Showing posts with label Congressional Quarterly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Congressional Quarterly. Show all posts

Apr 2, 2010

CQ - Behind the Lines for Friday, April 2, 2010

WASHINGTON - MAY 13:  U.S. Secretary of Homela...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

By David C. Morrison, Special to Congressional Quarterly
Third time's the charm: Airliner attack while TSA is still directorless "could mortally wound a president's hopes for a second term" . . . Firewall: "The notion that terrorists have cyber-attack capabilities and are merely waiting to use them -- Osama bin Laden's birthday, perhaps? -- is silly" . . . What we're worried about this week: Nigerian driver crashes through airport security barriers and into parked airliner. These and other stories lead today's homeland security coverage.
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President Obama has signed off on new security protocols for people flying to the United States, establishing a system in which intel data, not nationality alone, will prompt extra scrutiny, The New York TimesJeff Zeleny relates. Since Obama scolded agencies for overlooking warning flags heralding the underpants bomber, the checking of visa applicants against watch lists has evolved into a burdensome ordeal, The Washington Post’s Edward Cody surveys — as the Post’s Tara Bahrampour sees returning U.S. Muslims “facing new complications” at ports of entry.

Homies: “If there’s no one in charge [at TSA] of preventing [an attack], when something does happen, it’s a political disaster that could mortally wound a president’s hopes for a second term,” Time Magazine’s Mark Thompson assesses. Drug smugglers have set booby traps — barbed wire stretched like clotheslines across trails — for Border Patrollers on border roads near Deming, N.M., The El Paso TimesDaniel Borunda reports — while Tucson’s KOLD 13 News has DHS earlier this week transferring 10 ATVs, four motorcycles, 50 global positioning units and an assortment of tactical equipment to Mexico’s Secretariat of Public Safety.

Feds: CIA counterintel officers recently concluded that agency interrogators risk exposure to al Qaeda through Guantanamo inmates’ contacts with defense attorneys, The Washington TimesBill Gertz reports. The CIA “ceased long ago to be the ‘rogue elephant’ unmasked in congressional hearings in the 1970s. On the contrary, since 9/11 the agency has been accused less often of sinister misdeeds than of incompetence,” The New York TimesSam Tanenhaus essays. The Pentagon is implementing new safety measures since a gunman opened fire there last month, its security chief tells The Associated PressMonica Norton. The Nevada Capitol was locked down late Tuesday after the FBI advised the nation’s governors they would be receiving letters from an extremist group demanding their resignations, The Nevada Appeal’s Geoff Dornan relates.

State and local: DHS chief Janet Napolitano plans to hit Rhode Island today to assess damage from the worst flooding in 200 years, AP reports. Kentucky’s state auditor has found further questionable spending in a program that gives DHS grants to counties surrounding the chemical weapons-demilitarizing Bluegrass Army Depot, The Lexington Herald-Leader relates. Gov. Bill Richardson ordered more law enforcers to the New Mexico-Mexico border this week, following an Arizona rancher’s murder, The New Mexico Independent informs — and see The Washington Times: “Border violence threatening Americans.” The carnage in Mexico is worse now than the terror that enveloped Colombia during the 1980s and 1990s, The Texas Tribune, relatedly, has the state’s Public Safety director briefing lawmakers.

Cyberia: Federal spending for cybersecurity will reach $10.5 billion by 2015, a 10.5 percent increase from 2010, Homeland Security Newswire quotes from a Market Research Media study. In response to past cyber-attacks, the FAA is teaming with IBM on a system to secure commercial and private aviation networks from such threats, CNET News notes. “Mass indiscriminate computer attacks are giving way to highly targeted individual attempts in a new wave of professional cybercrime,” The Sydney Morning Herald relates. “Terrorists do not have the capabilities to launch cyber-attacks. They may eventually acquire them, but the notion that they have them and are merely waiting to use them — Osama bin Laden’s birthday, perhaps? — is silly,” James Lewis essays for U.S. News.

Bugs ‘n bombs: Looking at the indictment of Michigan cultists for plotting to use “weapons of mass destruction” against law officers, Slate wonders: “When did IEDs become WMDs?” On the bioterror front, “the government has done a pretty good job of protecting things, but a less adequate — and at times substandard — job of protecting people,” BioPrepWatch quotes an expert. Renewed DHS funding will allow Kansas State University food scientists to keep “educating current and future leaders in homeland security and food defense,” The Wichita Eagle relates — as Cattle Network has another grant supporting Texas A&M’s National Center for Foreign Animal and Zoonotic Disease Defense.

Know nukes: At Sen. Harry Reid’s request, DHS has canceled a mock “dirty bomb” terrorist attack exercise in Las Vegas, much dreaded by local innkeepers, The Christian Science Monitor mentions. “Asserting the right of first use [of nuclear weapons] is described as tough and realistic, but it is actually unrealistic,” Selig S. Harrison comments in a USA Today op-ed anticipating release of Obama’s nuclear posture review. Russia’s ambassador to the United States sees the Moscow metro bombings “as a grave warning that keeping nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists means eliminating them completely,” a FOX News op-ed relays. An Iranian nuclear scientist, who disappeared last year under mysterious circumstances, actually defected to the CIA and been resettled in the United States, ABC News learns.

Close air support: A $20 million upgrade of the Colorado Springs airport’s checked bag inspection system “is focused on being more efficient and more private,” KKTV 11 News relates. A British Airways computer expert who allegedly offered himself as a suicide bomber is now slated to face trial next January, BBC News notes — while This Day reports a Nigerian man shouting “repent” while crashing his car through security barriers and into a parked airliner, and Gulf News has an elderly man desperate to go on hajj to Saudi Arabia jumping a New Delhi airport emergency gate.

Off track: “This week’s Moscow subway bombings raise several questions, but one of the most mysterious must be: Why hasn’t something like this happened here?” a Slate columnist probes — and see The Christian Science Monitor, again, on five ways to make mass transit safer. “Just as the Moscow bombers sent New York into a new round of terror jitters,” Gotham’s MTA removed weekend security details from the Queens Midtown Tunnel and the Verrazano Bridge, the Daily News learns — while CBS 2 News has 100 NYPD officers working a three-hour transit exercise Wednesday, supposedly planned before the Moscow blasts. This week, too, it was discovered that half of the NYC subway monitoring cameras were out of order, News.am briefs.

Over there: U.S. naval forces yesterday captured a “mothership” and five suspected Somali pirates after exchanging gunfire and sinking their boat, The Voice of America mentions. The Pentagon may provide surveillance drones and other limited military support for a Somali government offensive against al Qaeda-linked insurgents, AP reports — as AFP has Nigeria’s self-styled Taliban militant Islamist sect threatening to widen its activities beyond the borders. French authorities have left extradition proceedings against Canadian professor Hassan Diab “hanging in limbo,” The Ottawa Citizen has the accused terrorist’s defense attorney charging.

Courts and rights: An Algerian man in Ireland charged with making death threats against a Dearborn attorney is also implicated in an international plot to murder a Swedish cartoonist for his drawings of Muhammad, The Detroit Free Press reports. The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that lawyers have a constitutional obligation to advise clients of the collateral immigration consequences of a guilty plea in a criminal case, The National Law Journal notes. “Governments are using increasingly heavy-handed tactics to crack down on environmental activists,” most notably levying charges of “eco-terrorism,” Green Left growls. A senior CBP lawyer “and her parents will receive $152,000 from NYC after police and child welfare workers raided her home based on false info, the Advance advises.

Say bye-bye, Jack Bauer: For viewers, “24” (FOX Entertainment) “is part sum of all fears, part wish fulfillment in an age of shadowy enemies . . . [but] the show’s trademark clock is about to stop ticking, The New York Times leads. “Let’s face it. Jack Bauer is not necessarily somebody it would be great fun to sit around and have a beer with, but I can’t think of anyone I’d rather have with me [if] I realized someone had just slipped a small nuclear device into my carry-on luggage,” a FOX News contributor eulogizes — and see BuddyTV on “Jack Bauer’s Top 5 Human Rights Violations.” In a silver lining for bereft Bauer-holics, Kiefer Sutherland promises Hollywood Insider the series finale will tee up the “24”movie in the works at 20th Century Fox.

>Kulture Kanyon: “When last we left ‘V,’ the ABC remake of the ’80s miniseries . . . a vast fleet of Visitors’ spaceships was waiting to, presumably, swarm down on an unsuspecting Earth. Yikes — what’s the color for that emergency in the DHS playbook?” The Dallas Morning News curtain-raises. “Just like Hollywood, video game publishers capitalize on trends . . . Now there’s a new trend on the horizon, or message, if you’re a conspiracy theorist: Russia’s evil,” GameDaily essays. “It is hard for me, as a human being and a Middle Easterner, to portray these kinds of roles,” Arab American actor Said Faraj tells Aramica in re: the parts playing terrorists that has largely been his lot. Artist Robin Lasser presented a performance of her “Ms. Homeland Security” last Friday in Topeka, KTKA 49 News notes.

Nuclear Casual-Tea Party: “The National Rifle Association has unleashed a new campaign to allow all American citizens ‘their God-given rights to own an atom bomb!’” Glossy News notes. “The public is being bombarded with television, newspaper, movie and billboard ads pushing the new ‘right’ that the NRA feels should be passed through Congress. Already the FOX News channel has picked up the baton and is aggressively pushing for legalization of individual possession. Anyone challenging this new mandate has been ruthlessly booed down and hunted . . . People complaining about it have been told ‘Why do you hate America? Do you want only the terrorists to have atom bombs?’ Interestingly enough, the NRA appears to have bought the majority share of stocks in the first company to mass produce atom bombs for the general consumer . . . Once the personal possession atom bomb amendment is forced through Congress the NRA plans on pushing for the legal right to carrying concealed atom bombs on the street.

Source: CQ Homeland Security
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Mar 26, 2010

CQ - Behind the Lines for Friday, March 26, 2010

By David C. Morrison, Special to Congressional Quarterly
Lie for a lie: Washington dismisses as "absurd" bin Laden threat to execute any American captives if 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is put to death . . . Occupational hazzard: Qantas pilot allowed to keep flying jumbo jets despite repeatedly complaining of urges to crash the planes . . . Running the clock out: Border-watching Minuteman Civil Defense Corps is punching out. These and other stories lead today's homeland security coverage.
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A Washington securicrat dismisses as “absurd” Osama bin Laden’s threat yesterday to execute any Americans in captivity if 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is put to death after trial, ReutersRania Oteify and Cynthia Johnston relate. Al Qaeda isn’t known to be holding any Americans at the moment, though an allied Taliban faction captured an American private in eastern Afghanistan last June, The Associated PressSarah El Deeb adds — while The Christian Science Monitor’s Dan Murphy wonders, perhaps redundantly: “Is Osama bin Laden out of touch?”

Feds: “Security threats against members of Congress is not a partisan issue, and they should not be treated that way,” The Washington Post’s Ben Pershing has House GOP Whip Eric Cantor avowing yesterday — and check Mike Madden’s Salon take.“Killing people without due process is . . . never acceptable if carried out in secret. Mr. Obama must explain and publicly justify targeted killings,” The Times of London’s Ben Macintyre maintains — as Agence France-Presse has a legal expert telling lawmakers drone strikes could put CIA officers in foreign courts facing war crimes prosecution. Opponents of Bush-era detainee practices hope reports of White House shifts on detention policies are “simply trial balloons the president himself will eventually pop,” the Los Angeles TimesJulian E. Barnes and David S. Cloud survey.

Homies: “The names ‘Department of Homeland Security’ and ‘Department of Defense’ are redundant. Which one should we drop?” The Hartford Courant’s Robert M. Thorson leads, terming the “homeland security” locution “noxious.” President Obama’s pick to head the TSA has managed to keep his nomination on track for consideration after the spring recess, The Wall Street Journal’s Keith Johnson updates — as CNN’s Mark M. Ahlers hears Robert Harding hedging on screener unionization, while assuring that “any such plan should be done in a way that would not hurt national security,” and Government Executive’s Chris Strohm has the top Senate homeland overseer seeking “five IG reports into the nominee’s previous work.”

State and local: Competing E-Verify bills drew advocates for both sides to a heated Rhode Island House hearing, The Providence Journal reports. New York State homeland security boss Thomas Donlon is yet another Paterson administration deserter, The Albany Times Union tells. While American Jewish institutions must take terrorism “awareness, preparedness and resiliency efforts seriously . . . our response will be appropriate and measured, devoid of the fear that terrorism seeks to instill,” a Jewish Telegraph Agency op-ed inveighs. An Ohio man detained Tuesday allegedly pulled up to a Defense Supply Center Columbus gate announcing he had an explosive device in his vehicle, WBNS 10 News notes. The Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, a border watch group composed of private citizens, has decided to disband, The Arizona Daily Star relays.

Chasing the dime: The European Commission says it wants its own system to track terrorist finances, one that would require the United States to contribute info on its own citizens’ transactions, The New York Times tells. Concerns about Mexican drug mayhem have created a growing demand at the border for bulletproof vehicles, the CEO of International Armoring Corp. tells The El Paso Times. As in most countries — the United States included, if less so — private guards outnumber police 7 to 1 in Guatemala, most of them untrained, uneducated and inexperienced, GlobalPost spotlights. Seeking an in to the sweet homeland security market, LifeLock Inc. has added ex-DHS secretary Tom Ridge to its board of directors, Phoenix Business Journal relates — as The Washington Business Journal sees his successor, Mike Chertoff, joining the BAE Systems board.

Bugs ‘n bombs: Union County, N.J., self-storage managers are cooperating with public-safety officials on random searches for hazardous materials that could potentially be used in explosives, Suburban News notes. From its 1980s inception, the “right-to-carry” movement has increased licensed concealed-gun carriers from fewer than 1 million to a record 6 million today, MSNBC surveys. Two years ago Afghan insurgents obtained several U.S. military systems used to jam signals that detonate IEDs, possibly passing them along to Iran for reverse engineering, Nextgov notes. Nuclear terrorism remains an intelligence priority, but so far terrorist groups haven’t displayed an ability to launch a large-scale WMD attack, Xinhua hears a senior intel officer briefing.

Close air support: A Qantas pilot was allowed to keep flying for three years despite repeatedly complaining of urges to crash one of the jumbo jets, The Sydney Morning Herald reports. Heather Mills, Paul McCartney’s ex, was livid when Heathrow screeners ordered her artificial leg removed and swabbed for explosives, The Daily Mirror mentions — while MusicRooms sees former Pussycat Dolls singer Kimberly Wyatt tweeting that she was “attacked by 10 security workers” at Heathrow because of a “Bullets 4 Peace” pendant. Some 18,000 people on TSA’s “selectee list” are subjected to third and fourth once-overs of passports and other extras, but those “who appeal never get confirmation they were on a list, much less learn why,” The Mansfield (Ohio) News Journal notes.

Coming and going: A mentally ill man on the London Tube in a judge’s wig with wires strapped to his wrists prompted the first activation of Operation Andromeda, Scotland Yard’s new response to “spontaneous sighting of a suspected suicide bomber,” The Daily Telegraph relates. There is less than meets the eye to a series of alarming reports regarding a U.S. intel warning of possible al Qaeda attacks on ships off the coast of Yemen, Newsweek notes. Heightened port security standards would put a dent in cargo theft, which the International Cargo Security Council estimates costs U.S. shippers $25 billion a year, a Security Park op-ed observes. In an escalation of the battle against Indian Ocean buccaneers, a Somali pirate was killed this week in a gunfight between a cargo ship and a pirate skiff, Danger Room relates.

Courts and rights: Federal prosecutors have added felony charges to a long list of misdemeanors filed against an ex-DHS officer who allegedly made unauthorized traffic stops about which he then falsified reports, The Rome (Ga.) News-Tribune tells. The daughter of one of four men convicted in the Holy Land Foundation terror financing case is attacking plans to transfer the convicts to a more secure prison, The Dallas Morning News notes. Word that a new chief judicial officer is being appointed to the Pentagon’s Office of Military Commissions suggests Gitmo tribunals will soon resume, Newsweek, again, notes — while The Washington Post spotlights two Gitmo detainees turned informer who are held in relative comfort but with little chance of release.

Over there: Kenyan terror police have arrested a watch-listed Somalia-born American, The Winona (Minn.) Daily News notes. A Canadian man facing 11 counts of attempted murder denied the charges, but admitted to sending tainted water and explosive devices to a variety of people, The National Post notes. Obeying a Taliban decree, three cell phone providers in a district near Kandahar turn off their antennas every nightfall, The Wall Street Journal relates. Security experts say recent police raids in Indonesia indicate a growing terrorism threat there, Voice of America spotlights.

Screening Room: Bush-era speech-writer Marc Thiessen cites the Joker from “Batman: The Dark Knight” (Warner Bros.) to rebut Obama on Guantanamo’s role as a recruitment tool for terrorists, Media Matters derides. In a Huffington Post homage to network residual checks, David Dean Bottrell fondly recalls appearing on CBS’ “Criminal Minds” as an emotionally unstable scientist who was trying to plant an anthrax bomb in a D.C. subway station. “Is it finally O.K. to have a few laughs at terrorism’s expense? Does this movie disempower terrorists by poking fun at them?” a poster on Elan: The Guide to Global Muslim Culture blogs in re: Chris Morris’s new comedy “Four Lions” (Warp Films). “Art in Action,” screening at Montreal’s Cinema Politica, is an “inspiring film about one ambitious couple and the growth of their art and humanitarian group: the Action Terroriste Socialement Acceptable,” The Concordian recounts.

Kulture Kanyon: A work by a Lebanese-Canadian playwright that imagines a dialogue between a terrorist bomber and one of his victims is among 10 plays on offer in this year’s Magnetic North Theatre Festival, CBC News notes. “Tourism / Terrorism,” a new release by The So So Glos “was a surprise to me,” an Altsounds.com critic leads. Sebastian Faulks’ “A Week in December” (Doubleday), a New York Times pan reads, features “a young Muslim plotting to attack a London hospital, and a hedge fund manager betting that England’s staunchest bank is about to fail. Guess which one is the villain?” Photographer Simon Roberts, recently tapped as Britain’s official Election Artist, worries he may become an innocent victim of U.K. anti-terrorism laws, Amateur Photographer spotlights. “Even terrorist organizations have started to get in on the criminal action,” a Forbes commentary on art theft takes note.

Natty Dread: “It turns out that one of America’s favorite places to drink rum, listen to reggae, and get mugged five blocks from their hotel has revealed itself as one of America’s strongest allies in the War On Terror,” The Spoof spoofs in re: Jamaica. “For decades, Americans have enjoyed the hospitality of this small, beautiful country, and welcomed the friendliness of the people to the point of teasing them for their stereotypical term, ‘Yea, Mon!’ on countless talk shows, sitcoms, and stand-up routines. No more, however, as American terrorism experts have finally realized the truth: Jamaicans have been trying to warn us of the dangers of another small country, Yemen, a country hanging off the ass-end of Saudi Arabia. The Jamaican people have long been telling any American who would listen that Yemen is a danger to them. To wit: American: ‘Excuse me, sir, but can you tell me if Iraq is going to attack us?’ Jamaican: ‘Yea, Mon!’ (In reality, his accent is distorting the name, ‘Yemen’.)”

Source: CQ Homeland Security