sure it was real and strip-searched
her. If passengers under suspicion are allowed to board, they are often
accompanied by undercover guards who watch their every move throughout the
flight.
In a world where terrorists communicate via e-mail and mobile phone, the
government is making electronic surveillance a key part of its security
strategy. A 1998 law already allowed
"roving wiretaps," in which authorities receive a warrant to tap not a particular phone but any
(mobile or land) that a terrorism suspect uses--or might use. That already
subjects unlimited numbers of individuals and conversations to surveillance.
But two days after the World Trade Center, Pentagon and Pennsylvania
atrocities, the Senate went further. By unanimous voice vote, it approved an
amendment allowing the FBI and other law-enforcement agencies to install
nationwide
"traps and traces," to capture information about both telephone calls and electronic messages with
the approval of a single judge. Within hours of the rushed vote, the American
Civil Liberties Union got calls from Senate offices asking,
"What did we just pass?" Well, says the ACLU's Gregory T. Nojeim,
"they enacted an amendment that will basically function like a blank warrant. It
writes meaningful judicial oversight out of the process."
The Senate also approved an expansion of the government's power to obtain, from
Internet service providers (ISPs), information about e-mail that their
subscribers send and receive. When the technology once named Carnivore (and now
sanitized to DCS 1000) is attached to an ISP's equipment, it sucks in every
customer's Internet activities--e-mail headers, Web-surfing trails, downloads.
If it becomes law, the Senate bill would extend Internet surveillance by
allowing the government to collect that information through Carnivore without a
warrant or subpoena.
Customers' privacy is also being sacrificed to the demands of security.
"Some companies have handed over not just customer data but profiling information,"
says Larry Ponemon, CEO of the consulting firm Privacy Council. One company,
he says, handed over its entire customer database in a rush to cooperate
in the terror investigation. There's a natural tendency to cooperate. At
Hertz, "we have provided all of the information requested by the government,"
says Rich Broome, vice president of corporate affairs. No subpoena was issued:
requests have been coming simply by phone and fax. Broome described the
requests as "appropriate and focused ... not a data dump."
There is bitter irony in trying to gain security at the expense of the very
liberties that define America. Turning the United States into a near-police
state would surely be terrorism's greatest triumph. Now, as the specifics of
proposed (and implemented) antiterrorism measures emerge, politicians and
activists from across the ideological spectrum are questioning the rush to
restrict Americans' freedoms and privacy.
"Before we begin dismantling constitutionally protected safeguards and
diminishing individual rights to privacy, we should first examine why [the]
attacks occurred," said conservative Rep. Bob Barr of Georgia in a letter to Ashcroft: it
certainly wasn't because civil liberties require letting people board 767s with
knives and box cutters. An ideologically diverse coalition of ethnic,
religious, civil-rights and government-watchdog groups is also urging caution.
"If we allow our freedoms to be undermined," says Anthony Romero, executive director of the ACLU,
"the terrorists will have won." As America launches its domestic counterattack on terrorism, the challenge
will be to tighten security without strangling the very values on which the
country was built.
With Lynette Clemetson and Adam Rogers in Washington, Steven Levy and Peter
McGrath in New York, Joanna Chen in Jerusalem and William Underhill in London
GRAPHIC: PHOTO: BAD PROFILE: Trenton, N.J., police confront two suspicious' bus riders
who spoke little English' after the driver alerted authorities. The pair were
released soon after.; PHOTO: CHECKPOINT N.Y.C.: As Wall Street returned to work
last week, New York police checked the identification of everyone entering the
area; PHOTO: INNOCENTS ABROAD? Zak Elgowhary, 3, at a Muslim prayer service in
Colorado for the terror victims; GRAPHIC: (Graph.chart) Arabs and Muslims in
America (Graphic omitted)
LOAD-DATE: September 26, 2001