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5 myths about keeping America safe from terrorism
By Stephen
Flynn, The Washington
Post
With
President Obama declaring a "systemic failure"
of our security system in the wake of the
attempted Christmas bombing of a Detroit-bound
airliner, familiar arguments about what can and
should be done to reduce America's
vulnerabilities are again filling the airwaves,
editorial pages and blogosphere. Several of
these arguments are based on assumptions that
guided the U.S. response to the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks -- and unfortunately, they are as
unfounded now as they were then. The biggest
whopper of all? The paternalistic assertion
that the government can keep us all safe
without our help.
1. Terrorism is the
gravest threat facing the American
people.
Americans are at far
greater risk of being killed in accidents or by
viruses than by acts of terrorism. In 2008, more
than 37,300 Americans perished on the
nation's highways, according to government
data. Even before H1N1, a similar number of
people died each year from the seasonal flu.
Terrorism is a real and potentially
consequential danger. But the greatest threat
isn't posed by the direct harm terrorists could
inflict; it comes from what we do to ourselves
when we are spooked. It is how we react -- or
more precisely, how we overreact -- to the
threat of terrorism that makes it an appealing
tool for our adversaries. By grounding
commercial aviation and effectively closing our
borders after the 2001 attacks, Washington
accomplished something no foreign state could
have hoped to achieve: a blockade on the
economy of the world's sole superpower. While
we cannot expect to be completely successful at
intercepting terrorist attacks, we must get a
better handle on how we respond when they
happen.
2. When it comes to preventing
terrorism, the only real defense is a good
offense.
The cornerstone of the
Bush administration's approach to dealing with
the terrorist threat was to take the battle to
the enemy. But offense has its limits. We still
aren't generating sufficiently accurate and
timely tactical intelligence to adequately
support U.S. counterterrorism efforts overseas.
And going after terrorists abroad hardly means
they won't manage to strike us at home. Just
days before the attempted bombing of Northwest
Airlines Flight 253, the United States
collaborated with the Yemeni government on raids
against al-Qaeda militants there. The group
known as al-Qaeda of the Arabian Peninsula is
now claiming responsibility for having equipped
and trained Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who
allegedly tried to blow up the flight. The
group is also leveraging the raids to recruit
militants and mount protests against Yemen's
already fragile central government.
At
the same time, an emphasis on offense has often
come at the expense of investing in effective
defensive measures, such as maintaining quality
watch lists, sharing information about threats,
safeguarding such critical assets as the
nation's food and energy supplies, and
preparing for large-scale emergencies. After
authorities said Abdulmutallab had hidden
explosives in his underwear, airline screeners
held up flights to do stepped-up passenger
pat-downs at boarding gates -- pat-downs that
inevitably avoided passengers' crotches and
buttocks. This kind of quick fix only tends to
fuel public cynicism about security efforts.
But if we can implement smart security measures
ahead of time (such as requiring refineries
next to densely populated areas to use safer
chemicals when they manufacture high-octane
gas), we won't be incapacitated when terrorists
strike. Strengthening our national ability to
withstand and rapidly recover from terrorism
will make the United States a less appealing
target. In combating terrorism, as in sports,
success requires both a capable offense and a
strong defense.
3. Getting better
control over America's borders is essential to
making us safer.
Our borders will
never serve as a meaningful line of defense
against terrorism. The inspectors at our ports,
border crossings and airports have important
roles when it comes to managing immigration and
the flow of commerce, but they play only a bit
part in stopping would-be attackers. This is
because terrorist threats do not originate at
our land borders with Mexico and Canada, nor
along our 12,000 miles of coastline. They
originate at home as well as abroad, and they
exploit global networks such as the
transportation system that moved 500 million
cargo containers through the world's ports in
2008. Moreover, terrorists' travel documents
are often in perfect order. This was the case
with Abdulmutallab, as well as with shoe-bomber
Richard Reid in 2001. Complaints about porous
borders may play well politically, but they
distract us from the more challenging task of
forging international cooperation to strengthen
safeguards for our global transportation,
travel and financial systems. They also
sidestep the disturbing fact that the number of
terrorism-related cases involving U.S.
residents reached a new high in
2009.
4. Investing in new technology is key to
better security.
Not necessarily.
Technology can be helpful, but too often it
ends up being part of the problem. Placing too
much reliance on sophisticated tools such as
X-ray machines often leaves the people staffing
our front lines consumed with monitoring and
troubleshooting these systems. Consequently,
they become more caught up in process than
outcomes. And as soon procedures become
routine, a determined bad guy can game them. We
would do well to heed two lessons the U.S.
military has learned from combating insurgents
in Iraq and Afghanistan: First, don't do things
in rote and predictable ways, and second, don't
alienate the people you are trying to protect.
Too much of what is promoted as homeland
security disregards these lessons. It is true
that technology such as full-body imaging
machines, which have received so much attention
in the past week, are far more effective than
metal detectors at screening airline
passengers. But new technologies are also
expensive, and they are no substitute for
well-trained professionals who are empowered
and rewarded for exercising good
judgment.
5. Average citizens aren't an effective
bulwark against terrorist
attacks.
Elite pundits and
policymakers routinely dismiss the ability of
ordinary people to respond effectively when
they are in harm's way. It's ironic that this
misconception has animated much of the
government's approach to homeland security
since Sept. 11, 2001, given that the only
successful counterterrorist action that day
came from the passengers aboard United Airlines
Flight 93. These passengers didn't have the
help of federal air marshals. The Defense
Department's North American Aerospace Defense
Command didn't intercept the plane -- it didn't
even know the airliner had been hijacked. But
by charging the cockpit over rural
Pennsylvania, these private citizens prevented
al-Qaeda terrorists from reaching their likely
target of the U.S. Capitol or the White House.
The government leaders whose constitutional
duty is "to provide for the common defense"
were defended by one thing alone -- an alert
and heroic citizenry.
This misconception
is particularly reckless because it ends up
sidelining the greatest asset we have for
managing the terrorism threat: the average
people who are best positioned to detect and
respond to terrorist activities. We have only
to look to the attempted Christmas Day attack
to validate this truth. Once again it was the
government that fell short, not ordinary
people. A concerned Nigerian father, not the
CIA or the National Security Agency, came
forward with crucial information. And the
courageous actions of the Dutch film director
Jasper Schuringa and other passengers and crew
members aboard Flight 253 thwarted the
attack.
Stephen Flynn is the president of the
Center for National Policy and author of "The
Edge of Disaster: Rebuilding a Resilient
Nation."


