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TRANSCRIPT - CARNEGIE CORPORATION OF NEW YORK AUDIO PRESS CONFERENCE
JULY 2, 2002
HOMELAND
DEFENSE AND DEMOCRATIC LIBERTIES:
AN AMERICAN BALANCE IN DANGER?
SPEAKERS:
- ASHTON
B. CARTER, former Assistant Secretary of Defense for International
Security Policy; Co-director, Harvard-Stanford Preventive Defense
Project; Ford Foundation Professor of Science and International
Affairs, John F. Kennedy School of Government
- GARY
HART, Co-chair, U.S. Commission on National Security for the
21st Century, retired U.S. Senator from Colorado
-
CHRISTOPHER F. EDLEY, JR.,
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights; professor of law, Harvard Law
School; Co-director, Harvard Civil Rights Project
MODERATOR:
SUSAN KING, Carnegie Corporation of New York
Susan
King: As we enter the week of Americas annual Forth of
July celebration, and another experience in this post-September
11th world of unspecific threats and general insecurity, we are
very pleased to welcome you to this conference call. A note right
up front, Carnegie Corporation of New York is a foundation that
believes in its very soul that scholarship is a critical ingredient
in the public policy mix. Andrew Carnegie, our founder, an ultimate
optimist, believed his enormous wealth could improve society by
advancing and disseminating knowledge and understanding. And weve
been doing that with his money for more than ninety years. We dont
come to this call with a firm point of view or something to sell.
International peace and security is one of our top priorities. The
nuclear threat is a preoccupation, but even before September 11th,
we had defined an area of exploration which we called New
Dimensions in Security. Democratic ideals are another priority
and an area of funding and scholarship. We feel at this moment both
areas, democracy and international peace and security, really need
to be looked at anew by scholars, by policy makers and by the public.
What with the new cabinet agency, the Homeland Security one in the
making, and intelligence a real question on the national agenda
and at Carnegie, our job is to create a platform for debate. And
so this spring we brought some leading thinkers, two of whom are
our grantees, to a forum to push the envelope on the tension between
the need to keep America secure and the right to personal liberties.
We are releasing the paper today that explores that tension and
we are binging to you three of the men who participated in that
forum. Three men, I think you will agree, who know quite a bit,
have studied the issues and can offer you some insight this week
into the questions that need to be asked and really need to be debated.
First
to speak today will be Ashton B. Carter, Professor at Harvards
Kennedy School of Government and co-director of the Preventative
Defense Project. He knows the Washington public policy cauldron,
having served as the Assistant Secretary for Defense under President
Clinton. Also with us, former Senator Gary Hart who will speak second.
He with former Senator Warren Rudman chaired the U.S. Commission
on National Security for the 21st Century. They called for a cabinet
office of Homeland Security. This commission was really set up to
advise whoever was elected President. It was an idea that was brushed
off by the Bush Administration at first. And then Christopher F.
Edley, Jr., professor at Harvard Law School and co-director of Harvards
Civil Rights Project. He is also a member of the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights. All three will have a short opening and then well
open it up for your questions.
Ash
Carter, would you start.
Ashton
B. Carter: Thank you. Glad to have the opportunity to join this
call and I thank Carnegie for arranging it. Where I thought Id
start out is to reprise a little of the testimony that I offered
last week at the set of Governmental Affairs Committee hearings
about which Im sure many of the listeners have read. There
were two debates going on last week and I think that the subject
of this call is at the intersection of two of them. The first debate
was over whether we should have connected the dots before 9-11.
That is, did the FBI and the CIA have the right dots, did they share
the dots, did they need new powers to connect dots better? And the
second debate was whether Congress should approve the Presidents
version of a new cabinet level department of Homeland Security.
In the version the President recommends or in other versions, or
not at all and relatedly, should the new department have an intelligence
arm, an intelligence agency within it? And Id like to suggest
that some new kinds of intelligence dots are what we need for Homeland
Security that a new department could usefully collect and that dont
raise the kinds of civil liberties issues that are raised by expanding
the powers of the CIA and the FBI. Now when I say intelligence here,
I mean the word very generally to denote information and analysis
necessary for the successful completion of the mission of homeland
security over time. We get the phrase connect the dots
from a childs game. Weve all seen that game but you
know that in the childs game the dots are numbered, but thats
not a very good guide to what were talking about. I think
a better image for Homeland Security intelligence is constellations
in the night sky. Im a Philadelphia boy and, of course, I
never saw the night sky when I was a kid. But when I did get out
of the city, people would ask me to look up in the sky and say,
Do you see up there, do you see that horse with the wings?
And, off course, I would never have seen a horse with wings unless
I was told to seek that kind of pattern. Then I could connect the
dots. The point of this is that without a template of some sort
about what terrorists might do, we will rarely succeed in connecting
the dots. Think about 9-11. Its not surprising to me, and
probably not to many people in the public, that we did not detect
the dozen or so individual Middle Eastern young men residing in
our country who plotted this attack among the many similar people
who travel in and out of the country. Thats not surprising
. . . that we didnt connect those dots. What is disturbing
is that the FAA and the airlines had not only not detected the perpetrators,
but more importantly they had never detected the mode of attack.
They never detected, in the sense of anticipating it and installing
simple counter measures like armored cockpit doors. You could buy
novels in the airport that describe such attacks but they werent
in the airline security handbooks. The template wasnt there,
and without the template we stood little chance of connecting the
dots and that leads me to ask, Whose job is it to make templates
for terrorists attacks of the United States? Well neither
the CIA nor the FBI make very good ones, and in fact, its
not their job. Theyre better at finding out whos trying
to mount an attack or why theyre trying to mount an attack
than what type of attack they might mount. But it should be the
job of the new department of Homeland Security to do this template
creation. In the Defense Department which Im familiar with,
we have a method for doing that we call Red Teaming. A Red Team
projects itself imaginatively into the terrorists shoes and
tries to devise attack tactics, like commandeering into airlines
and using them like cruise missiles. And a Blue Team tries to define
countermeasures like armoring cockpit doors. We had such a red and
blue team when we designed the Stealth airplane and I think we need
this kind of red teaming for homeland security to devise templates.
Now, second to last point that Id make follows from the first
one on templates. Once you have a template, a good template, you
have a rich set of alternatives of kinds of dots you could look
for. The debate in Washington tends to think of dots in terms of
specific perpetratorsMiddle Eastern men, Al Queda cells and
specific plotsand uncovering those are the jobs of the CIA
and FBI. But if Im looking for a maker of a dirty bomb, to
take a recent example, I might do better to keep my eye on radiological
waste rather than suspicious, angry young Middle Eastern men. Such
surveillance of the means of terrorism as distinct from, or opposed
to surveillance of persons who might be terrorists is a rich source
of useful intelligence and it raises far fewer civil liberties issues
than surveillance of persons. To give you other examples, in recent
years we stated to guard fissile material better in Russia and to
look for those who are looking for fissile material. Weve
started looking for people looking at our embassies suspiciously,
we started making it necessary to register your identification before
youre allowed to buy dangerous germs, pathogens that could
make a biological terror weapon and so forth. All this is surveillance
of means. So to sum up, I think if we look more deeply at the types
of intelligence we need for Homeland Security and dont just
jump to the conclusion that we need more CIA, FBI type of intelligence
then we can discern some other kinds of intelligence activities
that will materially help us protect the homeland and that dont
raise civil liberties issues. I would suggest that thats the
kind of intelligence that this new agency ought to specialize in
and the CIA and FBI shouldnt be part of the new agency. They
should go about collecting their traditional kinds of dots and their
traditional kinds of ways under their traditional safeguards. And
if we do it all this way we can see the patterns in the night sky
and still have our civil liberties both.
Susan
King: Thanks very much Ash. Senator Gary Hart
Gary
Hart: I join my presenter colleagues in thanking Carnegie for
this opportunity and all of you for joining us. Id like to
make just about three points. On the issue of formation of a Department
of Homeland Security, the reason the U.S. Commission on National
Security reached the conclusion we did, that we should have this
kind of organization, was based on two findings. One, that terrorist
attacks, and weve found this as early as the fall of 99,
were almost inevitable given the pattern of events in the 90's and
intelligence reports, even at that relatively early date. Second,
we were not prepared for those attacks. The pieces of the puzzle
of both prevention and protection were scattered all over the federal
government. We found as many as four dozen different federal agencies
that had some part of the solution and they lacked coordination.
We also preliminarily concluded that an office in the White House
wouldnt suffice to bring those pieces together, make them
work together. The third part that leads you to the logic of a coordinated
agency is that everyones job changed on September the 11th,
2001. That is to say, those people who up to that point had been
collecting custom duties and escorting ships in and out of harbor
and preventing illegal aliens from coming in on our southern border
suddenly had a more imminent job and that was to protect America
against terrorists attacks. And that is the single unifying element
of all the twenty some pieces that the President has proposed to
be part of this new agency, and that is the logic, I think, of this
new department. Second, the proposal of both the President and Congressional
leaders for a new agency has been criticized because it didnt
solve the intelligence dilemma if you will, or the shift from a
cold war intelligence capability to a post-cold war 21st century
capability, and as Ash Carter said very well, I think, much needs
to be done in that area. But that is a separate proposition from
collecting all of those disparate pieces for prevention and protection
under a single command authority with accountability to the President,
Congress and the American people. This new agency doesnt solve
the AIDs dilemma, it doesnt clean up dirty air, it doesnt
do a lot of things, it certainly doesnt solve the problem
of intelligence reform and reorganization. But that is not an argument
for not going forward with this new agency. The third point Id
make is the nature of conflict in the 21st century is changing.
Weve had nations state wars for 300 to 400 years and we are
accustomed to conflicts in which people put on uniforms, meet each
other in the field and one side wins and the other side loses. That,
in the second half of the 20th century conflict, particularly given
the role of warfare, began to change and that mutated into terrorism.
So what we have now is a form of conflict with which we are not
familiar and for which we are not prepared. It is not war, its
certainly not traditional warfare and it is something other than
crime, and I happen to think that the attacks of last September
were closer to crime than to war. But in any case, to address the
issue of the so called balance between security and liberty, were
going to have to understand this changing nature conflict and deal
with it differently than we did with the Cold War, World War II,
the Korean war, or whatever else. I dont think that we will
reach a perfect balance between security and liberty. We havent
done it in 225 years. Thats why we have courts and thats
why we continually try to seek that balance so I would urge all
of you and others, our fellow citizens, not to expect a statute
or an executive that purports to reach a perfect balance between
security and liberty. This is going to be an evolving pendulum swinging
exercise thats going to go on for quite a long time.
Susan
King: Thank you very much Senator Hart. Chris Edley.
Christopher
F. Edley, Jr: Well that was a perfect segue to the central point
to that I want to make. Which is that while were reorganizing
and mobilizing for homeland security we should also construct a
practical means of addressing wartime threats to civil liberties
and civil rights. But line-drawing between security and liberties
carries three distinct risks. Officials and judges may draw the
line in a place were going to regret or second, they may not
fully disclose where they have actually drawn the line or finally,
where ever that line is drawn, government agents may violate it,
perhaps covertly with little ability for us to detect, correct or
punish the abuses. And these later risks of failure to disclose
and comply deserve Congressional action now. Executive abuses in
connection with the civil rights movement, the Vietnam War, Watergate,
may seem like ancient history to many young journalists and chest
pumping officials but Japanese American internment in World War
I sedition trials, I suppose, are even less relevant. Yet in the
long winter since 9-11, weve seen the indefinite detention
of unnamed legal aliens from Islamic nations at undisclosed locations
and for undeclared reasons. Weve seen confusion and controversy
about access to council and the privacy of such council. Thereve
been massive expansions of governmental authority to search and
surveil based on far weaker predicates of evidence or suspicion
than we demanded in decades past. Weve seen impassioned accusations
of racial profiling and equally vehement denials and, of course,
we will have unseen military tribunals, sort of life imitating the
art of JAG episodes. The challenge here is that the familiar safeguards
for liberty may not be up to circumstances. The first, dont
count on the courts. As Chief Justice Rehnquist warned in his prescient
1998 book on the subject, wartime courts strained to accommodate
security imperatives as declared by the political branches. Second,
dont count on political small p checks, strong
bipartisan consensus, together with the sheer rapt and reach of
the security effort. I think meaningful Congressional oversight
through the intelligence and other committees will likely be overwhelmed
and superficial and very differential when it comes to the delicate
matter of reconciling antidemocratic liberties with these felt political
imperatives.
Legislators
will have other fish to fry and sexier headlines to grab. And finally,
dont count on political with a capital P checks
because a watchful public will not rise up in protest when so much
of the war will be secret, mostly for good reasons. Without transparencies,
public discussion and debate will be ill informed if it happens
at all. So what to do? Well within the new agency, let me burden
you with a specific proposal. I believe Congress should create an
office of right-to-liberties or ORL, headed by a Senate confirmed
director with sweeping powers of a super Inspector General but focused
solely on monitoring compliance with civil liberties and civil rights
norms in the government-wide war on terrorism. It ought to be staffed
with capable career professionals who have the necessary security
clearances and expertise and that should have the power to subpoena
documents, interview witnesses under penalty of perjury and aggressively
audit both the policy makers and the foot soldiers. This office
should receive and address public compliance and very importantly,
I think it should make classified, quarterly reports to the Congress,
to the head of Homeland Security and to the President. It should
also issue an unclassified version of that report to the public
along with official responses for the affected government securities
agencies. I think that we may also consider giving this office a
part time bipartisan advisory board designed to build public confidence
in ORLs operations and thereby giving us added confidence
in it more generally. It would be Constitutionally permissible for
example, for an advisory board to be appointed jointly by the President,
the House and the Senate since the board wouldnt have executive
or legislative powers itself. Now, this bears emphasis, the office
of rights and liberties Im talking about would not be responsible
for deciding where to draw the line between our need for security
and our commitments to libertythats another debate.
The office would not, for example, have a roll in deciding whether
INF detainees should have access to council or when prisoners should
be transferred from civil to military jurisdiction. Instead, what
Im proposing is that this office would have the roll of ensuring
that when our war fighters do draw a line, the public knows where
it isno secret policies. And its further duty would be to
exercise with diligence and independence to ensure us that from
top to bottom, those waging the war know where the line is and obey.
That is, compliance without cover-ups. It seems to me that even
more than in conventional crime-fighting, in an environment where
we cynically see political agenda behind every move and where many
of the moves are altogether secret, weve got a special challenge
here, to create legitimacy for this effort. Cant we reach
an agreement to prevent abuses and promote legitimacy? Congress
has to secure things even more fundamental than our borders and
our power plants. Thats it.
Susan
King: Thanks very much
Questions
and Answers
Jessica
McKnight - Hispanic Link News Service: How would the stricter security
laws that will be placed on the United States effect Hispanic Immigration
to the United States?
Chris
Edley: Well Id be happy to start. I think that the general
point that Id make is that in the expanded U.S. Patriot Act
there certainly is going to be expanded scrutiny of visa applicants.
There will be new mechanisms whereby security agencies can intervene
in various kinds of immigrant processing immigrant services from
visa applications all the way through to naturalization and that
we should expect. I think in many respects thats the more
practical issue. The kinds of investigations, the risks of profiling
of people who are from problematic countries or who physically look
like people who are from problematic countries. In short the racial
and ethnic profiling that weve heard so much about. Theres
no question that this heightened scrutiny, this heightened level
of surveillance will likely have something of a chilling effect
and therell be some civil liberties issues. Thats why
I think as important as it is to focus on debating in a continuing
way, as Gary was saying earlier, the importance, the vital importance
to our democracy of having continued debates about what our liberties
are and how to strike the balance between liberty and security,
I think its also important to try to create new, procedural,
if you will, mechanisms to supervise, to monitor, to enforce whatever
the civil liberties forms are, in immigration and elsewhere.
Susan
King: Senator Hart, you mentioned the INF would have a new,
bigger job, or has one now post September11. Anything you want to
add?
Gary
Hart: Not really, I concur with Professor Edley. I think the
first conflict is already occurring between security and liberty
and that has to do with various kinds of detainees, people that
are being held often without charges, without council, without constitutional
protections. And the American people are willing to let this go
on for the time being because of continued and renewed threats.
How long they will permit this once the threat level goes down if
it does, remains to be seen. It will all have to do with the civil
liberties organizations and so forth and how much public clamor
they raise, or continue to raise. But I would, in terms which way
the country is going to go, and as I say, I think its going
to be a pendulum, as far into the future as we can see, going from
one extreme, possibly then correcting it, then going back again
as threat levels rise and fall. I think the thing to watch are the
detainees and how theyre treated and in a way, law enforcement,
in particular if I may say so, this Justice Department will get
away with as much as they can. If people dont raise a clamor
about the detainees and the disposition of their cases, then the
conclusion of the policy makers will be the American people
want us to forge ahead and do what needs to be done. That
will spill over into immigration issues as well.
Molly
Peterson - National Journal Technology: I was curious as to
how you see the role of technology in all of these issues and what
sorts of technology do you think we need to be especially watchful
of in terms of civil liberties?
Ash
Carter: Well obviously technology makes electronic surveillance
easier to the extent we all use more electronic means to communicate,
we reveal more about ourselves and create records about ourselves
that can later be part of an investigatory file, and the techniques
of data mining allow government to go through huge volumes of information
and sort out the wheat from the chaff, needles from the haystack
to a much greater degree than has been true in the past and some
of the measures taken since 9-11, legal measures, have allowed law
enforcement to avail themselves of means of technological surveillance
in the domestic circumstance that weve long applied overseas
where we have much looser roles than what the CIA, the Intelligence
Committee do to non-U.S. citizens than we do . . . what law enforcement
can do here at home. But my concern, and this isthe last questioner
asked as wellis not only some concern about the civil liberties
implications of these changes to the law but I, as I said in my
comments, Im not sure theyre efficacious, surveilling
all of us more. We need to get smarter about what it takes to protect
ourselves and it may be better to have people looking out for people,
as I said earlier, trying to get their hands on radiological materials,
than it is trying to find out whether all of us citizens have some
sinister motive. I think that in this period since 9-11 weve
been alarmed and weve been reachingevery agency, has
been reaching into its usual toolkit and trying to apply its usual
tools to counter terrorism and I think the whole point to having
a new department is that the toolkits we have, the agencies we have
are not the right capabilities. We need to get thoughtful and effective
at counterterrorism intelligence and simply broadening the authoritieseverybody
already has authoritiesis not only dangerous to civil liberties,
my main point is that its not likely to be effective.
Gary
Hart: Id just comment in two respects. What still strikes
me as fiendishly brilliant about the first attack, and I underscore
the first attack, was the use of instruments that are not ordinarily
thought off as weapons and converting them into weapons, namely
airliners, one could argue that airliners are high tech, this was
kind of low tech warfare. Its taking, otherwise non-weapon
systems, and making weapons out of them and I think that we ought
to keep the Red Team concept that Ash has outlined, which is quite
right. Whoever the Red Team is ought to be thinking of ways in which
non-weapons can be used to kill people. The other observation I
make is there is a forth form of terrorism, often not highlighted,
along with biological, chemical and nuclear and thats cyber
warfare. And here, our Commission found that centralized authority,
namely the government of the United States is least effective and
the private, the dispersed private sector will bare the greatest
burden. These are the critical infrastructure industries of communications,
of finance, of energy, of transportation who are going to be called
upon, or certainly ought to be called upon right now, to be doing
everything they can to harden their technological controls, namely
computer controls of those infrastructure systems.
Chris
Edley: I think that theres a very instructive example
from history and that is that we can draw on the liberties issue
and that is wire tapping. With the advanced technology that made
wire tapping both easier and more effective it really took decades
for our legal system, including Congress, to try to develop a set
of civil liberties safeguards that struck a balance, thats
seemed generally acceptable. We cant afford that long a delay
in trying to arrive at some kind of operational consensus as new
technologies emerge to can help us fight the war on terrorism. And
not withstanding the wisdom of Ash Carters suggestion about
the right way you think about surveillance, with the rush of technology,
we should expect that therell be an awful lot of pressure
to simply do more surveillance because we can.
Thomas
Brazaitis Cleveland Plain Dealer: Theres been some
talk during this conversation about the publics role and it
seems to me from the polls that Ive read that the public not
only is willing, its eager to have more surveillance because
the other guy might be doing something that will endanger my freedom.
How do you draw the line and how difficult is it going to be to
guarantee the liberties that were promised to us from the beginning
of this country, when the public itself is open to the idea of increased
government intrusion?
Gary
Hart: Two observations. From a legal point of view and professor
Edley may want to comment on this, theres always been a kind
of, not always but usually we rely in criminal cases on probable
cause and we require law enforcement agencies to surveil somebody
or particularly to wiretap them to demonstrate to some, usually
specially some designated judicial authority that probable cause
exists to justify that activity and I think that this is going to
be, theres already discussion about whether or not there ought
to be a similar system where terrorists are concernedspecial
courts, special judges, where theres 24-hour access in case
theres an emergency. To have to demonstrate to somebody outside
the law enforcement arena that this isnt just, you know, sort
of a dragnet kind of surveillance cant go on. The second thing
is that during the Cold War, what isnt correct is when people,
when it comes out that innocent people are being surveilled and
the public usually gets aroused. I was on what was called the Church
Committee in 75, 76, I think the first Congressional
look at our intelligence agencies and then the follow-on Oversight
Committee that was created as a result of that and what we found
were widespread abuses of constitutional rights, civil liberties,
on the grounds that we needed to do this to prosecute the Cold War.
The pendulum swung back, publicly and politically at that time.
And again, if you accept my idea that this is the way that the war
on terrorism is going to be run, what we will find out, if the oversight
committees and Congress are doing their jobs, the courts are doing
their jobs, that when law enforcement agencies, department of justice,
FBI, or whomever starts listening in on everybodys phone call
or reading their email, enough innocent people will be swept up
that there will be a public reaction.
Susan
King: Ash, If surveillance is one kind of intelligence youre
talking about, you feel its more meaningful, the public may
not be aware that that would be a more meaningful way of getting
intelligence than surveilling people.
Ash
Carter: 9-11 gives them a plain example. If you could go back
in timea year, which of the following, do you think would
be a more efficacious way of preventing 9-11? Option one is greater
surveillance of Middle Eastern men in the United States. Just set
aside the civil liberties issue now and just ask yourself in terms
of prevention, efficacious prevention, thats option one. Option
two is to lock cockpit doors and armor them, which we have of course,
subsequently done. I dont think theres anybody who wouldnt
say number two is better, it works, doesnt involve anybodys
civil liberties, and theres no needle in the haystack finding
a few bad guys among lots of people who are perfectly innocent.
And what was lacking before 9-11 was a thoughtful sense of what
Senator Hart said diabolically clever people might do. Had we had
that template, we could have prevented 9-11 without all the surveillance,
so Im not prepared to say yes to a lot of surveillance techniques
that dont seem to me likely to be efficacious. In so far as
the efficacy of surveillance of persons is concerned, 9-11 is also
somewhat misleading in the following sense. The people who did that
were Al Queda operatives, associated with a particular group whom
we had known for a decade existed and intended to do us harm. Lets
think about another attack, not 9-11 but the October anthrax attacks,
and there we need to bear in mind that that individual has still
not been found, after all these months. But that individual, it
seems quite likely to have been an American, sadly, a cleared American,
an American with a security clearance who worked in government laboratories
and had our trust. Now if individuals that close to the center of
what we are as a society can be aberrant and do destructive things,
Im not sure that were ever going to findroot outall
those weirdoes in our own midst. I dont think that thats
certainly something we need to try to do, but thats not the
main game here in terrorism. The main game, as Senator Hart said
earlier, look at the infrastructures, try to imagine where our weaknesses
are, what they can do to us and watch the means of terrorism. Dont
look for the people, or at least dont look for the people
only and completely ignore the means.
Ash
Carter: I wonder if I could follow up. On Gary Harts comment
about the Church investigation, which is an important milestone,
I think, that mostly dealt with, or I think, in large part dealt
with COINTELPRO, started under J. Edgar Hoover and kept going and
as a result, Attorney General Levi tightened, instituted restrictions
on the FBI. But very recently Attorney General Ashcroft has loosened
those restrictions without much of an outcry despite the Church
hearings, which gets at my point that whats to prevent politicians
who have the public behind them from pursuing, establishing a line
way beyond what civil libertarians would like?
Chris
Edley: That is precisely why I believe we need to try to create
some new institutional mechanisms that will bring more of these
questions of what is the norm and is there compliance with the norm
to public light. The Church Committee was an extraordinary and heroic
effort and we shouldnt require that in order to make progress.
We need to find a way to institutionalize this kind of scrutiny,
not to displace but to supplement what can be provided by the intelligence
committees and by the courts. The other point Id emphasize
here is that if you have this kind of ongoing scrutiny and reporting
taking place, then you might not have to wait as long for an accumulation
of mistakes, of scandals, of injustices, that a tighter feedback
loop and corrective mechanism could come into existence because
of the heightened public awareness of whats actually going
on. The last point Id make is Im particularly troubled
here by what Senator Hart said, things happen in war and the public
is in the mood ofat least for the momentof weve
got to everything we possibly can and were willing to be flexible,
or to accommodate compromises, civil liberties protections like
requirements for probable causes and the like. Earlier examples,
the Civil, World War I, World War II, and the like had a kind of
time-limited nature to them that this kind of ongoing war on terrorism
really doesnt, so Im quite concerned with that to the
extent we are forced to reconceive or to compromise on our civil
liberties. The duration of that compromise is very undefined and
that in itself means that we need some creative mechanisms to deal
with the challenges.
Tammy
Lytle - Orlando Sentinel: Thank you. Senator Hart, I wanted
to talk to you a little bit more about this pendulum swing youve
been talking about. For starters, just looking at this new balancing
act between civil liberties and security, how it compares to some
of the past ones that have been mentioned here. Is this more of
a crackdown on civil liberties, less, you know, where do you see
so you see that in the spectrum. And also, what you see going forward,
I mean, as you know, you all came up with some pretty in-hind sight
prescient suggestions which were basically ignored. Now its
gone in the other direction. How long will that yield for security
keep-up or are you going to see the public sort of shift back and
say no, we have to change our priorities here?
Gary
Hart: I think there is a cold War analogy here, as a child of
the Cold War. We know that the intensity of the confrontation waxed
and waned in the American public mind and a lot of it had to do
with what the insiders buzzword, threat assessment, you know,
what were the Soviets rattling their sabers, were they doing somebody
in Cuba or somewhere else and things would heat up and the American
public would say, do whatever it takes to protect us. Theres
a scene in a movie that keeps recurring in my mind, Three Days of
the Condor with Robert Redford, and at the end of it he confronts
the CIA director of operations or some second level person over
the issue of protecting the oil supplies and the CIA man says to
Redford, The American people dont want to know what
we do, they just want us to do it. To protect their oil supplies
and not tell them how. And I think thats very central
to kind of the American psyche. If we keep having these periodic
threat warnings, such as the July 4th and they keep recurring about
every two to three weeks or whatever, then I think the American
people will tend toward, to say to their policymakers and their
elected representatives, do whatever it takes to prevent another
terrorist attack and if you step on some toes or you lock up some
dark skinned people, then so be it. Its when they start rounding
up some white-skinned people that the shoe begins to squeak a little
bit and I dont think were going to find a balance, a
lot will depend on whether we have another attack, I think we will,
I think it will be sooner rather than later. And how often these
things recur, and if they recur with considerable frequency then
well go into a, well suspend a lot of liberties.
Susan
King: Chris or Ash
Chris
Edley: That was 110% right.
Ash
Carter: I agree
Tammy
Lytle: Looking at this whole issue of what you touched on, racial
profiling, I mean it was certainly, you know, in disrepute not very
long ago and now you have people saying, Well, thats
what we get for political correctness. How do you respond
to those kind of comments.
Chris
Edley: There was never any deep agreement on the definition
of racial profiling. I worked on this issue quite a bit in the Clinton
White house and you had different people within the Administration
saying to a person, saying that they opposed racial profiling. Im
willing to get very specific about what its definition was and certainly
Im will to say, Well never do it. So I think
that theres been talking out of both sides of the mouth with
respect to racial profiling. I think that Senator Hart has said
something that is a deep truth about our democracy when he said,
Were never going to have a balance. I think thats
right. What were going to have is attention and its
in the Constitution and its in our civic life and its
good that its in our civic life because its the kind
of battle that we need to keep fighting. The real danger is when
we stop arguing about it. So that one side or the other so dominates
that important values are compromised if not lost. So in that sense
I think that what we have to strive to create is enough public understanding
of what those trade-offs are and what is in fact going on. Part
of our difficulty with the detainees, for example is that the agencies
themselves may not know completely what is going on in all of these
detention facilities. I remember the Civil Rights Commission, we
held a hearing on this back in the Fall, we had some INS and DOJ
officials there and we asked them about access to council and they
said, Oh but the detainees, they do have a right to council.
Then we had lawyers from the public interest groups saying, Well
but we dont even know who the people are and we dont
know where they are and nobodys called us. How do you know
that these detainees are fully informed about what their rights
are? So all of the mystery and all of the secrecy that surrounds
the way in which the war is conducted can have a corrosive effect
on the legitimacy of the war-fighting effort and its hard
to see how thats to anybodys advantage.
Ash
Carter: Can I add something here? We keep talking about this
as though we dont, as though its completely hypothetical,
that we dont have any evidence. We do have evidence. We have
two attacks, one in September and one in October. In the matter
of racial profiling, I think a fair analysis of the evidence is
that racial profiling would not have helped, either in 9- 11 or
in the case of the anthrax mailer. In the case of 9-11, the people
who boarded these airplanes did so with box cutters which they were
perfectly entitled to have, they bought cash tickets at the last
minute, which they also were at that time, did not raise any suspicions.
They boarded an airplane where the air crew left the cockpit door
open and had instructions that if anybody took the airplane over
they were to be passive about it because the person taking over
the airplane probably only wanted to go to Cuba. And so what went
wrong on 9-11 was not that there were some Middle Eastern men roaming
around the country. There are, there will be and no amount of profiling
was going to help, there were other things wrong and the special
thing that was wrong was that no one in our FAA had anticipated
this kind of attack and taken measures against it. Likewise, racial
profiling wouldnt have helped with the anthrax mailer. The
anthrax mailer, as I said, we dont know who it is yet, but
the evidence is accumulating that it was a trusted American who
did this and trusted Americans can be terrorists also. Not all terror
will originate outside of our borders, with people who are foreigners.
So I think if we look at these two incidents and we were just coldly
analytical about it, we conclude that racial profiling would not
have prevented these two incidents. We should be looking at other
things to protect ourselves and not only conceiving of this dilemma
as one between eroding liberties and protecting liberties. Much
of what we can do to protect ourselves has nothing whatsoever to
do with liberties but only with good sense and thoughtful prudence
about the small fraction of humanitythe American and non-Americanwho
will resort to this kind of thing over time.
Glenda
Holste - St. Paul Pioneer Press: This is for Professor Edley.
We were talking earlier about the lack of history, even among reporters
on these cycles that weve been discussing. What is the possibility
for a short reading list for people to understand the Alien and
Sedition Acts, the Civil War, etc., etc., when things went wrong,
what happened.
Chris
Edley: I think thats a fabulous idea and a short reading
list and an executive summary because we know how busy journalists
are, I think thats great. We ought to give some thought to,
maybe the Carnegie Corporation might undertake to put together such
a compendium and commission a synthesis essay of some sort.
Susan
King: At the back of the report we bulleted some of the historic
moments there. I will get a list and well follow it up with
an email to everyone thats on the call.
Chris
Edley: I think that Gary Harts example of the Church Commission
is one of my favorite examples and because of what let to the creation
of the Committee and its aftermath. There is much more to be learned,
I think, from the 20th and even the 19th century and let me also
add that I think there are things to be learned by looking at the
experience of trying to control misconduct by a police departments.
Tom
Brune Newsday: Thank you. Since the first week of this
new world were in, being under the threat of terrorism that
September 11th brought to us, the Attorney General repeatedly said
that he has made a paradigm shift with the Justice Department which
includes the FBI and several other law enforcement agencies. And
that paradigm shift is away from prosecution of criminals who are
past acts, to prevention of future acts, and that shifts a lot of
things from one side of the board to the other. Could you address
that? Do you think thats rhetoric one, and two if its
real, what are the issues that are involved in the switch from prosecution
to prevention?
Ash
Carter: Im entirely with the Attorney General in this
matter, and by the way the FBI director, Mueller, is as well. I
think the first person who pointed out sometime early in October
that he found that the disproportionate effort of his agency after
9-11 was to solve the crime of 9-11, not to prevent it from happening
again, and thats the prevailing culture in the FBI and its
an appropriate one when dealing with crime as traditionally conceived.
But our basic approach to crime is to allow it to occur and then
catch the people who did it so they cant do it again and as
a lesson to those who might do it in the future. But when youre
talking about terrorism on a scale of 9-11, you cant take
that attitudethat youre just going to let it happen
and then catch the people who did it. You have to be preventive.
And I think theyre absolutely right to get the FBI to do that.
Now youre absolutely right that thats a very big cultural
change within the FBI and it is a cultural change that has hazards
in it. The hazards that weve have been talking about, an agency
that sets itself the job of finding out whether people are thinking
about crimes and planning crimes, before they commit crimes, thats
rather a different matter than catching people with a gun in their
hand standing in the bank with a bag of money in their hands. In
the second case theres no question about whos guilty,
or little question and in the first case a lot of civil liberties
issues are raised. I however do believe and support the Attorney
General and the FBI Director, that theyre on to exactly the
right thing, there has to be at least a piece of the FBI which has
this preventive culture.
Gary
Hart: Leaving 9-11 aside, it interests me that America drifted
for a decade after the end of the Cold War in 91 without some
major institutional changes including particularly a DOD in our
defense strategies, tactics, doctrines, force structures, and in
our intelligence communities and it was probably the failure of
political leadership both in the White House and Congress. These
agencies should have done these things on their own to understand
the new world of the late 20th early 21st century and begin to make
the institutional and structural adjustments and doctrinal adjustments
for this new world. But were not a nation thats very
good at anticipating, we are better at reacting and therein lies
a subject that Carnegie or somebody ought to explore at greater
lengths. Its a bit like the FBI, wait till the crime
happens then solve it, instead of trying to anticipate and think
who might have a motive for doing the crime, and lets cut
them off at the pass. And there is a huge problem that needs to
be addressed and that is the reform of the intelligence structures
of America for this new world and Director Mueller has begun that
with the FBI. Kind of in the wake of this new department being created
and so who knows how strongly thats going to be pursued. These
are great bureaucracies with their own traditions and legacies that
dont want to change very much.
Susan
King: I just have to put one plug in. Ash Carter runs a preventive
defense project at Harvard. He is one of our Grantees. So we do
raise a few of these.
Tom
Burn: As part of this new preventive matter, there was the revision
of the domestic guidelines that the Attorney General Levi laid in
place in response to the revelations around the Church Committee.
In addition to that the Attorney General has spoken about the need
to disrupt terrorist supply plots. Dont those words have some
kind of resonance with many of the things that were uncovered by
the Church Committee in terms of disruption, prevention, prediction
of activities, and what about the First Amendment implications of
surveilling and maybe infiltrating or using informants to spy on
political or religious groups?
Ash
Carter: If I could start off, I would feel better about the
FBI embarking in this new cultural mode. Were there the intelligence
templates that I referred to earlier but what Im afraid of
and what one sees in the absence of the template is casting a big
careless over-broad surveillance net which doesnt catch anything
but which has other hazards. Now one nice thing about the Department
of Homeland Security which, if its established, it should
do, is by having the mission of protecting the homeland. Developing
these templates, developing protective techniques and tactics for
every one of our infrastructures, airlines, energy grid, and so
forth and being a customer for the FBIs intelligence the way
DOD is a customer for the intelligence community. A good customer
says, Heres what I need, heres the kind of information
that would be useful to me. And we will find that this kind
of throwing the net too wide is not only odious, but not useful.
I think in the end if you have a good, well thought out homeland
security program of a kind all of us on this call have been arguing
for, then thats the way to tame the FBI. You focus them where
their surveillance can be effective rather than simply beating on
them as were now doing, to protect us from terrorism. They
have no idea how to protect us from terrorism because they havent
worked a lot on this problem, they dont have good templates,
and theyll just do more and more surveillance but they wont
turn anything up. So I dont think the FBI, by itself, can
be expected to do this right. There has to be a thought out homeland
security program which steers them to do the kind of surveillance
that is useful, and that kind of surveillance will, I predict, not
be nearly as threatening to civil liberties as an ill conceived
and over-broad kind of surveillance.
Chris
Edley:
I think we may, as our hour wanes, have a little bit of a disagreement
at last. Ash perhaps puts more confidence in the possibility that
rational policy directed management of this war will substantially
minimize the risk of abuses. I dont have any doubt that it
will help but, I think its not going to help nearly enough.
The example that looms large in my mind are the disclosures, the
revelations about the widespread FBI tactics behind the civil rights
movement. Going to the NAACP meetings, going to meetings in the
basements of black churches, the wiretapping of Martin Luther Kings
phone and all the rest of it. I think it would be a mistake to simply
chalk all of that up to the animus of the FBI Director as opposed
to thinking about it in broader cultural or institutional terms.
So now, today, the question is, how much domestic spying, or surveillance
to dress it up, would we expect in mosques around the country? At
what point does the first perfectly legitimate First Amendment expression
of concerns trigger some kind of intensive scrutiny? And the difficulty
with the revised guidelines by the Attorney General, or one major
difficulty with them is that I think in part that the public, for
the time being seems to be willing to go along and its only
going to be if we get clear information off what the implications
are, what the consequences are, what kinds of mosques, how many
mosques, based on what predicate of suspicion, with what consequences
and it is getting at that kind of information that will eliminate
the consequences of drawing the lines. Where theyre being
drawn that over time will propel this pendulum, the swing of the
pendulum, that Senator Hart was talking about before. If we dont
create mechanisms to create that information in that oversight capacity
and to enforce obedience to the law then I think were inviting
the kinds of abuses weve seen from these various agencies
in past decades. Simply urging or expecting that policy rationality
will do the whole job, thats not going to work. Itll
do a substantial part of it, I agree, but I think we need more.
Paul
Owens - Orlando Sentinel: As Im sure youre all aware,
where the Administrations proposal for a Homeland Security
Agency will exempt the agency, certain activities of the Agency,
from Federal Freedom of Information Act and would also exempt the
Agency from Whistle Blower protection or, and Im curious Senator
Hart to whether or not your commission examines those issues and
how the Commission came out.
Gary
Hart: We did not, with any specificity, I cant assume
to speak for the other Commissioners, Ill just give you my
own view. I think that we didnt issue a kind of general statement
that nothing could or should be done in the defense of this country
that would jeopardize American Constitutional rights and civil liberties
full stop. Having said that, then the real work begins of case-by-case
decisions. I think the two key institutions here are the Congress
and if I may say so, the press. If the Congressional Oversight Committees
do their job, whichever committee ends up overseeing the new Department,
if it does its job aggressively and if the media and the press,
and particularly the editorial side of the press, does its job of
asking tough questions and being insistent about it and doing its
traditional job at its best of protecting Americans rights,
that would be more therapeutic than anything I can think of. If
the press is passive, however, and waits for the next stand or something
like that and doesnt hold the decision makers to account,
case-by-case, I mean. Its got to be more aggressive in my
judgment on these oldest range of civil liberties issues than it
has been on its detainees to date then I think those are the best
correctives we can hope for. I dont think that an exemption
from Freedom of Information Act or the whistle blower protections
or any of those things are necessary to protect this country from
terrorists.
Tammy
Lytle - Orlando Sentinel: Senator Hart, the Commission that
you did, given all the experience you had looking at that, what
do you think of the way that Bush out structured this new department
and where do you come down on this argument about where should this
domestic spying capability bein the CIA, in the FBI, in this
new department?
Gary
Hart: Your reverse order. I think Ash came very close to having
it exactly right. This outfit, the new Department has to have a
kind of a high intensity for the ability to accept the collection
agenda. To tell the collectors, agency, bureau and others what it
needs to know and then be able to scrutinize and analyze that information
better than almost anybody else around with a finer tuned antenna
than probably any capability we presently have. But is certainly,
in my judgment, we dont need another collection capability.
That is to say, you dont need this new department being in
competition with existing agencies for collection, that is just
more duplication, overlap and confusion. But I do think in terms
of the security of this country domestically, it has to have finer
and more intense capability of analyzing information for the terrorist
threat than anybody else in our government. Our Commission did not
have the mandate to design the new agency. The closest we came was
to say the Federal Emergency Management Agency should be the core
base for the new agency, that the three uniform border patrol agencies,
Border Control, Customs and Coast Guard ought to be part of it,
and then we left it to policymakers to fill in the blanks and from
my own personal point of view, I think the President came very close
to getting it right.
Susan
King: Thank you very much.
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