Homeland Security Made in Israel

If there should happen to be an al-Qaeda attack in Calhoun County Alabama,   Sheriff Larry Amerson will presumably know what to do. That is because he and   a number of colleagues in law enforcement have received paid trips to Israel   to learn how to deal with the terrorist threat. The Washington-based Jewish   Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA) sponsors a Law Enforcement Exchange Program “in order to learn how to better protect   the U.S. communities from terrorist attacks.” The program takes law enforcement   officials from the United States and sends them to Israel for training in the   “strategies and techniques perfected by Israeli law enforcement.”   Amerson, past president of the National Sheriff’s Association, made his trip   in 2012. Along the way, he reportedly benefited from a “greater understanding   of the situation in Israel as it relates to terrorist threats.” JINSA also   hosts conferences in the U.S. where Israeli officers are brought over to brief   American law enforcement officials.

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) is also involved in the   effort to indoctrinate the U.S. law enforcement community. Its website’s Homeland   Security Monitor chronicles numerous meetings between Israeli intelligence   and police officials and their U.S. counterparts, to include numerous trips   to Israel to learn from the masters of the craft about various aspects of security,   including controlling borders and airports. Even firemen have made the journey,   presumably to learn how a fire in Israel differs from a fire in the United States.

Ironically, American law enforcement and emergency services are every bit   as capable as those in Israel and really have nothing to learn. The difference   in practice is that Israel uses extensive profiling to identify threats, which   means Arabs are regularly stopped and questioned. Exposure to that dubious technique   is often paid for by the U.S. taxpayer as much of the travel to Israel is funded   by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which provides billions of dollars   in training   grants to cover the expenses. Marc Kahlberg of International Security Consulting    offers a package that   is called “Eye of the Storm.” He promises “an exclusive learning   tour into the heart of Hebron. You will have the opportunity to see first-hand   how the police there are dealing with a daily volatile situation. You will feel   the adrenalin, but be completely safe and will be the guests of the Israeli   Police Commander.” As Hebron is the largest Arab city on the West Bank with a population of 250,000 that   against its will hosts an illegal Israeli settlement of 1,000 protected by the   police and army, it promises to be an interesting experience.

It has been reported that when the United States was attacked on 9/11 Israeli   Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was pleased because he understood that Washington and Tel Aviv would now be joined at the   hip in their mutual response to what Israel has been defining as terrorism.   When Netanyahu spoke before congress shortly afterwards he said “We are all targets” before   engaging in a number of meetings instructing Washington regarding what must   be done. Netanyahu’s Israel succeeded beyond its wildest dreams, exploiting   the incident to such an extent that the United States has adopted wholesale   Israeli perceptions of Middle Eastern politics. As Scott McConnell has observed,   there exists “a transmission belt, conveying Israeli ideas on how the United   States should conduct itself in a contested and volatile part of the world.   To a great extent, a receptive American political class now views the Middle   East and their country’s role in it through Israel’s eyes.”

Beyond that political assessment, the Israel-terrorism nexus operates on a   number of levels. It has been sometimes noted that the United States has adopted   the Israeli model to deal with terrorism, so much so that American politicians   sometimes consider Israel a component of U.S. national security. Republican   Vice Presidential candidate Paul Ryan’s website included “Israel” under the category “Homeland Security.”

The federal bureaucracy has also been changed to accommodate the new reality.   Since the Clinton Administration, every senior diplomat or official dealing   with the Middle East region has had to pass through a vetting process to ensure   full support of and deference to Israeli interests, which include its view of   the terrorist threat. Non-compliance is career ending. Chas Freeman, who was   named to head the National Security Council in 2009, was quickly forced to step   down when it was determined that he was not sufficiently pro-Israel.

Since 2001, many senior appointees throughout the federal government have gone   one step farther, no longer making any effort to hide their strongly pro-Israel   sentiments. Witness the ascendancy of Paul Wolfowitz, Doug Feith, William Boykin,   and Eric Edelman at the Defense Department under George W. Bush. Given the openly   expressed identification with Israel at the Pentagon and National Security Council   it is no surprise that Washington and Tel Aviv appear to align completely on   how to combat terrorism. Both claim the right to engage in preemptive warfare   and to assassinate people in other countries without any transparent legal process.   Both operate lethal drones to kill suspected militants on the ground, both have   engaged in torture, and both operate high security prisons containing numerous   suspects who are described as terrorists but who have never been and quite likely   never will be tried. Many of the detainees have been confined for years and   will undoubtedly die in prison without ever being charged with a crime. Some   of them are surely innocent.

The Israeli-American model for dealing with terrorism is itself unusual. Historically   speaking, countries that have been plagued with a terrorism problem have focused   on countering that specific threat without seeking to expand the conflict. But   that has not been the case for post 9/11 America, with George W. Bush grandiloquently   proclaiming a global war on terror which was later euphemized into a “global   freedom mission” under Bush and as “overseas contingency operations”   under Barack Obama. Bush set the United States up as an international policeman   with the rest of the world relegated to being either “with us or against   us.” Israel meanwhile set the framework for the program, defining the terrorist   threat against itself and Washington as “radical Islam,” a phrase   that has been readily picked up by American politicians and the media. Radical   Islam implies a worldwide struggle that is frequently conflated into a complete   rejection of political Islam and suspicion regarding the intentions of anyone   who is a practicing Muslim, a predisposition that is playing out currently vis-a-vis   Egypt.

Israel has also done much to name the players and define the playing field.   The hypocrisy of the process is evident when groups like Hezbollah and Hamas   are thereby identified by Washington as “terrorists” even though they   do not threaten the United States and see themselves as national liberation   movements for the Palestinian and Lebanese people. Meanwhile, groups like the   Mujaheddin e Khalq (MEK), which have actually killed Americans, have been removed from the State Department list because they are perceived as enemies of the   regime in Iran and are therefore by extension friends of Israel and its allies   in Congress and the media.

Less visible is Israel’s hand in shaping and profiting from the domestic agenda   against terrorism, which is where Sheriff Amerson comes in. The Lobby and its   friends are intent on projecting a positive image of Israel as a bulwark against   terrorism and the “only democracy in the Middle East.” The disparate   groups that make up The Lobby are active in creating the tie that binds regarding   the perception of terrorism on the ground and they do it through exchange programs   and the actual involvement of Israeli security companies and contractors in   the lucrative homeland security marketplace. Israel is a militarized state and   the United States over the past twelve years has also moved in the same direction   vis-a-vis its own police forces, a development that again reflects the priorities   of national and local governments and the predilection to deal with the perceived   terrorism threat through the use of overwhelming force and intimidation. New   York City’s unconstitutional “stop and frisk” police activity is a   preemptive doctrine modeled on Israeli counter-terrorism practice and it should   be no surprise that the New York Police Department has an overseas office in   Tel Aviv.

It has been noted that the terrorism threat itself is greatly exaggerated,   with more Americans killed by falling television sets than by terrorist action,   but this has not stopped the proliferation of state level departments of homeland   security, fusion centers for sharing information, and the introduction of consultants   and security service providers at all levels. Much of the activity is either   wasteful, redundant, or completely unnecessary. America’s seventy-two fusion   centers, where many of the Israeli contractors and advisers wind up, have been   denounced in a Senate   report as useless, ineffective, and frequently engaged in spying on American   citizens, particularly Arabs, but also including anti-abortionists and Ron Paul   supporters.

This effort to turn a buck from the woefully mismanaged Department of Homeland   Security is multifaceted. The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reports that fully 97% of DHS discretionary grants are given to Jewish organizations   even though Janet Napolitano has admitted that there is no “specific, credible   threat” against Jewish targets. And the flow of money is combined with   similar efforts being undertaken by other elements in the Israel Lobby to influence   opinion and create an American national consensus unshakably favorable to Israel.   The Israeli arms   and security industry, which is partially “covert” so it can sell   to countries and rulers on arms embargo lists, is a partner to the process.   It is now the fourth largest weapons exporter in the world, behind only the   U.S., Russia, and France. It has 6,800 licensed arms and security services providers,   making it the largest industry in Israel. Israeli companies can and do bid on   federal and local government contracts in the U.S. and they are also able to   export their products freely to America thanks to the Israel-United States Free   Trade Agreement of 1985 and the Counterterrorism Cooperation Accord Between   the Government of the State of Israel and the Government of the United States   of America of 1996. This direct involvement of Israel in American security has   been recently expanded through passage of 2012’s United States-Israel Enhanced   Security Cooperation Act.

Israeli companies dominate the international airline security industry, frequently   doing double duty as the covert, local Mossad station, but their failures are   better known than their successes, including the case of the Nigerian underwear   bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab who was ultimately detected by an alert passenger.   Israeli technology companies also produce many of the devices used by police   departments and the FBI to tap telephone conversations and record call data.   And the employment of their high tech telecommunications equipment comes at   a national security price as, for example, they exploited a back door in the technology to listen in to White House phone conversations   during the Clinton Administration.

Israeli contractors and companies dot the homeland security landscape but   only rarely attract any attention. One notable exception to that rule was the   2002 attempt by New   Jersey governor Jim McGreevey to appoint an Israeli Golan Cipel, who was also   his lover, as his Homeland Security adviser. The companies sometimes boast about   their role in the occupation of the Palestinian West Bank. They claim to provide   what they describe as “real” experience and expertise based on their   recurring conflict with their Arab neighbors. They often combine that narrative   with proselytizing their point of view about the politics of the Middle East.   The Israel Law Center (Shurat HaDin) is currently offering an October “Israeli Adventure of a Lifetime – the Ultimate Mission to Israel,”   which includes meetings with Mossad officials, observing a trial of a Hamas   terrorist, riding an ATV on the Golan Heights, and a briefing by Israeli soldier   heroes, all experienced while residing in five star accommodations. It is something   like Disneyland with guns and real live Arabs to shoot at.

If one starts looking, scores or even hundreds of Israeli companies and consultants   pop up nearly everywhere in U.S. national security while a search of the Israel-America   Chamber of Commerce website did not identify   even a single American security company operating in Israel attempting to obtain   Israeli government and private sector contracts. Israel’s Security Solutions   International offers U.S. taxpayer funded training courses using “Israeli veterans” as   instructors. Defense contractor Elbit Systems is providing spy towers on the Arizona border with Mexico. Magal Security Systems, which   has four subsidiary companies in the U.S., has a contract for security at American nuclear power plants. Rozin Security Consulting provides security at Mall of America, using its trademarked Suspicion Indicators Recognition   and Assessment System, which is basically profiling. Global Security International,   with offices in New York City, offers consulting services relating to counter-terrorism operations.

The broader question American taxpayers should be asking themselves is whether   the hundreds of billions of dollars being spent on national security is money   well spent. Israel has a vested interest in making the terrorist threat appear   more real than it actually is and also to present itself as the only reliable   partner of the United States in the war against global terror. It also profits   substantially as its companies and former security officers have exploited their   “real experience” credentials to entrench themselves in U.S. homeland   security at all levels. With the aid of the domestic Israel Lobby, Tel Aviv   has become adept at selling a product, which includes the fals depiction of   Israel as the victim in the Middle East. This victimhood has apparently obtained   traction in the United States, where politicians and the mainstream media persist   in describing the nation with the world’s largest economy and most powerful   military and security forces as somehow threatened. As a result, as Professor   Steven Walt has described   it, Washington is “chasing spooks and ghosts all over the world,”   convinced that it is “very, very vulnerable.” Israel has certainly   done its best to encourage that mindset.

Philip Giraldi,

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