1.17.2007

If The Pentagon Can't Do What It's Charged With Doing, Why Are They Watching Us?

The Pentagon has had any number of objectives since September 11th, 2001, including:

  • Capturing Osama bin Laden "dead or alive"
  • Capturing his second-in-command, Dr. Al Zawahiri
  • Defeating Al Qaeda
  • Defeating the Taliban
  • Capturing Saddam Hussein (the Pentagon didn't do this; the Kurds did and turned him over)
  • Capturing Afghanistan and creating conditions so the country would become a democracy
  • Capturing Iraq and creating conditions so it could become a free democracy
  • "Winning the Global War on Terror" (Calling it the War on Terror, Donald Rumsfeld told us on the eve of his departure, was silly and bogus)
Now, as it happens, the Pentagon has achieved NONE of these objectives. So why the hell does the Pentagon have time to identify, track, and keep in a database those who peacefully protest Mr. Bush's many wars of empire?

From Common Dreams, by Walter Pincus, originally from the Washington Post:
A Defense Department database devoted to gathering information on potential threats to military facilities and personnel, known as Talon, had 13,000 entries as of a year ago – including 2,821 reports involving American citizens, according to an internal Pentagon memo to be released today by the American Civil Liberties Union.

The Pentagon memo says an examination of the system led to the deletion of 1,131 reports involving Americans, 186 of which dealt with "anti-military protests or demonstrations in the U.S."

Titled "Review of the TALON Reporting System," the four-page memo produced in February 2006 summarizes some interim results from an inquiry ordered by then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld after disclosure in December 2005 that the system had collected and circulated data on anti-military protests and other peaceful demonstrations.

The released memo, one of a series of Talon documents made public over the past year by the ACLU under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, said that the deleted reports did not meet a 2003 Defense Department requirement that they have some foreign terrorist connection or relate to what was believed to be "a force protection threat."

The number of deleted reports far exceeds the estimate provided to the Washington Post just over a year ago by senior officials of Counterintelligence Field Activity (CIFA), the Defense Department agency that manages the Talon program. At that time, then-CIFA Director David A. Burtt II said the review had disclosed that only 1 percent of the then 12,500 Talon reports appeared to be problematic.

The ACLU said in its own report that past disclosures about Talon "cried out for congressional oversight yet Congress was silent." It said the new memo indicated there "may be even more disturbing" information to discover and declared "it is time for Congress to act."

The ACLU noted the memo showed that Talon reports had a much wider circulation than previously disclosed, with about 28 organizations and 3,589 individuals authorized to submit reports or have access to the database. The organizations with access include various military agencies as well as state, federal and local law enforcement officials.

A Pentagon spokesman said there are 7,700 reports in the Talon database. Some involve U.S. citizens, but the spokesman declined to say how many.
Perhaps we need to shut down the Pentagon since they aren't performing their jobs while collecting more money than any other American institution (and more than most others rolled together).