Tag: counter terrorism
Trump Quietly Shutting Down Safeguards Against Terrorism And WMD

Trump Quietly Shutting Down Safeguards Against Terrorism And WMD

The Trump administration quietly canceled several important national security programs, which were created after 9/11 to help protect Americans from weapons of mass destruction.

More than 30 current and former Department of Homeland Security employees said they did not know why the Trump administration stopped the programs. The employees warned the cuts could hinder the agency’s ability to respond to a nuclear attack, according to the Los Angeles Times.

The programs cut over the past two years include training exercises for dealing with weapons of mass destruction at the state and local level. Another initiative that worked with foreign governments to prevent the smuggling of nuclear materials was also abandoned.

The cuts were reportedly made without a thorough review of the potential risks to national security.

Additionally, more than 100 scientists and nuclear experts have been reassigned or have left the Department of Homeland Security, hurting the agency’s ability to protect Americans.

“The real thing could happen tomorrow with no warning,” one former official told the Los Angeles Times. “And the only practice our defenders are going to have is through these ‘red team’ studies and actual exercises. That activity is necessary to ensure even basic competence.”

The cuts are counter to what the Trump administration promised to do in a national security strategy report published in December 2017.

Trump officials promised to “augment measures to secure, eliminate and prevent the spread of WMD and related materials,” according to the report. The administration also said it would make sure it retained the technology and knowledge to “reduce the chance” that weapons of mass destruction would “fall into the hands of hostile actors.”

The Trump administration has a track record of making questionable national security decisions.

Trump has given security clearances to people with questionable backgrounds. He also threatened to declassify sensitive intelligence to protect his own politic interests.  Additionally, firing sprees seem to be common at the Trump-controlled Department of Homeland Security. Trump’s national security advisers have also been quick to leave their positions.

When it comes to protecting the homeland, it seems Trump and his allies have no idea what they’re doing.

Published with permission of The American Independent.

Lone Wolf Terrorists Continue To Confound Law Enforcement

Lone Wolf Terrorists Continue To Confound Law Enforcement

By Cindy Chang and Richard Winton, Los Angeles Times (TNS)

In 2005, Torrance, Calif., police officers searched the apartment of two men suspected of robbing a gas station.

There, the officers found a lengthy manifesto and a list of potential targets, including synagogues and military sites. They had stumbled on an Islamist terrorist cell in the advanced stages of an attack plan.

The San Bernardino massacre, which killed 14 people, has focused new attention on “lone wolf” terrorists who plan attacks away from traditional high-profile targets without directly coordinating with others.

While the FBI typically takes the lead in major terrorism investigations, local police officers and sheriff’s deputies are the initial line of defense — especially in the case of home-grown plotters.

With their local intelligence and connections to the communities they serve, police are often the first to pick up on clues that something is wrong — or to fortuitously come across a dangerous situation. Large agencies like the Los Angeles Police Department and Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department have sizable counter-terrorism units that comb the Internet for suspicious postings, follow up on tips and cultivate contacts in the community.

Neighbors or friends might notice strange behavior, an uptick in bulky package deliveries or changes to a person’s routine. Human intelligence is the key, and local authorities are more likely than their federal counterparts to be plugged into those sources, said Deputy Chief Michael Downing, who oversees the LAPD’s counter-terrorism bureau.

But the challenges are daunting. Sometimes, as with the San Bernardino assailants Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, even family members said they did not notice any warning signs. Federal authorities say Malik wrote a Facebook post pledging her allegiance to an Islamic State group, but there is no evidence so far that they were connected to a larger terror cell.

“Self-radicalization poses a tremendous problem, as it is hardest to detect,” Downing said. “For us, it has always been easier to detect a network group adversary, because someone is going to slip up or hit a trip wire, versus a lone wolf.”

At the LAPD, the Counter-Terrorism and Special Operations Bureau’s 900 officers include some Muslims and several who speak who speak Arabic or Urdu. The bureau maintains relationships with local mosques and works closely with other law enforcement agencies, including the FBI.

The LAPD’s version of the “If you see something, say something” program, which encourages residents to report suspected terrorist activity, has won praise but also raised concerns in recent years.

In 2007, the LAPD scrapped a plan to map the city’s Muslim population amid an outcry from Muslim groups and civil libertarians.

But law enforcement officials say it is precisely those kinds of grass-roots leads that could stop the next terror plot. Officers are constantly checking out reports of suspicious activity, searching for the smallest of clues, Downing said.

Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State, San Bernardino, said terror networks have become more sophisticated at delivering their messages through social networks, making it easier to lure followers.

The San Bernardino massacre illustrates the difficulties of stopping terrorists who may have been radicalized mainly behind closed doors while surfing the Internet, said Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens, who previously oversaw the counter-terrorism unit in L.A. County.

“Sleepy little Orange County is pretty active” in producing terrorists, Hutchens said. She noted that several aspiring foreign fighters arrested and charged by federal authorities in recent years came from the county and were heading to Syria to join ISIS.

In the U.S., homegrown terrorists come from a range of socioeconomic and educational backgrounds, making it hard to generate a criminal profile, said Brian Michael Jenkins, a terrorism expert at the Rand Corp., a Santa Monica, Calif., think tank.

It is the terrorist among us — someone like Farook, seemingly leading a normal life — who poses the biggest challenge for law enforcement and who stokes the biggest fear in the public.

“The fact that this was such an ordinary guy, who was likable, who got along with other people at work … It was a Christmas party. It was the Inland Regional Center, which is not at the top of anybody’s perceived target list,” Jenkins said. “That underscores the point that this could happen anywhere. This person I’ve known for years is maybe, as we speak, planning to kill me.”

©2015 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Photo: San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod Burguan (C) speaks at a news conferenece, informing the media, that the couple Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, and Tashfeen Malik, 27, were responsible for the shooting rampage at the Inland Regional Center, in San Bernardino, California December 2, 2015.  REUTERS/Alex Gallardo

Yemen Faces Power Vacuum After President Quits

Yemen Faces Power Vacuum After President Quits

Sanaa (AFP) – Yemen faced a dangerous power vacuum Friday after its president announced his resignation over a deadly standoff with Shiite militia controlling the capital and lawmakers called an emergency weekend session.

President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi, a key U.S. ally in the fight against Al-Qaeda, said late Thursday that he could no longer stay in office as the country was in “total deadlock”.

Prime Minister Khalid Bahah also tendered his resignation, saying he did want to be part of the collapse of the country.

The fall of Hadi’s Western-backed government would raise fears of complete chaos engulfing Yemen, strategically located next to oil-rich Saudi Arabia and on the key shipping route from the Suez Canal to the Gulf.

A senior State Department official said staffing at the U.S. embassy in the capital Sanaa, already thin after most of the diplomatic personnel were ordered to leave in September, would be further reduced.

The country is an important power base for Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), which claimed responsibility for this month’s deadly attack on French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo.

Parliament is set to hold an extraordinary meeting to discuss Hadi’s resignation offer, which needs to be approved by lawmakers to take effect.

Hadi advisor Sultan al-Atwani told AFP that parliament would meet on Sunday “at the earliest” because it is in recess and lawmakers need time to return.

Witnesses and security forces said that Huthi militiamen had encircled the parliament building overnight, having already seized the presidential palace earlier this week.

Gunmen have also surrounded the houses of top officials including Defence Minister Mahmud al-Subaihi and head of intelligence Ali al-Ahmedi, a security official said.

The Huthis, who hail from Yemen’s northern highlands and who took control of most of the capital in September, said the constitution stipulated that Hadi’s resignation should be approved by an absolute majority in parliament.

“As this has not happened, the resignation remains pending,” the militia said in a statement.

Yemen has been riven by instability since an uprising forced strongman Ali Abdullah Saleh from power in 2012.

Saleh has been accused of backing the Huthis — who are from the same Zaidi sect of Shiite Islam as the ex-leader — as has Shiite-dominated Iran.

The Huthis, who have long complained of marginalization, called on supporters to take to the streets on Friday afternoon to show their “backing for the revolutionary measures”.

Thousands of supporters answered the call, staging a rally north of Sanaa.

Meanwhile, hundreds others demonstrated near the University of Sanaa against the Huthis and in support of Hadi, witnesses said.

Similar protests were staged in the cities of Taez and Hudaida.

While the situation was generally calm in Sanaa, two small explosions targeted two houses belonging to Huthi members but there were no casualties.

After heavy fighting between government forces and the Huthis this week that killed at least 35 people, the UN Security Council and Yemen’s Gulf neighbors had all voiced support for Hadi’s continued rule.

The situation escalated on Saturday when the militiamen seized top presidential aide Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak in an apparent bid to extract changes to a draft constitution opposed by the Huthis because it would divide Yemen into six federal regions.

The Huthis continue to hold Mubarak and maintain a tight grip on the capital despite a deal struck late on Wednesday to end what authorities called a coup attempt.

In return for concessions over the disputed draft constitution, the Huthis pledged to vacate the presidential palace, free Mubarak, withdraw from areas surrounding the residences of Hadi and Bahah, and abandon checkpoints across the capital.

Hadi is from Yemen’s formerly independent south and in recent days southern officials have taken steps to back his rule, including closing the air and sea ports in the main city of Aden.

The security and military committee for four of south Yemen’s provinces, including Aden, said late Thursday it would not take orders from Sanaa following Hadi’s resignation.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called on all sides “to exercise maximum restraint and maintain peace and stability”, his spokesman said.

His envoy to Yemen, Moroccan diplomat Jamal Benomar, had arrived in the country on Thursday for talks with the political rivals, but they were swiftly overtaken by events.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the United States was assessing the fast-moving events.

“We continue to support a peaceful transition. We’ve urged all parties and continue to urge all parties to abide by… the peace and national partnership agreement,” Psaki told reporters.

Yemen has allowed the United States to carry out repeated drone attacks on Al-Qaeda militants in its territory.

Oxfam warned that 16 million people — more than half the population — were in need of aid in Yemen.

“A humanitarian crisis of extreme proportions is at risk of unfolding in the country if instability continues,” the aid group said.

AFP Photo/Mohammed Huwais

Mixed Feelings: Americans Willing To Give Up Freedoms For Terror Fight But Want Civil Liberties Protected

WASHINGTON (AP) — Surveillance cameras in public places? Sure. Body scans at airports? Maybe. Snooping in personal email? Not so fast.

The same Americans who are increasingly splashing their personal lives across Facebook and Twitter trace a meandering path when asked where the government should draw the line between protecting civil liberties and pursuing terrorism.

Ten years after the 9/11 attacks led to amped-up government surveillance efforts, two-thirds of Americans say it’s fitting to sacrifice some privacy and freedoms in the fight against terrorism, according to a poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

A slim majority — 54 percent — say that if they had to choose between preserving their rights and freedoms and protecting people from terrorists, they’d come down on the side of civil liberties. The public is particularly protective of the privacy of U.S. citizens, voicing sharp opposition to government surveillance of Americans’ emails and phone calls.

For some Americans, their reluctance to give up any freedoms is a reflection of their belief that the terrorists eventually will succeed no matter what.

“If somebody wants to do something, they’ll find a way,” says David Barker, a retired high school teacher from Wynne, Ark., who says he’s not ready to sacrifice any freedoms in return for more security.

Others worry that giving up one freedom will lead to the loss of others.

“It’s like opening a crack in the door, and then the door is opened wide,” says Keri Jean, a homemaker from Elk Ridge, Utah.

The poll asked people to grapple with some of same quandaries that the government and the courts have been wrestling with over the past decade, and even before the 2001 terrorist attacks. And it turns out that policymakers, too, have drawn a zigzag line as they make tradeoffs between aggressively pursuing potential terrorists and preserving privacy and civil liberties.

Two-thirds of those surveyed believe the resulting policies are a mish-mash created in reaction to events as they occur rather than clearly planned.

Consider the rules on government interception of email: Sometimes that’s legal and sometimes it’s not. It depends on how old the email is, whether it’s already been opened by the recipient, whether the sender and recipient are within the U.S., and which federal appellate court considers the question. Sometimes investigators need a warrant and sometimes no court approval is necessary.

The AP-NORC poll found that about half of those surveyed felt that they have indeed lost some of their own personal freedoms to fight terrorism. Was it worth it? Close to half of those who thought they’d lost freedoms doubted it was necessary.

Overall, six in 10 say the government is doing enough to protect Americans’ rights and freedoms as it fights terrorism. But people may not even be aware of what they’ve given up. The extent of government eavesdropping and surveillance is something of a mystery.

There have been recent efforts in Congress — unsuccessful so far — to require the Justice Department to estimate how many people in the U.S. have had their calls and email monitored under a 2008 law that gave the government more surveillance authority. And a recent AP investigation revealed the existence of a secret police unit in New York that monitored daily life inside Muslim communities.

For all of their concern about protecting personal rights, Americans — just like policymakers and the courts — show far more willingness to allow intrusions into the lives of foreigners than into their own.

While 47 percent of Americans support allowing the government to read emails sent between people outside the United States without a warrant, just 30 percent supported similar monitoring of emails sent between people inside the country, for example. And while nearly half supported government eavesdropping on phone calls between people outside the country without a warrant, only a quarter favored such surveillance of calls inside the U.S.

“Countries have become bound with political correctness and I think need to be a little more strict,” says Jean, despite her warnings about surrendering more freedoms. “Stop being afraid to offend others.”

The government can listen in on telephone calls made by foreigners outside the United States without a warrant, but government investigators are generally required to obtain orders signed by judges to eavesdrop on domestic phone calls and other electronic communications within the U.S. The rules are more complex for cross-border communication between foreigners and Americans.

Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, which focuses on privacy and civil liberties, says Americans were surprisingly willing to accept new surveillance techniques in the years after the 9/11 attacks, but the pendulum now appears to be swinging somewhat in the other direction.

“People are just not quite willing to accept these tradeoffs, particularly when they are ineffective,” he says.

The U.S. effort to combat terrorism receives mixed reviews: Just 36 percent say it’s been extremely or very effective, 49 percent say moderately so.

About a third of Americans are concerned that they or their family will be victims of a terrorist attack, and 37 percent believe the area where they live is at least at moderate risk of being attacked.

Susan Davis, a medical transcriptionist from Springfield, Mo., answers for many Americans when asked whether sacrificing some freedom is warranted in order for the government to provide more security.

“Yeah,” she says, “as long as they don’t go too far with it.”

But everyone has their own definition of what’s too far.

The poll found that Americans have different comfort levels with various scenarios in pursuing potential terrorist activity. For example:

—71 percent favor surveillance cameras in public places to watch for suspicious activity.

—58 percent favor random searches involving full-body scans or pat-downs of airplane passengers.

—55 percent favor government analysis of financial transactions processed by U.S. banks without a warrant.

—47 percent favor requiring all people in the U.S. to carry a national ID card and provide it to authorities upon demand.

—35 percent favor racial or ethnic profiling to decide who should get tougher screening at airports.

The first three scenarios already are legal; the latter two are not.

The poll turned up sharp divisions among Americans on whether torture — banned by the government — should have any place in combating terrorism.

Fifty-two percent said torture can be justified at least sometimes to obtain information about terrorist activity. Forty-six percent said it can never or only rarely be justified.

The AP-NORC poll was conducted July 28 to Aug. 15. It involved landline and cell phone interviews with 1,087 adults nationwide, and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.1 percentage points.

___

Associated Press writer Stacy Anderson, Polling Director Trevor Tompson and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.