Showing posts with label homeland security. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeland security. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Friedman's 2009 piece on U.S. torture still correct (Stratfor)

Here's the practical part of George Friedman's 2009 op-ed on U.S. torture for intelligence gathering, and it's still on-target:

The problem with torture — as with other exceptional measures — is that it is useful, at best, in extraordinary situations. The problem with all such techniques in the hands of bureaucracies is that the extraordinary in due course becomes the routine, and torture as a desperate stopgap measure becomes a routine part of the intelligence interrogator's tool kit.

At a certain point, the emergency was over. U.S. intelligence had focused itself and had developed an increasingly coherent picture of al Qaeda, with the aid of allied Muslim intelligence agencies, and was able to start taking a toll on al Qaeda. The war had become routinized, and extraordinary measures were no longer essential. But the routinization of the extraordinary is the built-in danger of bureaucracy, and what began as a response to unprecedented dangers became part of the process. Bush had an opportunity to move beyond the emergency. He didn't.

If you know that an individual is loaded with information, torture can be a useful tool. But if you have so much intelligence that you already know enough to identify the individual is loaded with information, then you have come pretty close to winning the intelligence war. That's not when you use torture. That's when you simply point out to the prisoner that, "for you the war is over." You lay out all you already know and how much you know about him. That is as demoralizing as freezing in a cell — and helps your interrogators keep their balance.

And here's the philosophical part:

And this raises the moral question. The United States is a moral project: its Declaration of Independence and Constitution state that. The president takes an oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution from all enemies foreign and domestic. The Constitution does not speak to the question of torture of non-citizens, but it implies an abhorrence of rights violations (at least for citizens). But the Declaration of Independence contains the phrase, "a decent respect for the opinions of mankind." This indicates that world opinion matters.

At the same time, the president is sworn to protect the Constitution. In practical terms, this means protecting the physical security of the United States "against all enemies, foreign and domestic." Protecting the principles of the declaration and the Constitution are meaningless without regime preservation and defending the nation.

Let me repeat something: The U.S. is a moral project on display for the whole world.  It's not just another country defending its people and borders. U.S. conservatives and liberals alike believe in "the American way," whatever they take that to mean. So if we allow harm to that moral project, we allow harm to the essence of who we are. We become something else. That's why myself and others have argued since 9/11 that if we allow the terrorists to change who we are, then they've already won. They've convinced us to abandon our moral project.

Now to Friedman's qualifier on that: "Protecting the principles of the declaration [of Independence] and the Constitution are meaningless without regime preservation and defending the nation."

But the U.S. regime has never been threatened; and the defense of the nation was never in question -- perhaps only the defense of a few thousand potential citizens of that nation. No threat that we know about has risen to the level of a gun to the head of America, or an existential threat.

Furthermore, it's clearly not worth taking every possible precaution possible against any imaginable threat. Those threats have to be real and of sufficient magnitude and likelihood. And the costs mustn't exceed the benefits.

To put it in everyday terms, as my conservative friends like to do, think about the safety of your home. If you're honest, you would probably admit there are several measures you could take to make your home safer against intruders, accidental injury, fires and natural disasters. But there are costs and trade-offs to all these measures; and at a certain point each one of us says, "I've done enough," knowing full well we could be safer if we were willing to spend more, endure more inconvenience, etc. And these are only the material costs and trade-offs -- not moral costs and trade-offs involved in torturing people!

I say this to ward off oft-heard arguments, mostly from conservative politicians and pundits, that the U.S. Government exists primarily to protect us from every military or terrorist threat, both real and imaginable. No, it doesn't. Because the costs of doing that wouldn't be worth it. Indeed, trying to do "everything possible" could even make life in the U.S. not worth living, and make abandoning our "moral project" seem like a more appealing option. That's the danger. 


By George Friedman
April 20, 2009 | Stratfor

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Attack on California's grid shows lack of 'homeland security'

I've been saying for years that terrorism in the U.S. is too easy, hence all these screenings at airports, cyber security, NSA spying and fighting the terrorists "over there" are big distractions.

You don't buy a fancy home security system and then leave your front door unlocked and the windows open.    

Partly, the lack of focus on physical security of our key infrastructure such as electrical grid, ports and bridges is that the problem is very big and yet not at all sexy; and partly because simply physical security like sheet metal screens doesn't lend itself to outsourcing to the big military-industrial contractors that charge $ billions for expensive technological solutions.  


BY Shane Harris
December 27, 2013 | Foreign Policy 

Friday, May 3, 2013

Poll: 29 percent of Americans potential traitors

Forget profiling and surveilling Muslims, Arabs or Chechens, why aren't we profiling and tracking this self-identifying 29 percent of Americans?  You can see the poll results here.

These people are obviously gearing up mentally if not in reality for treason and armed insurrection. Where's the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security when we need them?

Seriously though, let me ask my Republican friends to imagine the FOX headline, "Poll shows 29 percent of immigrants/blacks/Northerners/Democrats think 'armed revolution' might be needed."  If you saw that on FOX, would you react with nonchalance?

No, pro-gun conservatives would be climbing the ceiling, ringing every alarm bell they could find.  

Moreover, has there ever been another time in American history when 29 percent of Americans thought this way?  Well, maybe in 18th century when Americans did not have any representation.  But that's not the case now.  

No, this is not good, not good at all.  These are folks who don't respect the scoreboard of democracy and are about to take matters into their own hands.  

These poll results are ugly any way you spin them.


May 2, 2013 | FoxNews

Saturday, March 23, 2013

2,243...and rising

That's how many Americans were killed by guns since the Newtown shooting massacre when 20 children were shot and killed, many of them more than 10 times, their tiny bodies destroyed beyond recognition.

Here you can read some of the stories of recent victims.

By comparison, 2,191 U.S. troops were killed in Afghanistan since 2001.  We exceeded that KIA figure in just 3 months in the homeland, where we are definitely not secure.    

UPDATE (03.24.2013): Slate and the Twitter feed @GunDeaths have been crowdsourcing gun-deaths data, and on March 7, they came up with the figure of at least 2,923 Americans killed by guns since Sandy Hook. That's about as many Americans who were killed on 9/11, which sent us into spasms of rage and remorse and precipitated two disastrous wars that cost trillions of dollars. Yet the same number of deaths at home in the span of about 3 months doesn't give us a moment's pause.  


By Jason Cherkis
March 22, 2013 | Huffington Post

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Military-corporate welfare grants NH town a tank

Where are the Tea Parties when we really need them? (Chasing after welfare moms, voters without photo IDs, and Mexican fruit pickers, as usual.....)


By Radley Balko
February 16, 2012 | Huffington Post

"We're going to have our own tank."

That's what Keene, N.H., Mayor Kendall Lane whispered to Councilman Mitch Greenwood during a December city council meeting.

It's not quite a tank. But the quaint town of 23,000 -- scene of just two murders since 1999 -- had just accepted a $285,933 grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to purchase a Bearcat, an eight-ton armored personnel vehicle made by Lenco Industries Inc.

[...]

Since the Sept. 11 attacks, the war on terror has accelerated the trend toward militarization. Homeland Security hands out anti-terrorism grants to cities and towns, many specifically to buy military-grade equipment from companies like Lenco. In December, the Center for Investigative Reporting reported that Homeland Security grants totalled $34 billion, and went to such unlikely terrorism targets as Fargo, N.D.; Fon du Lac, Wisc.; and Canyon County, Idaho. The report noted that because of the grants, defense contractors that long served the Pentagon exclusively have increasingly turned looked to police departments, hoping to tap a "homeland security market" expected to reach $19 billion by 2014.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Credit rating agencies' conflict of interest

America's slavery to the credit rating agencies is even more lamentable considering that these agencies have a huge conflict of interest: they're lobbying the same U.S. government which they're threatening to downgrade to keep their (private) ratings embedded in U.S. financial regulations.

Even the recent debt ceiling deal has not ended their threats to downgrade America's credit rating. Coincidence? Is there really any doubt among reasonable people that the U.S. Government can't or won't honor its debts? I mean, short-term U.S. Treasury bills are synonymous in finance with risk-free assets.


By Bethany McLean
August 2, 2011 | Slate

Everyone hates the big credit rating agencies—Standard & Poor's, Moody's, and Fitch. Europeans resent the clout that they wield. Democrats hate them for their complicity in expanding the subprime mortgage market that brought down the economy and left us with a 9 percent unemployment rate. Republicans, though they're generally opposed to the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation, have no love for the credit rating agencies, either. The conservative Wall Street Journal columnist Holman Jenkins, in a July 27 column headlined "Who Elected The Rating Agencies?," called section 939A of Dodd-Frank, which requires federal regulations to be stripped of all references to credit ratings, a "rare useful provision." Citing section 939A, David Zervos, the head of global fixed-income strategy at Jefferies, calls the noise the credit raters are currently making about downgrading U.S. Treasuries a "last gasp of hot air."

Yet the stock performance of the rating agencies doesn't suggest that they're losing their relevance. Moody's stock is one of the best-performing for any big U.S. company this year. There may be a good reason. Last week, the House financial services committee held a hearing about the rating agencies. Much of it was devoted to the possibility that the agencies would downgrade the United States, but the various witnesses brought prepared statements about the progress of section 939A. After reading these, I'm not convinced that this important reform is going to happen.

The ratings agencies would like you to believe that the source of their power is the accuracy of their opinions. But in fact, its true source is the extent to which their ratings have been embedded in various rules and regulations across the financial world. It all started back in 1975, when the Securities and Exchange Commission began to use such ratings to calculate how much capital broker-dealers should be required to hold. To prevent the proliferation of fly-by-night raters, the SEC designated a handful of firms as "nationally recognized statistical rating organizations," or NRSROs. By the time the financial crisis hit, NRSRO ratings were embedded in thousands of regulations and private contracts, if not more, determining what securities money-market funds would be permitted to own, how much collateral counterparties would have to put up in trades, and countless other arcane matters. At the hearing, Mark Van Der Weide of the Federal Reserve testified that Fed regulations contained no fewer than 46 references or requirements regarding credit ratings. In theory, section 939A will bring an end to the NRSROs' regulatory power. Every federal agency is required "to remove any reference to or requirement of reliance on credit ratings and to substitute in such regulations such standard of credit-worthiness as each respective agency shall determine as appropriate."

"With the elimination of regulatory reliance on ratings, the entire NRSRO superstructure should be dismantled," testified Larry White, a professor at New York University and a longtime critic of the agencies. Moody's and S&P themselves say they want to be taken out. The agencies say their ratings should speak for themselves and not carry the force of law. Why they should favor a law that weakens them is a bit of a mystery, but perhaps the answer is that so many others are willing to argue their case for them. Several witnesses at last week's hearing voiced resistance to section 939A taking effect:

"Just as it is not feasible or practical for us or other institutional investors to simply stop using credit ratings altogether, it may not be feasible or practical for federal agencies to strike, in one fell swoop, ratings from all of their rules and regulations," said Gregory Smith, the chief operating officer and general counsel of the Colorado Public Employees' Retirement Association. "We encourage regulators to take a careful, deliberate approach to eliminating references to ratings over time. "

Consider the issue of removing ratings from the process of determining how much capital banks must hold against various exposures. The banks say that there isn't a ready alternative. Smaller banks argue that they don't have the resources to use anything other than credit ratings, which are relatively cheap and easy, and that if forced to find alternatives they'll have a harder time competing against large banks. The large banks argue that if they can't use credit ratings, they'll have a harder time competing against foreign banks, which still use ratings. Indeed, the Federal Reserve reported that replacing credit ratings could "lead to competitive distortions across the global banking system and the domestic banking landscape."

That reference to the "global banking system" gets to another problem: Despite European dislike of the American rating agencies, ratings are ingrained in the global capital standards--even those implemented after the 2008 sub-prime crisis, which exposed the ratings agencies' unreliability. As the OCC's David Wilson pointed out, the latest global regulatory framework ("Basel III") continues to use ratings to judge creditworthiness. "U.S. regulators cannot conform our capital standards to those agreed to internationally if section 939A precludes any reference to or reliance on credit ratings," wrote Wilson in his statement.

One year ago, as U.S. regulators began soliciting comments from the banking industry about what they should use instead of credit ratings, the gist of what they heard back was this: Don't mess with our ratings. "Generally, comments received did not concretely identify or suggest alternative standards of credit-worthiness," the FDIC said in its hearing statement. "Most commenters … argued that credit ratings are valuable tools in evaluating credit risk." The OCC's Wilson reported that "a majority of the commenters said that the OCC should continue to use credit ratings in its regulations."

This lingering attachment to the ratings agencies isn't limited to banks and regulators. Investors—yes, the very same people who got burned relying on the rating agencies three years ago—don't want to see them go. As Gellert, the CEO of Rapid Ratings, put it, "There are many market players who benefit from, and support, the status quo." If investors no longer have ratings to rely on, then they'll have to do the credit analysis themselves. If they're wrong, they won't be able to blame those accursed rating agencies! And as Gellert explained, the allure of ratings goes beyond the avoidance of responsibility. Ratings actually help investors game the system. In what's known on the Street as "ratings arbitrage," funds that are statutorily prohibited from buying non-investment-grade bonds buy the highest yielding bonds with the lowest investment grade rating that they can find, thereby juicing their returns. That creates an artificial demand for securities that don't merit the rating they received, at least by the market's judgment. Ratings arbitrage is what put the most dangerous mortgage-backed securities in greatest demand at the peak of the subprime madness.

Investors don't just want to keep credit ratings around—they want to keep credit ratings from the current big three. After the crisis, in 2010, Jules Kroll, a well-known investigator, formed Kroll Bond Ratings in order to provide investors with an alternative. But Kroll noted in his testimony that investors often require before they'll buy a security that it have not just a rating, but a rating from Moody's, Standard & Poor's, and/or Fitch. Kroll Bond Ratings took an informal survey of the top 100 pension funds, and found that of the 67 that published their guidelines, almost two-thirds required a rating from at least one of the top three firms. "It is self-evident that this practice further entrenches the incumbent rating agencies," wrote Kroll in his prepared remarks.

In fairness, the regulators, or at least the SEC, do still seem to be plodding gamely ahead. In March, the SEC proposed to remove credit ratings from the rules that govern which securities a money market fund may purchase. Gellert says that his business is doing very well, because although investors may still be using ratings from the big three, they're also eager for another opinion. That can only help. And he says that at the hearing he saw bipartisan support for removing ratings from regulations.

Then again, on July 21, in a little-noticed vote, the House financial services committee approved (over the objections of Massachusetts Rep. Barney Frank, ranking Democrat on the committee and one of the named authors of Dodd-Frank) a repeal of the part of Dodd-Frank that (quite reasonably) subjects the credit rating agencies to "expert liability," meaning that if the ratings agencies screw up they'll face the same legal risk as accountants and other third party advisers in bond sales. The July 29 Wall Street Journal reported that various business groups, including the Chamber of Commerce, are suing the government to overturn various parts of Dodd Frank that they don't like. The Journal piece didn't mention section 939A, but it would seem a likely target. According to the OCC's testimony, some in the industry are already recommending a "legislative change" to the section. Loathe them though everyone does, reliance on the credit rating agencies turns out to be a terrible habit that almost no one is willing to break.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Without color-coding, how can we regulate fear?

I disagree with this change by Obama. First of all, color-coding is easy to understand. Duh. Secondly, how am I to know how scared I should be from day to day?

I need Big Guvmint to tell me! I miss Dubya-Cheney!! I can't hack it in this new uncertain terror-stricken world!


By Eileen Sullivan
November 24, 2010 | AP