American Spark Homeland Security Forced To Revise Terrorist Watch Lists

Our ‘Terrorist Watch Lists’ seem created to watch everyone except the terrorists.land Security Forced To Revise Terrorist Watch ListsBy Cliff MontgomeryAngry congressional lawmakers have given the Department of land Security (DHS) a hard six-month deadline to revamp its process for clearing individuals who have been wrongly put on government terrorist watch lists.The fiscal 2007 land Security appropriations bill–signed into law in the first week of October–requires the department to “establish revised procedures for expeditiously clearing individuals whose names have been mistakenly placed on a terrorist database list or who have names identical or similar to individuals on a terrorist database list.”The bill further ordered the department to finish these changes within six months.Frustration and anger has grown in Congress during the last year, with the discovery that the administration’s “watch lists” are in fact riddled with inaccuracies. It is a particular problem in the area of aviation, where innocent U.S. citizens–including sometimes even lawmakers themselves–have been detained because their names appeared on one of the lists.”If we’re going to have a watch list that works, we should fine-tune it,” Rep. Zoe Lofgren, (D-CA)., said during a June hearing.Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, said in February that his wife, Catherine, was questioned at airport checkpoints because her name matched that of a folk singer formerly known as Cat Stevens. Civil rights pioneer Rep. John Lewis, (D-GA), and even well-known lawmaker Sen. Edward Kennedy, (D-MA), also have said they were wrongly placed on a watch list and stopped numerous times.Last January DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced that the government would “accelerate efforts to establish a government-wide traveler screening redress process to resolve questions if travelers are incorrectly selected for additional screening.”Of course, the best way to solve matters would be to ensure that only those actually suspected of terrorist activities are put on those lists. One cannot help but think that the inclusion of fellow lawmakers like Ted Kennedy and John Lewis–both fierce combatants of this White House–has more to do with childish politics than a serious concern over terrorist activity.Besides, if you’re going to use a name on a terrorist list which may clearly be confused with someone else–like, say, ‘Cat Stevens’–then that list should well describe which ‘Cat Stevens’ you’re looking for in the first place. A random series of rather average names can only create confusion, not security.The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has flatly called for the government to end its current aviation watch lists. The demand came in response to a CBS60 Minutes” report disclosing that the lists include many common names along with people who are dead, in prison, or are international dignitaries, such as the president of Bolivia.If you think the ACLU goes too far in calling for a complete end to the current watch lists, consider this: the “60 Minutes” report also discovered that these administration watch lists, said to protect us from those big bad terrorists, do not include the names of all terror suspects.Why? Agencies say they are afraid to share some names with anyone outside the administration.In other words, you’ll be protected from sharing a plane with Ted Kennedy or the wife of Ted Stevens, but you may end up sharing it with al-Qaeda’s number three man. Don’t you feel safer already?Neither do Republicans, or Democrats, or the ACLU, or anyone else with half a brain.       “Until land Security can figure out a way to create a genuine, narrow, targeted list of real terrorists rather than harming innocent people, Congress needs to shut this monstrosity down,” said Tim Sparapani, ACLU legislative counsel.   land Security’s Transportation Security Administration (TSA) operates three aviation watch lists: one with names of individuals who are not allowed to fly; one with names who need secondary screeningFBI‘s Terrorist Screening Center is responsible for managing and consolidating all administration watch lists.The FBI and TSA both issued statements in early October eagerly defending the ‘terrorist-free’ watch lists as valuable counterterrorism tools; though to be fair, the statements added that the agencies were clarifying current redress procedures. A TSA spokeswoman told Government Executive magazine that about 35,000 people have sought redress for wrongly being placed on an aviation watch list.But both the FBI and TSA declined to reveal names or how many people are on any of the lists, saying that the information is secret. Giving out names of those proven to have no terrorist ties of any kind, or stating how many people are on these rather useless lists, cannot be done under the current regime. That would come far too close to giving real power back to the American people.And we know only the Iraqis are ready for a liberty like that.

Sign Up for our e-Newsletter

You can expect to stay well ahead of the game, with the tough, insightful reporting of our e-Newsletter. No info-tainment or shouting matches passed off as ‘news’, but the real deal, sent to your personal e-mail every Monday morning, for less than 30 cents an issue.
Sign Up Today!