It Is Time To Defund And Abolish The Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) was
formed as a result of the 911, when 19 jihadists, Radical Muslim
terrorists, most of whom came from Saudi Arabia, who were armed with
box-cutter knives, took over the planes and flew them into the Pentagon
and the twin Towers.
Since its awkward birth in 2003, it’s safe to say the
baby never learned to walk, or stopped flinging its food or sucking its
thumb. But it has grown. An umbrella agency that now incorporates 22
different agencies and components with some 240,000 employees, it has
survived mostly because of natural bureaucratic intransigence, but fed
also, by the lingering specter of 9/11, which gives it near-impenetrable
political security. It is currently receiving appropriations of $39
billion for fiscal year 2013 (and that is after sequestration).
Of course most of that money goes to DHS components
that were independent or part of other agencies before DHS came along.
They include the U.S Coast Guard, the Secret Service, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Federal Protective Service, Customs
and Border Patrol, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and
everyone’s friend, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA).
But some $4.5 billion of the total budget goes to
front office operations and programs, as well as new DHS directorates
created after 2003. They involve department management, research and
development, security training, the inspector general’s office, the
Office of Health Affairs, Analysis & Operations, and a Domestic
Nuclear Detection Office. And don’t forget its cybersecurity directorate
– every agency’s got one! – for which its getting more than a half a
billion dollars a year to operate. In other words, the DHS
administration has become a bureaucratic planet onto itself and no one
can deny it.
Case in point: the old St. Elizabeth’s mental
hospital in Washington, the site of the (still unfinished) new 4.5
million square foot DHS headquarters, in 2011. I was told by my handlers
that the old imposing 19th century main hall, which used to house
hundreds of patients and the administration of the hospital – the size
of two football fields – would be, once refurbished, for the secretary’s
staff only. Another major hall would be for the agency’s lawyers. The
rest of the 14,000 employees from other components would be working
elsewhere on the 176-acre property.
Ben Friedman over at CATO called DHS a “bureaucratic
monstrosity” and there are plenty of people outside and inside
government who would agree with him. Isn’t it time to consider that this
experiment – inspired by the politically driven, essentially emotional,
misplaced need to do something after the 9/11 attacks and fueled
accordingly by neoconservative grandstanders like Sen. Joe Lieberman (D)
and Rep. Peter King (R), who have used the new agency and its
corresponding congressional committees as a platform for anti-Muslim
tirades and more government intrusion our lives – has failed?
Put aside all of the money the government would save,
getting rid of the Department of Homeland Security would be a first
step at scaling back post-9/11 domestic counterterrorism and law
enforcement hubris – not to mention the militarization of domestic
security. They’ve already began testing domestic drone surveillance (in
addition to the military blimps and aerostats, drones are already used
on the border and in the Drug War), and the agency is always on the
lookout for the best in spy camera technology, because, of course, they
are looking out for our best interest. DHS has also helped local police
build up their own armories by giving them money to buy military
surplus. “The buying spree has transformed local police departments into
small, army-like forces, and put intimidating equipment into the hands
of civilian officers,” wrote Andrew Becker for The Daily Beast in 2011.
The problem with the DHS administration is that it
doesn’t have a clear mission beyond coordinating homeland security
efforts already exercised by its major components and working with
outside agencies – FBI, the Pentagon, the Centers for Disease Control
and state and local homeland security offices, etc. – to share
information, launch joint programs, training, policy, whatever.
One of the agencies it helped to get off its feet was
the new TSA, and from day one, DHS has fumbled and bumbled down the
runway, from the enormous amount of money lost in failed contracts, to
the conveyor belt of bad press regarding the screening procedures (like
old ladies and toddlers getting humiliating pat-downs while explosives
and guns sail through checkpoints time and again during undercover
inspections).
For the last several years, millions of fliers have
endured full-body scanners that snap near-naked pictures of their bodies
while they “stick ’em up” obediently in something that resembles a
mini-transporter but is infinitely not as cool. DHS has insisted these
machines are safe and necessary (ironically, the Rapiscan models that
ex-DHS chief Chertoff lobbied for when he left the agency to go into the
private sector are being pulled from the airports – more millions
wasted – because they emit the more dangerous ionizing radiation). But
officials still can’t guarantee that full-body scans will detect all
explosives hidden on the human body, leading many of us to wonder
uneasily about what fresh tortures TSA may have in store for us down the
road.
Meanwhile, the ACLU is demanding more information
about DHS agents detaining thousands of individuals at the borders each
year, confiscating their laptops and other electronic devices, even when
there is no suspicion of wrongdoing. From the ACLU in May:
Essentially DHS has adopted a policy of peering into
anyone’s data, at any time, for any reason. Through a FOIA request filed
three years ago we discovered that more than 6,500 travelers had their
devices searched under this policy between October 2008 and June 2010.
Almost half of those were U.S. citizens.
Flying, to many Americans, has become a very
stressful undertaking – and forget it if you’re suddenly put on the “no
fly list” by mistake – the DHS redress program, which is supposed to
help get you scrubbed from the list (supposedly 21,000 names strong as
of 2011, double from the year before) has done nothing of the sort for
anyone, according to critics.
Meanwhile, DHS has invested upwards of $1.4 billion
on state/regional fusion centers but cannot account for how it was
spent, according to a scathing senate report last fall. That report
accuses DHS of not only of wasting money, but it called the information
the fusion center was generating “oftentimes shoddy, rarely timely,
sometimes endangering citizens’ civil liberties and Privacy Act
protections, occasionally taken from already-published public sources,
and more often than not unrelated to terrorism.” At the time, The
Washington Post paraphrased the report, calling the centers “pools of
ineptitude, waste and civil liberties intrusions.”
A bevy of law enforcement representatives, as well as
then-Sen. Lieberman, who you could easily call the father of the fusion
centers, leapt to DHS’s defense. But it is hard to say you are not
spying on Americans when you have state fusion center officials like
this guy in Arkansas, clearly admitting they are monitoring
“anti-American” organizations without warrants. The ACLU has been
tracking these centers, too, calling them a “force multiplier for spying
in local communities.”
During the Occupy Wall Street rallies, individuals
from DHS’ Federal Protective Services were spotted on the scene at
numerous city events, because of course, a domestic protest movement
regarding the dirty nexus between Wall Street and the state are a threat
to the homeland. FPS agents showed up again to greet Tea Party
protesters across the country in May. Later, hundreds of documents
obtained through numerous FOIA requests showed widespread DHS
surveillance of the Occupy movement, and even internal recognition that
what they were doing may not be constitutional.
Add all of this to the scandals that have plagued
both the DHS administration, as well its components (the Secret Service
prostitution affair being the worst in recent years, but some of the
smaller ones hurt the agency just as much over time). But don’t expect
congress to get to the bottom of any of it. The way the agency is
structured, some 100 committees have oversight jurisdiction over DHS,
proving the old adage that having too many cooks in the kitchen makes
for a crummy stew that no one will have to take the blame for.
DHS also remains the agency with lowest morale among
its employees, year after year, since the agency’s inception. The lack
of training, budgets, leadership have all been fingered, but we really
need to throw in the fact employees answer to two masters – their
component heads and DHS – and there is so much turnover at the top, so
much ambiguity about what this umbrella organization is supposed to be
doing, that it creates a culture of detachment and confusion, thus the
low morale.
In other words, the bureaucracy is really a threat to
its own mission – dare we say a threat to national security? It’s
certainly become a threat to us, costing Americans more in coin and
liberty every day. This is no more evident than in DHS’s recent attempts
to gain more access to Internet data in its new cybersecurity efforts.
We already have our hands full with NSA. The time to address the future
of DHS is now.
It is clear that the DHS is not in the business of
protecting us, it is in the business of protecting criminals and keeping
us controlled. The DHS no longer plays any role in protecting of the
U.S. citizens. It is time to defund and abolish it, sell all of its
assets and ammo and return all the proceeds to the U.S. treasury for
partial repayment of our debt.
No comments:
Post a Comment