Thursday, April 24, 2008
LAPD begins program to report espousal of non-criminal extremist views
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/los_angeles_metro/la-me-counterterror14apr14,1,4854617.story
LAPD leads the way in local counter-terrorism
A commander's checklist is a link from traditional police work to intelligence to combat terror attacks.
By Josh Meyer, Los Angeles Times, April 14, 2008
Since 9/11, authorities have urged local police to become the front line in domestic counter-terrorism, gathering street-level intelligence about crimes and suspicious activities that could foretell another attack.
But for various reasons it has not worked out that way. The nation's 17,000 local law enforcement agencies have gathered information in their own haphazard ways or not at all, authorities and experts say. Most police officers, after all, are trained to gather evidence to prove crimes, not to cultivate and analyze intelligence to prevent terrorists from striking.
Now, however, a Los Angeles Police Department official has devised a solution that is considered so cheap, so easy to implement and so innovative that federal authorities in Washington are considering making it a national model for all police departments.
Cmdr. Joan T. McNamara, who heads the LAPD's Counter-Terrorism and Criminal Intelligence Bureau, revised the investigative report that officers must fill out for crimes, real or suspected, adding a section where they can describe in detail any kind of potential terrorist-related activity. In addition, officers are now required to fill out the forms if they observe suspicious activity, whether or not a crime was committed.
Until now, no one thought to codify the suspicious activities usually associated with terrorism in order to look for patterns and trends, McNamara said in an interview.
In recent months, all LAPD officers have been receiving training in what kinds of suspicious activities to look for, based on a 65-item checklist that McNamara and her small staff drew up. The checklist includes indications that someone conducted surveillance on a government building, tried to acquire explosives, openly espoused extremist views or abandoned a suspicious package.
McNamara also included a box on the form that must be checked if any of those suspicious activities are listed in the report. If the box is checked, a copy of the form is forwarded to specially trained analysts in her intelligence bureau, who then enter the information into a database that can be used by other law enforcement agencies.
McNamara, a 26-year veteran and highly decorated police commander, is new to counter-terrorism. After making a name for herself in narcotics investigations, she was brought in to head the high-profile counter-terrorism bureau last April by Deputy Chief Michael Downing. He said he wanted "fresh eyes" to see how the LAPD could better institutionalize counter-terrorism within the entire police force, from the front line officers up the chain of command.
McNamara brought her idea to Downing and Police Chief William J. Bratton. They were immediately supportive, she said, because it played into their existing campaign to transform police officers from traditional crime fighters into intelligence-gatherers.
Bratton, a former New York Police Department chief, was especially enthusiastic, she said, because he had been a pioneer in the use of statistics and standardized reporting to analyze and combat crime trends, a process known as Compstat.
After the LAPD consulted with officials in Washington and civil liberties experts, Bratton issued a special order March 5 that formally required all officers to report incidents "potentially related to foreign or domestic terrorism," using McNamara's program.
By then, the U.S. Directorate of National Intelligence was interested. This month, it dispatched teams of experts to Boston and Chicago to see if the program can be implemented in those cities as a precursor to a much larger rollout. Another team will soon visit Miami.
Maj. Michael Ronczkowski, head of Miami's Homeland Security Bureau, was one of many law enforcement officials who praised the LAPD program at a two-day law enforcement intelligence conference in Los Angeles, which ended Friday.
"It's about time someone at the local level took the initiative to be this proactive," said Ronczkowski, who is also a member of the Major Cities Chiefs Assn.'s Intelligence Commanders Group, a national law enforcement advocacy group. "What L.A. is doing could impact the entire country."
josh.meyer@latimes.com
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
New Norman Finkelstein Inteview
Despite his lack of systematic class analysis, Norman Finkelstein always has some insightful things to say about
Nevertheless, Red Eye is curious what Finkelstein thinks will transpire in the January 2009 and afterwards when the new administration will receive a "report" from the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and Brookings Institution which will be Walt-Mearsheimer light -- in other words more pressure on
Power, Politics & Scholarship
Znet,
By Norman Finkelstein, Jake Hess, and Margaree Little
Norman Finkelstein's ZSpace Page
The following interview took place on April 15 and 16, 2008, in
JH/ML: You have described the two-state solution as "The option which is embraced by the whole of human kind, apart from Israel and the United States... that is return to the June 1967 borders, mutual recognition between an Israeli and Palestinian State and some sort of mutually acceptable resolution of the refugee question." It's obvious why
NF: Well, it's not really why obvious why
So, I mean, even the premise of the question of the question is not entirely clear. Why are they persistent? There have been basically three theories put forth -- two, and then I have my own view on the topic. One is the ideological one, that these people are Zionists and they're not going to concede any of Eretz
My own view is, I don't really think it's either. I think it's more of a political issue. It has nothing to do with security and never has. The mentality of the Israelis is that you don't concede anything to Arabs, because when you give them an inch, they're going to take a mile. So once you have something you don't give it up unless you're forced to leave. And they control the occupied territories and they will not budge until they're kicked out.
You take the case of the Israeli occupation of southern
So, let's just now get to the question. I don't see any obvious reason why
JH: How does Professor Chomsky respond to that?
NF: You see, the thing is, with any political issue, you can always find a quote/unquote ‘rational explanation' for anything. Benjamin Franklin famously said, ‘What a wonderful thing reason is, because you can find a reason for anything.' It's sort of like, in politics, you can always find a ‘rational explanation.' But the rational explanation might not be the right explanation, for a simple reason: Because you can have, in any given situation, multiple rational explanations. [In the case of
So Professor Chomsky will give rational explanations; he'll say the water resources, he'll say land, he'll say it increases
You can make rational explanation why Rumsfeld or Cheney should be communists. I'm serious. You read Marx's Grundrisse, and he says the most alienated person in society is not the worker; he says the most alienated person in society is the capitalist, because they turn into money-making machines. There's the famous line by Marx -- he was very poor and was given an option for some sort of job -- and he said, ‘Come hell or high water, I'm not going to let the bourgeoisie turn me into a money-making machine.' So you can make an argument that ‘rationally,' every capitalist should be a communist, because then they wouldn't be so alienated. I'm serious; that's the kind of problem with these kinds of arguments. You can make ‘rational arguments' to prove anything.
JH/ML: We have a related follow-up question. During a recent talk at the
NF: Well, it's basically what I said before: I think the lobby is influential on the local issue of the Israel-Palestine conflict. So one example is the whole issue of the [Israeli] withdrawal [from the occupied territories]. If you look at the record right after the June 1967 war, of course the
But the Americans wanted a full withdrawal by the Israelis; they were very clear about that. You can look at the internal record - and it's now available - and you'll see the Americans are telling the Israelis, ‘You have to withdraw.' But every time it came to a point of a clash with
Where there are big issues are at stake, yes, the
If [continued Israeli occupation] became a real, live political issue endangering US interests, the
JH: Can you give an example of an issue over which the
NF: You saw, for example, 1991, with this whole issue with this guy Shamir. They really couldn't stand Shamir; he was absolutely obnoxious, Yitzhak Shamir. I think they called him ‘That little shit.' He was this ideologue, very provincial, and he was very insistent about being in your face, about expanding the settlements. Well, there's the famous scene. The [Israeli's] ask for the ten-billion dollar loan, in 1991, in order to subsidize the settlement of the Russian Jews. Bush said no, and then he has the famous scene in Capitol Hill, he said, ‘It's just one lonely guy - me -- against thousands of lobbyists.' And everyone knew who he was talking about, he was talking about AIPAC and ‘The Jews'. It's very interesting what happened; the lobby did nothing. No Senators wanted to go on board - AIPAC was trying to push through a bill, denouncing Bush, because he was ‘making an obvious allusion to Jews undermining US national interests' - Senators didn't want to sign it; no. They knew - Bush, Baker - now, they're serious. And [the lobby] shut up. You know the next thing that happened? Shamir was defeated, because the Israelis knew too. This guy [was] getting in [the
When the
I was very struck - Miller's a complete imbecile, of that there can be no question - what struck me is really interesting. There was a famous line by Baker. He was told, ‘If you block the ten-billion dollar loan, you're going to lose the Jews in the next election.' And the famous line which everyone quotes is - and Baker replied, "Fuck the Jews." It struck me. Miller -- and [his book] is a ‘tell all' - doesn't mention it. All he does is praise Baker; ‘Baker is tough, Baker is not an anti-Semite.' These people are completely loyal, faithful servants of power. The notion they're working for
JH: Yes - the line was "Fuck the Jews."
NF: Yes. Miller doesn't mention it, because it would be very hard for him to reconcile his complete toadying to Baker in the book with that line. And that's why Mearsheimer and Walt - I like Mearsheimer, very nice guy - but they totally misread these people. They have only one loyalty: to power and privilege. That's their loyalty. And they don't derive their power and privilege from this little village called
JH/ML: You've said the following about the 2006 invasion of
NF: That may have been slightly exaggerated because there is, in my opinion, a complete confluence and overlapping of interests between the
There was a real fear among Arabs that if Hezbollah were defeated it was going to mean a big problem for
There was a confluence of interests, but it was a confluence of interests that was controlled by the
JH/ML: You've also said the following about the 2006 Israeli invasion of
NF: Whenever there's an independent, modernizing force in the Arab world, the Israelis get terrified, because the fact of the matter is - you don't need to be a mathematical genius to know this - numbers are not on their side. Resources are not on their side, if you take the whole Arab world amassed. And
If you go back and read David Ben-Gurion, he used to say his biggest fear was an ‘Arab Ataturk.' And they were terrified that someone was going to come along and modernize the Arab world. Ben-Gurion's view was, ‘They'll never accept us; we're a foreign implant, we came in here by force, and so the only way to remain here is by keeping them backward.' And so whenever there is a modernizing force that emerges in the Arab world - an independent force - they become terrified, and they want to knock it out. That's what they did with Naseer, and that's what they're trying to do with
These are formidable powers, whatever you think of their ideologies. It's so funny to read the [Miller] book; they love King Hussain. Sure; you know, the British used to call him ‘Our plucky little King.' They love King Hussein, they love Sadat, they love anyone who is slavishly pro-American - whatever it means - pro-Western. But anyone who is independent? It's funny; they hate them, but they respect them. Believe me, they respect Hezbollah; they hate them, but they respect them very much.
Hezbollah is one of those cases of wedding and adapting a traditional - some may even say a throwback - ideology, but wedding it and adapting it to the modern world. And they're pretty good at that. They're smart, they're technologically sophisticated, they're serious, and that worries the Israelis. Because ideology is very adaptable; you can pretty much adapt any ideology, in my opinion. OK, there may be limits. Even the question of women. In the south of
JH/ML: Returning to the question of a two-state solution: what a ‘mutually acceptable' solution to the refugee question would mean in practice is that Palestinians renounce their internationally-recognized right to return, a basic human right. Isn't this antithetical to the Palestinian right to self-determination? Why should the Palestinians be expected to renounce that right? And, on a related note, you say the refugee question is one of the few dimensions of the Israel-Palestine conflict over which legitimate controversy exists. But there's no question that the refugees have the right to return. So where does the controversy arise?
Well, I think there's a misunderstanding there. First of all, it's a fair question; I've had to think about it. There's no controversy in terms of what the historical record shows, that the Palestinians were ethnically cleansed in 1948. There's no controversy on the moral question; ethnic cleansings are an abomination, you don't have to belabor that point. And there's no question on the legal issue; under international law, like all other refugees, they have the right to return to their homes after battlefield hostilities have ended. But then there's a separate issue, and that's the political one, namely, politics is about what's possible. And as far as one can tell, there's what one might call a strong international consensus on the full Israeli withdrawal. You could say on the question of the Palestinian right of return, I would have to say the consensus is there - no question - but in terms of the political will, I would have to call it weak.
Now, where do I draw that inference from? The way I would draw the inference is by looking at the negotiations. So what do you see in the negotiations? If you look carefully at the record on
But my guess is, if
The international community is tougher on the issue of borders, because everyone recognizes the moment you say it's ok to take land by force, it causes - U Thant said, if we reject [the principle of the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by war], we're back to the law of the jungle, because borders start changing because countries make war. So every country is willing to hold fast on this principle of no acquisition of territory by war, because it affects every country; you know, the
ML: One thing that strikes me in the analogy you're making is that you made that decision on your own behalf. I'm wondering if the Palestinian refugees will have a voice in this decision...
NF: I totally agree with that. I'm pretty tough on this issue; they have the last word. My responsibility is to defend their rights. What they choose to do with their rights is their business, not mine. I don't like it when people tell me what I should do with my rights. When I was at Brooklyn College in 1992, when they were getting rid of me and they went over to one of the "radical" professors - with heavy quotation marks, as with all "radical" professors - and they asked Steve London, ‘So, are you going to go to bat for Norm?' And
JH/ML: In Image and Reality of the Israel-Palestine Conflict, you write: "The inevitable but very distant future is one in which Palestinian Arabs and Israeli Jews, enjoying reciprocal communal and individual rights, coexist within a unitary entity." Why do you think that?
NF: Well, basically the Palestinian state will be such a piddling state, and the Jordanian state is barely viable, and I think the point that Meron Benvenisti makes; he's all along claimed this two-state idea is a chimera. Because, he says, Palestinians and Israelis share everything, that
And then there's the other fundamental issue - the demographic one - which is not going away. Palestinian Arabs constitute now about twenty percent of
Of course, one of the ideas that
JH/ML:
NF: Basically it was to knock out
But I think that's the point I made earlier; they had it, and they weren't going to go. Most of the reason was that the Egyptians wanted them to go. They had no security interest. But the Egyptians wanted them to leave, and they decided ‘We're going to humiliate them; we're not going to leave.' There was no need; that's true of all these territories.
All this talk about the
They wanted the Sinai, they wanted the Golan, for the same reasons: to humiliate, to show the Arabs who's in charge, that's their standard. In the case of the
JH: What is it about the West Bank?
NF: In the
Why? Because the
Now, do you think it's about that? Do you think it's about so they can drive their car and dip their feet? No. It's
Personally, I agree with Assad. You have got to stop these Israelis. They always want to humiliate and degrade the Arabs.
JH/ML: In an interview with Chicago public radio, you said: "I don't say this with any kind of satisfaction, but I don't think
NF: You saw an example of it just a few months ago. The Bush administration was poising itself to attack
Well, the whole world breathed a sigh of relief, except one country:
When you take the case of the end of the 2006 war in
But even if you accept that rationale, four point six million is still insane. You could have accomplished your aim with far fewer than that. This was the densest use of cluster bomblets in history. The only thing that came close was
This war hunger, this incapacity to even think in terms of diplomacy and trying to reach some sort of détente with your neighbors. No, you can't reach a détente with your neighbors; there is only one thing you can do with your neighbors, and that's break their kneecaps. That's the Israeli style. It's fine if you're mafia, but there, the stakes are getting much higher. They have a very serious adversary now in
JH/ML: In Image and Reality of the Israel-Palestine Conflict, you write: "There can be little doubt that, consigned to a footnote, Oslo will one day be dismissed as a sordid detour on the path to a just and lasting peace." Talk about the
NF: I think the main misapprehension about
And it worked like a charm; they created a class - it was called Fatah - and then the day of reckoning came in
Well, Mr. Arafat, like all of us, was mortal, and he passed from the scene. And now you have a bunch of leaders who don't give a wit about Palestinians, Palestinian nationalism; they just want their Swiss bank accounts, good meals, photo-ops, and the rest. And so it seemed as if everything was now going swimmingly, like we were back on course. And we were going to sign the agreement, and
But a new problem came: the problem of Hamas. They didn't really have much of a choice, but they waited too long, and by this time an opposition movement had dug roots among the Palestinians, and the rest, as they say, is history. American collaborators now are trying to dislodge Hamas and get on with the business of being collaborators.
JH/ML: Describe the on-the-ground legacy of
NF: What's happened has been exhaustively documented. The main features of the Oslo accord which have wreaked havoc on the Palestinians have been, number one, the growth of the settlements and settlers, which have doubled - now more than doubled, the last number was four-hundred sixty thousand settlers in the occupied territories. In 1993, the figure was about two-hundred thousand. So the number of settlers has doubled.
And then there's been the policy of closures - both internal and external - meaning the large number of Palestinians - it was over one-hundred thousand, plus the families they support - who were dependent on work in
JH/ML: If most of the major historical questions about the conflict have been answered, as you say, are there any important issues which still need more scholarly attention, in your opinion? Were you to lay out a research agenda on the Israel-Palestine/Arab-Israeli conflict, what would it look like?
NF: First of all, I have to be a little bit cautious here. The issues for which there are no longer any real political consequences, there is no longer any real controversy. So, for example, the 1948 war - apart from the lingering refugee question, which Palestinians have basically conceded they've lost - there are no open political questions left. What do I mean by that? Everyone accepts the borders after the war as being
When you come to the 1967 war it's different, because it's still an open political question, namely the issue of occupation and withdrawal. And so on '67, I would say the scholarship still presents areas of controversy, in particular, two. Number one, did
Apart from '67, it's not really controversial anymore. 1973 is no longer controversial; why? Because '73 was about the occupation of the Sinai.
JH/ML: You're writing a book titled A Farewell to
NF: Basically the argument can be summed up pretty simply. American Jews are basically liberal - you see it in polls, you see it in party affiliations - for a simple reason. American Jews flourished and thrived in the
But the argument I make in the book is, our knowledge of the Israel-Palestine conflict has substantially changed in the last twenty years, and there's much more informed criticism of
What's my point? My point is mainstream people are saying it's apartheid. Haaretz is saying it's apartheid. If you're American, if you're Jewish, you're liberal; how can you reconcile your liberal values with supporting what mainstream American and Israeli institutions and officials are calling apartheid? And so as a consequence, you see - especially among the younger generation, which I'm more familiar with because I lecture a lot around the country - on college campuses,
Now there have been different explanations put forth; I mean the polls show support for
And I'm pretty confident about that conclusion because I lecture at forty schools a year; I know the campuses, and I see what happens. [Pro-Israel groups] have lost a huge amount of ground. There was a time when I came [to speak at colleges] and it was like a Daniel in the Lion's Den. But it's not like that any more; it really isn't. They're losing ground, it's obvious. I see it everywhere I go. They come to where I speak, there's one row, all primed to attack me, but they don't say anything at the end. Because all I do is say ‘This is what international law says, this is what Amnesty says, this is what Human Rights Watch says.' So do they really want to have to stand up and say ‘Amnesty, they're anti-Semites; Human Rights Watch, they're anti-Semites; the International Court of Justice, they're anti-Semites; all these Israeli authors, they're anti-Semites; Haaretz, they're anti-Semites.' Do they really want to go there? No, so they shut up.
JH/ML: You've taught at many universities and you constantly lecture on college campuses. What can you say about the state of student
NF: I think the most noticeable difference is the Palestinian and Arab students are a very impressive bunch now. They're second and third generation here, they're at the best schools, very excellent students, very focused, and courageously and bravely committed to the cause. Not much trembling and fear, I think mostly because they're second and third generation, and I think they've realized that civil liberties here - whatever you want to say - are pretty solidly entrenched. Unless you're on a green card or something. But if you're American-born, they're pretty solidly entrenched.
I was at
And the other good side of course is many wonderful Jews working in concrete, collaborative ways with Palestinians and Arabs. Frankly, I don't even think the distinction means much anymore once they work together; that barrier is so quickly and easily transcended if you can agree on basic principles of solidarity. If you want to compare, for example, trying to transcend the barrier between blacks and whites in the
Yesterday at Brown was just terrific. An Israeli refusenik, as he's called, raised his hand and devoted the larger part of his remarks turning to the Hillel members in the audience and making direct eye contact with them, denouncing ‘rude American Jews who tell Israelis to go and commit murder.' And he said two things. Number one, ‘If you want to tell us what to do, why don't you go to
And I thought to myself, ‘if we had a national organization, to have people like that hammering away at the Israeli lobby...' I was told last night was the first time he had spoken. He had been in jail for a year and a half. People knew it, but he was always silent. And I think, ‘Oh my God, we have this guy! Knock them all out!' That's what we need; we need an organization. We have real possibilities.
JH/ML: What about the state of public discourse more broadly? You've been lecturing on
NF: Actually, to tell you the truth, I have a debater's impulse in me. I like people to make devil's advocate arguments against me to see how my own arguments fare against them. I mention this because, frankly, it's become too easy. No one challenges you anymore. There are no arguments on the other side anymore. Over and over again I discover it. I do the same routine, as it were, everywhere I go. I give a fairly lengthy talk and I ask for dissenters to go first [during the question and answer session.] And I even give them the option of making a statement; you don't even have to ask a question. And dissenters simply don't appear. There's no dissent, and there aren't even statements. It's become too easy; it's become embarrassingly easy, because

