By Naomi Wolf, Friday 21 December 2012, guardian.co.uk
People often ask me, in terms of my argument about "ten steps"
that mark the descent to a police state or closed society, at what stage we
are. I am sorry to say that with the importation of what will be tens
of thousands of drones, by both US military and by commercial interests,
into US airspace, with a specific mandate to engage in surveillance and with
the capacity for weaponization – which is due to begin in earnest at the start
of the new year – it means that the police state is now officially here.
In February of this year, Congress
passed the FAA Reauthorization Act, with its provision to deploy fleets of
drones domestically. Jennifer Lynch, an attorney at the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, notes that this followed a major lobbying effort, "a huge
push by […] the defense sector" to promote the use of drones in American
skies: 30,000 of them are expected to be in use by 2020, some as small as
hummingbirds – meaning that you won't necessarily see them, tracking your
meeting with your fellow-activists, with your accountant or your
congressman, or filming your cruising the bars or your assignation with your
lover, as its video-gathering whirs.
Others will be as big as passenger planes. Business-friendly media
stress their planned abundant use by corporations: police
in Seattle have already deployed them.
An unclassified
US air force document reported by CBS (pdf) news expands on this
unprecedented and unconstitutional step – one that formally brings the military
into the role of controlling domestic populations on US soil, which is the
bright line that separates a democracy from a military oligarchy. (The US
constitution allows for the deployment of National Guard units by governors,
who are answerable to the people; but this system is intended, as is posse comitatus, to
prevent the military from taking action aimed at US citizens domestically.)
The air force document explains that the air force will be overseeing
the deployment of its own military surveillance drones within the borders of
the US; that it may keep video and other data it collects with these drones for
90 days without a warrant – and will then, retroactively, determine if the
material can be retained – which does away for good with the fourth amendment
in these cases. While the drones are not supposed to specifically "conduct
non-consensual surveillance on on specifically identified US persons",
according to the document, the wording allows for domestic military
surveillance of non-"specifically identified" people (that is, a
group of activists or protesters) and it comes with the important caveat,
also seemingly wholly unconstitutional, that it may not target individuals
"unless expressly approved by the secretary of Defense".
In other words, the Pentagon can now send a domestic drone to
hover outside your apartment window, collecting footage of you and your
family, if the secretary of Defense approves it. Or it may track you and your
friends and pick up audio of your conversations, on your way, say, to
protest or vote or talk to your representative, if you are not
"specifically identified", a determination that is so vague as to be
meaningless.
What happens to those images, that audio? "Distribution of domestic
imagery" can go to various other government agencies without your consent,
and that imagery can, in that case, be distributed to various government
agencies; it may also include your most private moments and most personal
activities. The authorized "collected information may incidentally
include US persons or private property without consent". Jennifer Lynch of
the Electronic Frontier Foundation told CBS:
"In some records that were released by the air force recently … under
their rules, they are allowed to fly drones in public areas and record
information on domestic situations."
This document accompanies a major federal push for drone deployment this
year in the United States, accompanied by federal policies to encourage law
enforcement agencies to obtain and use them locally, as well as by federal
support for their commercial deployment. That is to say: now HSBC, Chase,
Halliburton etc can have their very own fleets of domestic surveillance
drones. The FAA recently established a more efficient process for local police
departments to get permits for their own squadrons of drones.
Given the Department of Homeland Security militarization of police
departments, once the circle is completed with San Francisco or New York or
Chicago local cops having their own drone fleet – and with Chase, HSBC and
other banks having hired local police, as
I reported here last week – the meshing of military, domestic law
enforcement, and commercial interests is absolute. You don't need a messy,
distressing declaration of martial law.
And drone fleets owned by private corporations means that a first amendment
right of assembly is now over: if Occupy is massing outside of a bank, send the
drone fleet to surveil, track and harass them. If citizens rally outside the
local Capitol? Same thing. As one of my readers put it, the scary thing about
this new arrangement is deniability: bad things done to citizens by drones can
be denied by private interests – "Oh, that must have been an LAPD
drone" – and LAPD can insist that it must have been a private industry
drone. For where, of course, will be the accountability from citizens buzzed or
worse by these things?
Domestic drone use is here, and the meshing has begun: local cops
in Grand Forks, North Dakota called in a DHS Predator drone – the same make
that has caused hundreds of civilian casualties in Pakistan – over a dispute
involving a herd of cattle. The military rollout in process and planned, within
the US, is massive: the Christian
Science Monitor reports that a total of 110 military sites for drone
activity are either built or will be built, in 39 states. That covers America.
We don't need a military takeover: with these capabilities on US soil and
this air force white paper authorization for data collection, the military will
be effectively in control of the private lives of American citizens. And these
drones are not yet weaponized.
For the rest of the article go to:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/dec/21/coming-drone-attack-america
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