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Police State Files
by Geov Parrish
Two releases of local law enforcement files in the last couple weeks
have shed new light on just how far the Bush administration, federal,
and local law enforcement are going to suppress political dissent in the
aftermath of 9/11.
The first case was in Pittsburgh, where a Freedom of Information Act
request by the American Civil Liberties Union yielded the revelation
that from 2002, when opposition to an invasion of Iraq began in earnest,
right through at least until the final, heavily redacted document from
2005, law enforcement officials investigated, monitored, harassed, and
infiltrated activists from Pittsburgh's Thomas Merton Center. Merton was
a renowned Catholic theologian and pacifist who fiercely opposed the
Vietnam War and all wars, and his namesake descendants apply the same
beliefs to Iraq.
As the released documents make clear, that, and only that, was why they
became targets: because they opposed the war in Iraq. An FBI document
from 2002 notes that the center is "a left-wing organization advocating,
among many political causes, pacifism." Pacifism! Egads! Aside from the
fact that pacifism is a set of personal moral beliefs--not a "political
cause"--is pacifism, in our militarized 21st Century America, the new
Red Scare? Seems so. Just ask the Quakers.
Or maybe, instead, pacifism is simply terrorism. Because the outfit
investigating the Thomas Merton Center wasn't the Pentagon TALON
program, which was the tool used to go after the Lake Worth (Florida)
Quakers and hundreds (at least) of other domestic peace groups. It
wasn't even an NSA monitoring program. The Merton Center caught the
attention of the Pittsburgh version of a Joint Anti-Terrorism Task
Force, a program set up in dozens of cities across the US to combine the
efforts of the FBI and other federal, state, county, and local law
enforcement agencies to combat the alleged threat of "domestic
terrorism." With only so many domestic terrorists to go around, there's
got to be something handy to keep all those task forces busy and their
budget dollars flowing. Now, we have a better idea of what that
"something" might be: investigating ordinary, law-abiding citizens who
oppose Bush administration policies. That's now considered terrorism. Of
course, it's the far right that has engaged in "domestic
terrorism" in our recent history (remember Oklahoma City), but for some
reason that's not who these task forces are concerned about.
Apparently, in nearly three years of probing, the terrorism most
frequently engaged in by the Mertonites was the handing out of leaflets.
A February 2003 FBI report titled "International Terrorism Matters"
detailed a schedule that the center posted on its web site of antiwar
rallies in Pittsburgh, New York, and elsewhere. From Bush on down, the
word "terrorism" is being slung around awfully loosely these days.
Still, the FBI defends the investigations, calling them, in a statement,
"appropriate." And that raises the question of whether such
investigations are still going on (probably), and whether they're being
carried out by a local Joint Anti-Terrorism Task Force near you
(probably), and whether the main target is your local antiwar group or
coalition (probably).
The second set of documents came from yet another source: the
court-ordered release, as part of an ongoing lawsuit, of five internal
NYPD memos detailing and analyzing--mostly with gleeful
satisfaction--steps taken to disrupt and minimize New York City
demonstrations in 2002, particularly the World Economic Forum protest
that was the first, and virtually the last, major anti-summit
demonstration after 9/11.
What the memos for the first time detail are police tactics that have
been used widely across the US against such demonstrations ever since
law enforcement was embarrassed by the 1999 anti-WTO protests in
Seattle. Anyone who has been to these demonstrations knows the playbook:
massive presence of police in riot gear, heavily armed mostly with
chemical weapons and batons; tanks, visible police vans and buses, and a
widespread use of undercover cops; corralling protesters into tightly
controlled spaces with no access available for the public to enter or
leave; a constant shifting of police lines, including provocative forays
into the crowd; and the preemptive arrests of any protestors the police
don't happen to like or find inconvenient, with the understanding that
they'll be held until the summit or convention or whatever leaves town
and then released, with charges (if any) later dropped or dismissed. One
of the NYPD memos notes, for example, the arrest of about 30 masked
demonstrators (doubtless black bloc anarchists) for the "crime" of being
"obvious potential rioters."
The last I checked, the Constitution doesn't allow for arresting people
for what they might potentially do. But that, along with the rest
of these tactics, with minor variations is pretty much what's happened
at every major post-Seattle US protest of the war or the international
corporate regime, in New York, Washington, Philadelphia, Los Angeles,
Miami, and so on. The black bloc property destruction in Seattle, and
the media overhype it provoked, allowed law enforcement to sell such
tactics as necessary; in every one of these cities, a major protest has
been preceded by a local media hysteria over the potential for "another
Seattle," local city councils passed restrictive new anti-protest
measures, and law enforcement got lots of pricey new crowd control toys.
Now, such protesters are not only "obvious potential rioters," but
"terrorists." The recent reauthorization of the PATRIOT Act, passed with
widespread bipartisan support, included a new "anti-terrorist" provision
allowing police to establish anti-protester "exclusion zones" at any
event of "national significance." (In Seattle, where this idea was first
used and then legitimized by the courts, it was more honestly called a
"no-protest zone," an egregious violation of the First Amendment.)
The idea of all these harsh tactics is both to scare potentially
sympathetic members of the public, who don't necessarily want to be
caught in a riot (police or otherwise), away from attending; and at the
same time to legitimize whatever forms of police and jail abuse are
inflicted on the protesters who do attend, in hopes they'll think better
of it next time. It's worked, and in six years, as the crackdown grows
ever-harsher, activists have yet to devise effective counter-measures.
What does any of this have to do with protecting the country from
terrorist attack? Not a damn thing, of course. But it's exactly the sort
of rationale dictatorships and totalitarian states throughout history
have used to scare the public, rationalize domestic state violence, and
suppress, marginalize, and eventually silence political dissent.
According to your high school civics class, America doesn't go for that
sort of thing.
But then, that book seems to have been thrown out.
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