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Chapter Fifteen: In Search of Homeland Security

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Title: Chapter Fifteen: In Search of Homeland Security


1
Chapter FifteenIn Search of Homeland
Security
2
Defining Homeland Security
3
Defining Homeland Security
  • Issues surrounding homeland security
  • Issues surrounding homeland security are confused
    because the country is dealing with a new
    concept, a new meaning of conflict, and a change
    in the procedures used to defend the United
    States
  • Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
  • DHS is responsible for protecting the borders and
    the countrys interior

4
Defining Homeland Security
  • Mission and understanding
  • Mission and understanding mean the same thing,
    but there are many different understandings of
    homeland security because many agencies have
    differing missions
  • Policy
  • The policy guiding homeland security in the
    United States has not been fully developed, and
    executives are not quite sure of the way that all
    the missions of various agencies fit together

5
Defining Homeland Security
  • Civil defense
  • Homeland security also involves civil defense,
    that is, citizens engaged in homeland security
  • A major portion of security is a civic
    responsibility

6
Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Views of War
7
Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Views of War
  • Democrats and Republicans
  • Republicans tend to see terrorism as a military
    issue
  • Democrats tend to see terrorism as a criminal act

8
Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Views of War
  • Before the time of growing terrorism
  • Before the time of growing terrorism, War was an
    extension of politics fought within the legal
    framework of the Constitution
  • The Constitution states that only Congress has
    the power to declare war, and Congress declares
    whether America is in a state of war or of peace
  • Terrorism is changing the nature of conflict

9
Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Views of War
  • Carl von Clausewitz
  • Prussian general and military philosopher, Carl
    von Clausewitz, came to believe that the French
    Revolution created a new type of war
  • The strength of the French came from their
    ability to place the nation in arms, that is, to
    rally the people to the belief that all citizens
    of a nation are potential soldiers or supporters
    of the military
  • Clausewitzs On War is a philosophical treatise
    on the nature of total, nationalistic wars

10
Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Views of War
  • Victor Hansons criticism of Clausewitz
  • Hanson criticizes Clausewitz and the Western way
    of battle, claiming the West is consumed with the
    way war was fought in Ancient Greece. According
    to this line of thought, the purpose of military
    action is to seek a decisive engagement.
  • Terrorism is designed to produce the opposite
    effect, seeking to avoid direct confrontation
    with force

11
Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Views of War
  • Sun Tzu
  • Chinese philosopher, Sun Tzu, produced a treatise
    on the paradoxes of war
  • Sun Tzu saw war and peace as two sides of the
    same coin
  • War and politics were psychological forces held
    together by the belief in power

12
Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Views of War
  • Asymmetry
  • Terrorism is based on Sun Tzus concept of
    strength-to-weakness
  • In modern military parlance this is called
    asymmetry- competing forces are out of balance
  • Terrorists tend to be true believers who
    sacrifice lives, and they are willing to attack
    while avoiding social conventions and societal
    norms
  • The purpose of terrorism is to give the
    impression that powerful economic, military, and
    political forces cannot protect ordinary people
    going about their daily routines
  • Military forces must cope with this change, but
    criminal justice agencies become involved in
    homeland security precisely because terrorists
    fight outside the rules

13
Pearl Harbor and 9-11 Two Different Worlds
14
Pearl Harbor and 9-11 Two Different Worlds
  • December 7, 1941
  • The purpose of the Japanese attack on Pearl
    Harbor was to destroy U.S. military capabilities
    in the Pacific

15
Pearl Harbor and 9-11 Two Different Worlds
  • September 11, 2001
  • The 9-11 attacks were designed for drama. They
    were a tragedy performed on a subnational level,
    with the purpose of murdering thousands of people
    to create an aura of fear
  • The goal of the September 11 terrorists was not
    one of conventional military strategy. Its
    purpose was to create so much feat that Western
    institutions would change their behavior
  • The terrorists of September 11 were attacking
    globalization while America was defending state
    power

16
Pearl Harbor and 9-11 Two Different Worlds
  • The new style of conflict
  • Jihadists are not attacking state power they are
    attacking the idea of Western, and particularly
    American culture
  • Modern terrorism is aimed at the infrastructure
    of everyday life and the symbols that define that
    structure

17
Redefining Conflict, Defense, and
Intelligence
18
Redefining Conflict, Defense, and Intelligence
  • Clausewitzs factors on the changing nature of
    military action
  • Sometimes wars are fought on frontiers against
    irregular armies
  • War is an extension of politics. The only reason
    a nation fights is to win a political victory

19
Redefining Conflict, Defense, and Intelligence
  • Preparing for the new type of war
  • The Pentagon prepared to fight state-to-state
    battles during the 1990s
  • Terrorists do not fight in field engagements
    therefore, military forces must transform their
    structures to take the fight to terrorists

20
Redefining Conflict, Defense, and Intelligence
  • Vice admiral Arthur Cebrowsky
  • Cebrowsky believes that America needs to create a
    new defense culture that permeates all levels of
    society and that breaks down barriers between
    organizations
  • The United States needs forces that thoroughly
    understand American culture and the cultures of
    our enemies and friends

21
Redefining Conflict, Defense, and Intelligence
  • Martin van Crefeld
  • Crefeld argues that war has changed violence is
    the purpose
  • Crefeld illustrates his thesis by using the
    French-Algerian War as an example. The Algerian
    nationalists of the National Liberation Front
    (FLN) fought for the communitys survival. As
    long as they fought, they were succeeding

22
Redefining Conflict, Defense, and Intelligence
  • Barnetts thesis
  • Barnett implies that military forces must change
    for future battles
  • A force fighting to impose political will
    operates differently from a force fighting for
    existence
  • The purpose of power is to create a new set of
    international rules in which all nations are
    included in economic development, prosperity, and
    peace
  • When nations are excluded, violent terrorists
    have no incentive to play within the rules

23
The Role of Symbols and Structures
24
The Role of Symbols and Structures
  • Symbolic targets
  • Asymmetrical war is waged against symbolic
    targets, and homeland security is designed to
    secure symbols
  • Attacks against symbols disrupt support
    structures and can have a high human toll

25
The Role of Symbols and Structures
  • Grenville Byford
  • Byford points out that symbolic attack may simply
    be designed to inflict massive casualties that
    is, killing people has a symbolic value
  • Rather than engaging in political rhetoric about
    morality, Byford concludes, it is more productive
    to understand that Americans represent symbolic
    targets of military value

26
The Role of Symbols and Structures
  • Ian Lessers three forms of terrorism
  • Symbolic terrorism is a dramatic attack to show
    vulnerability
  • Pragmatic terrorism involves a practical attempt
    to destroy political power
  • Systematic terrorism is waged over a period of
    time to change social conditions
  • Terrorists use symbolic attacks or attacks on
    symbols to achieve pragmatic or systematic results

27
The Role of Symbols and Structures
  • The key to security
  • Offer protection without destroying abstract
    meanings
  • Enhance protection while maintaining openness
  • The irony is that every added security measure
    increases the feeling of insecurity

28
Law Enforcements Special Role
29
Law Enforcements Special Role
  • Preemptive, offensive policing
  • If law enforcement simply responds, it will have
    little impact on the prevention of terrorism

30
Law Enforcements Special Role
  • Results if state and local agencies shift to
    offensive thinking and action
  • Police contact with potential terrorists will
    increase
  • This, however, increases the possibility of
    negative stereotyping and the abuse of power
  • Proactive measures demand increased intelligence
    gathering, and much of the information will have
    not relation to criminal activity

31
Law Enforcements Special Role
  • Offensive action in the private sector
  • Offensive action begins in the local community
  • The weakness in local systems occurs because
    state and local police departments do not
    frequently think beyond their jurisdictions, and
    they do not routinely take advantage of potential
    partnerships inside their bailiwicks

32
Building Intelligence Systems
33
Building Intelligence Systems
  • The most important aspect of security
  • Information that guides security forces
  • Information is crucial for day-to-day operations

34
Building Intelligence Systems
  • Information gathering
  • While academic in nature, information gathering
    is directly applicable to gathering intelligence
  • Applied intelligence involves gathering basic
    information about a target and real-time
    information about current events
  • The practical application of this process comes
    through organizing structures aimed at
    collecting, analyzing, and forwarding information

35
Building Intelligence Systems
  • President Jimmy Carter
  • Carter wanted to protect Americans from their
    government
  • The government began to limit the power of
    intelligence operations, unintentionally
    hampering their effectiveness

36
Building Intelligence Systems
  • Time magazine article
  • The article stated America needs to learn to spy
    again
  • National security intelligence is crucial, but
    law enforcement has a role
  • The authors of the article also censure
    bureaucratic structures for failing to share
    information, and they condemn the system for
    relying too heavily on machine and electronic
    information
  • Another weak point is the inability to analyze
    the information

37
Building Intelligence Systems
  • New Jersey State Police (NJSP)
  • The NJSP Intelligence Service Section is made up
    of three divisions
  • The Intelligence Bureau is the largest division,
    composed of six units
  • The Analytical Unit
  • The Casino Intelligence Unit
  • The Electronic Surveillance Unit
  • The Liaison Computerized Services Unit
  • The Service Unit
  • The Street Gang Unit

38
Building Intelligence Systems
  • The central security unit is responsible for New
    Jerseys counterterrorist mission. It is a
    proactive organization designed to prevent
    terrorism through interdiction
  • The Solid Waste Unit keeps an eye on organized
    crime
  • Recently, NJSP linked its intelligence service
    with federal law enforcement, giving it the
    potential for greater effectiveness

39
Building Intelligence Systems
  • California Anti-Terrorism Information Center
    (CATIC)
  • Formed after 9-11, the CATIC is a statewide
    intelligence system is designed to combat
    terrorism
  • The center links federal, state, and local
    information services in one system and divides
    operational zones into five administrative areas
  • CATIC combines public information with data on
    criminal trends and public terrorist activities

40
Building Intelligence Systems
  • New York City Police Department (NYPD)
  • Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly created two new
    units
  • One for counterterrorism
  • One for intelligence

41
Building Intelligence Systems
  • Critics of the FBI and CIA
  • The FBI and CIA have been criticized for failing
    to gather information before the September 11
    attacks and ineffectively analyzing the
    information they did have
  • Civil liberties groups fear growing power in
    agencies associated with homeland security, while
    others express concern over expanding executive
    authority

42
Planning for Homeland Security
43
Planning for Homeland Security
  • Planning is essential
  • Planning enhances the gathering, organizing, and
    analyzing of information

44
Planning for Homeland Security
  • The International Association of Chiefs of Police
    (IACP)
  • The IACP believes planning can be guided by
    looking for threats inside local communities
  • Indicators such as an increase in violent
    rhetoric, the appearance of extremist groups, and
    increases in certain types of crimes may
    demonstrate that a terrorist problem is on the
    horizon

45
Planning for Homeland Security
  • Richard Best
  • National security differs from law enforcement
  • In police work, officers react to information
    provided voluntarily
  • National security intelligence is used to
    anticipate threats
  • Law enforcement should plan and develop two
    channels for information
  • One should be aimed at law enforcement
  • State and local police agencies should be
    prepared to pass such information along to
    defense sources

46
Creating a Culture of Information Sharing
47
Creating a Culture of Information Sharing
  • The National Strategy for Homeland Security calls
    for increased information sharing among law
    enforcement agencies

48
Creating a Culture of Information Sharing
  • Information sharing systems
  • The Regional Information Sharing System (RISS)
  • The RISS is a six-part information network whose
    policies are controlled by its members
  • The High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas
    (HIDTAs)
  • The El Paso Intelligence Center (EPIC)
  • The International Law Enforcement Intelligence
    Analysts (IALEIA)
  • Weaknesses in the U.S. system

49
Creating a Culture of Information Sharing
  • The National Criminal Intelligence Sharing Plan
  • The purpose of the plan is not only to create a
    culture of sharing, but to generate the
    structures and communications systems to make it
    happen
  • All agencies will communicate in a single network

50
Creating a Culture of Information Sharing
  • 9-11 Commission Report recommendations
  • Recommendations focused on defense, intelligence,
    information sharing, homeland security, and law
    enforcement
  • The commission argued that the government was
    structured to fight the Cold War, not to counter
    terrorism

51
Creating a Culture of Information Sharing
  • Critics of the 9-11 Commission Report
  • The FBIs record of combating terrorism was port,
    and there may be no reason to believe that
    restructuring will improve its capabilities
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