APFNPreparing for the Terrorist Threat (Dec. 2000)Thu Oct 9 15:38:29 200364.140.158.177Preparing for the Terrorist Threat(Jon Basil Utley) (23-Dec-00 14:14:57) http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3520.html IT'S THE FRAUD, STUPID (NY POST) (23-Dec-00 14:37:35) http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3521.html Meet Your Enemy (Joseph Sobran) (23-Dec-00 14:43:02) http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3522.html Re: Preparing for the Terrorist Threat(DON HOLLAND) (23-Dec-00 14:56:00) http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3523.html DEATH BY GOVERNMENT (APFN) (23-Dec-00 15:30:08) http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3524.html Re: Anyone recall the Reichstag Fire? (Marc V. Ridenour) (23-Dec-00 16:23:12) http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3525.html Re: Preparing for the Terrorist Threat http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3526.html (Patricia Doyle) (23-Dec-00 16:52:27) Re: Preparing for the Terrorist Threat http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3527.html (D.) (24-Dec-00 21:37:28) http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/12-27-00/mbs.cgi.3527.html Preparing for the Terrorist ThreatSaturday, 23-Dec-00 14:14:57 24.14.28.77 writes: Preparing for the Terrorist Threat By Jon Basil Utley http://www.InsideTheWeb.com/messageboard/mbs.cgi?acct=mb1075995 A congressional advisory panel reports that a national strategy is needed to defend against terrorist attacks, but some plans would have us give up our civil liberties. The potential for terrorist attacks inside U.S. borders is a serious, emerging threat,” warns Republican Virginia Gov. James Gilmore. Gilmore is chairman of a congressionally mandated panel studying the changing threat to U.S. security and what kind of responses the nation will have to make. What’s needed, according to Gilmore, is a “truly national strategy” with the creation of a “National Office to Combat Terrorism” reporting to the president. Moreover, the national office would be overseen by a new joint congressional committee. The implications for the future of American society, the way it is organized, and the implications for civil liberties are just now beginning to be examined by a number of groups. Gilmore, who is chairman of the Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons of Mass Destruction, emphasizes that groups seeking to influence U.S. policy or perpetrate revenge have the capability to inflict serious actual and psychological damage on the nation. “America is prepared but can become better prepared,” he says, warning that no attack on U.S. cities would “dissuade America from its role as world leader in an unfriendly world” nor cause “any change in U.S. foreign policy.” The report warns terrorists of the U.S. government’s great ability to detect those responsible for past terrorist acts. Gilmore’s commission tackles head on the difficult problems involved in cracking down on potential terrorists and the “protection of civil liberties.” The report quotes the warning of Ben Franklin, “They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” It insists that troops involved in domestic actions against mass terrorism must be under civilian control, but it does not address practical issues such as sunset provisions for seizures, specification of any rights of appeal or other problematic questions. Budget needs, legalities involved in the triage of victims, resources to support treatment of mass casualties and/or panic flight from cities are left to be addressed by the new national office. However, other experts are looking at these problems. The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington think tank, finds that “an effective response cannot be undertaken unless the necessary legal framework is in place” and that the “health arena presents the most urgent need for legal reform.” CSIS has just concluded a long, detailed study, Combating Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Terrorism. But perhaps the most far-ranging look at the legal structures to deal with a new type of warfare took place at the American Bar Association’s meeting last month on national-security law. Attended by top military and civilian antiterrorism officials, the gathering, which takes place every year, focuses on what specialists call catastrophic terrorism (CT). ABA’s legal experts concluded that federal and state governments had the legal authority to take pretty much any action they thought necessary in the event of a major terrorist nuclear or biological attack. Nevertheless, they found that the various levels of government all were woefully unprepared and likely to work at cross-purposes against each other. Many of the laws on the books, they discovered, were conflictive and contradictory. Hospitals, for example, were described as subject to a “host of legal issues.” Administrators would face existing law on equal access that requires complete, free care for every individual brought to an emergency room, even if hundreds or thousands of citizens suddenly were injured or ill. According to Tara O’Toole, deputy director of Johns Hopkins Center for Civilian Bio-defense Studies, no triage decisions are permissible under current law; hospitals could face the threat of catastrophic lawsuits, even years later, if they operated on any basis except attending all patients equally. She also described other problems: More than 1,000 hospitals have been closed during recent years because of competition, and most work on a “just in time” basis for purchasing drugs and staff services. Thus there is very little redundancy or “surge capacity” in the entire U.S. hospital system. Another speaker questioned the priorities of the vast amount of new spending on civil defense. The New York Times reported that civil-defense spending has totaled approximately $10 billion so far, but funding has been directed toward training and protecting government personnel and facilities with only 2 percent, or about $200 million, for civilian preparations such as storing medicines (antibiotics cure anthrax if started early) and other measures. However, the Gilmore report states that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta recently launched the Epidemic Information Exchange to “simplify and expedite … public-health information between CDC and state health departments.” CDC also has contracted for 40 million doses of smallpox vaccine. O’Toole described how New York City’s health department still uses pins on a map to track problems and has very limited resources to prepare for any disaster. The city of Denver practiced a mock plague attack last June where the infected would be isolated and allowed to wait for death, a practice that would be contrary to existing laws. She described how biologists were not accustomed to dealing with government and often were “aghast at the slow pace” of bureaucratic response. Juliette Kayyem of Harvard University’s School of Government presented a paper on “The Law of Catastrophic Terrorism.” Declaring that “domestic preparedness must include legal preparedness,” Kayyem boldly set aside civil-liberties issues. She complained that many outdated laws go back one or two centuries but are almost never taken off the books because politicians are afraid to appear weak on terrorism. The 1996 Anti-Terrorism Act updated some old anticommunist laws to apply them to terrorists. It was followed by the Comprehensive Anti-Terrorism Act of 2000. But broadly speaking, CT is affected by the rules of war, a possible declaration of martial law by the president, the Bill of Rights and the laws of disasters (which mainly are intended to cover situations created by hurricanes and earthquakes). Kayyem drew up a list of legal powers which authorities might seek and current laws which, in the opinion of disaster officials, prohibit or curtail necessary government authority. Her analysis makes a chilling list, which includes: seizure of community and private assets — including food, water, vehicles, as well as possible price controls on necessities; control of transportation terminals, including airplanes, railroads, trucks and buses; utilization of the military for civil control; control of access to communications — including restricting media access to damaged or threatened areas; legal issues relating to quarantine; reinterpretation of criminal-law constitutional standards for warrants and searches which should be made broader to allow for widespread surveillance; warrantless detention of individuals for short periods of time — something that is allowed now only for resident aliens; investigation of groups before the requirement of “reasonable suspicion” is met; granting broad state authority over corpses to perform autopsies relating to cause of death; ordering production of necessary goods; and ordering citizens to take medicines. Scott Stucky, general counsel of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said that there was “solid legal authority to use the military for CT.” He said that the “Posse Comitatus Act” was mainly “smoke and mirrors,” that it was statutory, not constitutional, and that any penalties under it only could apply to the civilians who ordered the military to act, but not against soldiers themselves. Stucky said that the military was not trained for domestic actions and not at all in the field of constitutional liberties and civil rights. With regard to press freedoms, the panelists stated that, with the Internet, government would find it impossible to limit press autonomy. Stephen Dycus, a professor at Vermont Law School, said that a president could declare martial law but that it was not clear if that would allow press controls and closing down of offensive Internet sites within the United States. O’Toole argued against censorship, stating that it would be vitally important for the government to have credibility with the public. Kayyem argued that censorship would be necessary to prevent mass hysteria and for efforts to control civilian exodus. Jon Basil Utley is the Robert A. Taft Fellow in Constitutional and International Studies at the Ludwig von Mises Institute. He is a former associate editor of The Times of the Americas and worked in South America as a correspondent for Knight-Ridder Newspapers. ============================================================================ "The American Dream" Fire 'em all! http://www.apfn.org/apfn/dream.htm "We the People" are quick to condemn Hitler and the German people for the holocaust. It was a terrible thing, by the murder of six million Jewish people during World War II does not compare to the sin we in America condone, while worshipping the "god of choice". FORTY MILLION children sacrificed (MURDERED), since one misguided, unconstitutional, ruling was made by our Supreme Court. http://www.the-oil-patch.com/archive/child2000html We believe Patriots should rule America.... Please join in the fight with us in seeking TRUTH, JUSTICE AND FREEDOM FOR ALL AMERICANS.... http://www.apfn.org/ American Patriot Friends Network (APFN) http://www.apfn.org APFN EMAIL LIST SUBSCRIBE/UNSUBSCRIBE IN SUBJECT LINE TO: apfn@apfn.org APFN-1 YahooGroups: Subscribe: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/apfn-1/join Unsubscribe: apfn-1-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com APFN CONTENTS: http://www.apfn.org/old/apfncont.htm APFN MSG BOARD: http://disc.yourwebapps.com/Indices/149495.html Public Education System vs Christian Home Schooling Home School News, Info. & Links http://www.ordination.org/homeschool.htm Jon Basil Utley Attack by airport police Jim Peggs, Thu Oct 9 22:49 Investigate The CIA Cliff Kincaid, Thu Oct 9 17:11 CIA leak spotlight falls on career prosecutor LEAK-GATE, Thu Oct 9 17:42 The Loss Of American Moral Authority RFE/RL, Thu Oct 9 16:13 The Israel lobby , Martin Peretz, Richard Cummings, Thu Oct 9 17:58 Clintons’ Pardoned Buddy Spied For Israel Gordon Thomas, Thu Oct 9 23:01
Main Page - Saturday, 10/11/03
Message Board by American Patriot Friends Network [APFN]
APFN MESSAGEBOARD ARCHIVES