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by Jim Redden
Foreign Police Politics
merica has a new foreign policy. As demonstrated in Bosnia and Kosovo,
the Clinton Doctrine suggests that America should send military forces
anywhere that people are oppressed because of their ethnic or religious
backgrounds. But if that's the case, why aren't American troops being
dispatched to two African countries where far more people have been "ethnically
cleansed" than in the Balkans? These countries are Sudan and Sierra
Leone. According to recent news reports, nearly two million people
have been killed and at least four million have been displaced during
the 16-year-old civil war that is currently raging in Sudan. Hospitals,
schools and other civilian targets are bombed on a daily basis. Meanwhile,
in Sierra Leone, more than 50,000 persons have been killed and one million
displaced over the past eight years. According to Human Rights Watch,
rebel forces systematically murdered, mutilated, and raped civilians during
their January offensive. Entire families were gunned down in the street,
children and adults had their limbs hacked off with machetes, and girls
and young women were taken to rebel bases and sexually abused. So far
Clinton hasn't made an issue of the slaughter in either country.
You're Being Watched
ccording to the Irish Times, U.S. and European governments have
reached an agreement to help each other spy on their citizens. The scheme,
called Enfopol, is currently under consideration by the European
Union. It would allow law enforcement officials to eavesdrop on Internet,
fax, and mobile phone conversations, and will force the communications
providers to foot the
bill. Writes the Times: "What concerns [European Parliament members] is
that there is no clear definition of what constitutes a serious crime, and
that law enforcement officials do not have to obtain a court order before
an interception ... Enfopol will enable police to track and record email
and mobile phone calls across international boundaries through real-time
remote access points or backdoors. For instance, Internet service providers
must provide police forces with access to their computer systems so that
they can track email traffic. The agreement also includes a memorandum of
understanding between Europe, the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and
Norway. So law enforcement officials from any of these states can eavesdrop
on each other's citizens."
Watch Out for Martial Law
n what appears to be a carefully-orchestrated move, the Pentagon
is using
President Bill Clinton's numerous warnings about domestic terrorism to
fundamentally change the role of the U.S. military. Federal law prohibits
military troops from domestic law enforcement operations, unless the
President formally declares martial law. The Posse Comitatus Act, passed
after the Civil War to reign in the military, bars federal troops from
doing police work within the United States. But now the Pentagon has asked
Clinton to appoint a military leader for the continental United States. The
Pentagon says the appointment is necessary to respond to the threat of
major terrorist strikes on American soil. The request was made in late
January, shortly after Clinton delivered a series of warnings about
domestic terrorism, including a passage of his State of the Union address.
On January 21, Clinton said it was "highly likely" that a terrorist group
will launch or threaten a germ or biological attack somewhere in America in
the next few years. The New York Times reported the Pentagon's
request one
week later. White House officials characterize the request as a minor
adjustment of the lines of military authority and organization. But civil
libertarians say such military power could threaten the privacy and liberty
of private citizens. "The danger is in the inevitable expansion of that
authority so the military gets involved in things like arresting people and
investigating crimes," said Gregory Nojeim, legislative counsel for the
American Civil Liberties Union. "It's hard to believe that a soldier with a
suspect in the sights of his M-1 tank is well positioned to protect that
person's civil liberties." The White House says Clinton has the power to
approve the request without seeking Congressional approval.
Drug War Disaster
he American Bar Association says the government's War on Drugs is a
failure. According to a February study conducted by the ABA, more people
are being arrested on drug charges and sentenced to longer jail terms than
ever before. Among other things, the study found that 1.2 million people
were arrested on drug charges in 1997, a 73 percent increase over the
number of people arrested in 1992. Despite that, the study says, illegal
drug use increased 7 percent from 1996 to 1997. Myrna Raeder, chairwoman of
the ABA's Criminal Justice Section, says the statistics suggest the policy
of arrest and incarceration "does not work." Marc Mauer, assistant director
of the Sentencing Project in Washington, D.C., agrees. He says drug crimes,
more than most other offenses, "are much less affected by tough sentencing
policies."
Mexican Priorities
he Mexican economy is in turmoil, with millions of people unemployed and
daily protests in the capital city. Despite that the Mexican government
recently made a committment to spend from $400 million to $500 million
over the next few years to fight drugs. The money will go to buy a wide
range of military
and law enforcement equipment, including planes, helicopters, high-speed
navy patrol boats, satellite surveillance systems, radar systems, and
hydraulic X-ray devices that can detect drugs or weapons in any vehicle.
The United States government pressured Mexico into
developing and adopting the spending plan. It was announced just weeks
before the March 1 deadline when President Clinton informed Congress
whether Mexico and 27 other countries have fully cooperated in the War on
Drugs. Failing the certification scorecard could result in financial and
other penalties. Borrowing a phrase from Nazi Germany, Mexican Interior
Secretary Francisco Labastida Ochoa declared "total war against drug
trafficking" on February 4. "This is the most ambitious anti-drug effort
thast has ever been undertaken by our country." In comparision, Mexico only
spent $1 billion to fight drugs in all of 1998.
Big Brother Alert
ichard
A. Clarke may be the most powerful person in the Clinton Administration
you've never heard of. Clarke is the White House terrorism czar, charged
with coordinating the federal government's response to all forms of domestic
and international terrorismranging from bombings to anthrax attacks
to cyber-sabotague. Working out of Oliver North's old office at the National
Security Council, Clarke has written at least four classified Presidential
directives on terrorism. They helped create the $11 billion-a-year operation
he is now overseeing. In addition, Clarke has a reserved seat when Cabinet
members meet in the White House on National Security issues, next to Secretary
of State Madeleine Albright and Secretary of Defense William Cohen. He
pushed for the decision to fire cruise missiles at Afghanistan and Sudan
in August, and he is currently coordinating efforts to capture suspected
terrorist leader Osama bin Laden. Clarke is also trying to rally public
support for military attacks on computer hackers. "An attack on American
cyber-space is an attack on the United States, just as much as landing
on New Jersey," he told the New York Times. "I'm talking about
shutting down a city's electricty, shutting down 911 systems, shutting
down telephone networks and transportation systems. You black out a city,
people die. Black out lots of cities, lots of people die. It's as bad
as being attacked by bombs. The notion that we could respond with military
force against a cyber-attack has to be accepted." Here's more information
about Clarke(1);
try as well Clark(2).
And here is a speech
by Clarke.
What To Do About Y2K
hat
should the federal government do if the Millennium Bug causes widespread
problems? Impose martial law? Not according to Sam Smith, publisher of
The Progressive Review. As Smith wrote on February 12, 1999,
"The Constitution does not directly address the question of what should
happen in the midst of a major national catastrophe. But neither does it
give the slightest support to giving non-elected civilian or military
officials plenary powers. The best guide is to be found in the Tenth
Amendment which says that the powers of the federal government are those
delegated to it by the states and the people. The states and the people
have not delegated the power of martial law. Thus in a true crisis (such as
a nuclear attack) the answer seems quite plain: the country should be run
as a loose confederation of 50 states until a legitimate federal
government could be re-established. In the interim, the highest officials
in the land would be the governors."
Crime (law) Wave
ongress is passing so many new criminal laws that even the American Bar
Association is worried about the growing power of the federal government.
In mid-February, an ABA task force chaired by former attorney general Edwin
Meese III said Congress is sometimes pushed to pass "misguided, unnecessary
and harmful" anti-crime laws out of fear of being considered soft on crime
if it fails to act. The "Federalization of Criminal Law" report mirrors
criticism raised by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist in his year-end
report on the federal judiciary in December. Rehnquist blamed the trend on
pressure in Congress "to appear responsive to every highly publicized
societal ill or sensational crime." The report states: "Enactment of each
new Federal crime bestows new Federal investigative powers on Federal
agencies, broadening their power to intrude into individual lives.
Expansion of federal jurisdiction also creates the opportunity for greater
collection and maintenance of data at the Federal level in an era when
various databses are computerized and linked." The panel notes with alarm
that more than 40 percent of all federal criminal laws enacted since the
Civil War have been passed since 1970. Federal criminal justice
expenditures grew by 317 per cent from 1982 to 1993, compared to a 163
per cent increase on the state level. The number of Federal prosecutors
increased from 3,000 to 8,000 over the past 30 years. And, of 59,242
Federal charges filed against individuals in 1997, over 25 percent were for
a single offense - - drug trafficking. Several new federal laws, "championed
by many because they would have a claimed impact on crime, have hardly been
used at all," the task force found. It cited laws dealing with drive-by
shootings, interstate domestic violence, failure to report child abuse, and
murder by escaped prisoners. "There is no persuasive evidence that
federalization of local crime makes the streets safer for American
citizens," the report concludes.
Russia's Y2K Problems
he Millennium Bug could cause nuclear catastrophes in Russia,
spreading
radioactive fallout around the world. In early February, the Russian
government said it does not have the $3 billion needed to fix its Y2K
problems. As a result, nuclear missiles could go into hard-to-stop
countdowns and nuclear power plants could overheat and melt down, as in
Chernobyl, the world's worst nuclear accident. "We're in a crucial
situation in several areas, including the Defense Ministry," said Alexander
Krupnov, chairman of the Central Communications Commission. "Who knows if
the country will be ready? We can't give any guarantees." Meanwhile, in
China, the Beijing Morning Post reported that more than half
of that
country's crucial enterprises don't even know how to detect the computer
glitches in their systems.
Copyright © 1999 by Jim Redden.
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