Me and OFAC and Ahmed the Egyptian: One Citizen’s Misadventure in Securityland
Where did I go wrong? Was it playing percussion with an Occupy Wall
Street band in Times Square when I was in New York recently? Or was it
when I returned to my peaceful new home in Oslo and deleted an email
invitation to hear Newt Gingrich lecture Norwegians on the American
election? (Yes, even here.)
I don’t know how it happened. Or even, really, what happened. Or what
it means. So I’ve got no point -- only a lot of anxiety. I usually write about the problems of the world, but now I’ve got one of my own. They evidently think I’m a terrorist.
That is, someone in the U.S. government who specializes in finding
terrorists seems to have found me and laid a heavy hand on my bank
account. I think this is wrong, of course, but try to tell that to a
faceless, acronymic government agency.
It all started with a series of messages from my bank: Citibank.
Yeah, I know, I should have moved my money long ago, but in the distant
past before Citibank became Citigroup, it was my friendly little
neighborhood bank, and I guess I’m in a rut. Besides, I learned when I
made plans to move to Norway that if your money is in a small bank, it
has to be sent to a big bank like Citibank or Chase to wire it to you
when you need it, which meant I was trapped anyway.
Tomgram: Ann Jones, The Incredible Shrinking Woman in Post-9/11 Hell
The big war news on the front page of the New York Times last weekend was headlined:
“U.S. Is Planning Buildup in Gulf After Iraq Exit.” Its first
sentence: “The Obama administration plans to bolster the American
military presence in the Persian Gulf after it withdraws the remaining
troops from Iraq this year, according to officials and diplomats.” Of
course, for those reading TomDispatch.com, this news was undoubtedly
less than startling, given that Nick Turse nailed down the same
long-term buildup almost two years ago in a post presciently entitled “Out of Iraq, Into the Gulf.”
Nonetheless, that Times piece has a little gem buried in it, one that should get Secretary of State Hillary Clinton the Onion
Orwellian-geopolitical-statement-of-the-week award. The newspaper of
record quotes her as saying, “We will have a robust continuing presence
throughout the region, which is proof of our ongoing commitment to Iraq
and to the future of that region, which holds such promise and should
be freed from outside interference to continue on a pathway to
democracy.” Yes, it’s a fact: the United States is, on principle,
against outside interference everywhere on Earth, and if you don’t
believe us, we’re happy to garrison your country to prove it.
It’s evidently not, by the way, the season to write for
TomDispatch.com. State Department official Peter Van Buren, whose
firsthand book about the debacle of “nation-building” in Iraq, We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, has gotten so much attention lately, and who wrote at this site about his (mis)treatment by his employer, has now been stripped of his security clearance and suspended from his job. He’s at home
facing future punishment for being an honest man -- and so, evidently,
not up to diplomatic snuff -- in his continuing blunt comments on the
State Department’s path to madness
in Iraq. Here’s how the official departmental letter put the matter:
“[Y]ou have shown an unwillingness to comply with Department rules and
regulations regarding writing and speaking on matters of official
concern, including by publishing articles and blog posts on such matters
without submitting them to the Department for review, and that your
judgment in the handling of protected information is questionable.”
Mind you, this is in an American world of security overkill in which, according to Dana Priest and William M. Arkin of the Washington Post,
854,000 people hold top security clearances, while "some 1,271
government organizations and 1,931 private companies work on programs
related to counterterrorism, homeland security, and intelligence in
about 10,000 locations across the United States."
In the meantime, Ann Jones, who has regularly reported for this site from grim global battle zones, finally left them for -- one bloody massacre
aside -- a land so peaceable you can practically hear a pin drop. I’m
talking about Norway. But as with Van Buren, no matter how far you go,
the U.S. government still gets its man (... er, woman). What that’s
meant for her is that, even in peaceable Norway, Jones found herself
embroiled in some small corner of post-9/11 American national security madness. We’ve all heard about what happens when you find yourself trapped on a no-fly list, but how about a no-pay list (and worse yet, it’s your own money)? Tom
Me and OFAC and Ahmed the Egyptian:
One Citizen’s Misadventure in Securityland
So the first thing I noticed was that one of those wires with money I
needed never arrived. When I politely inquired, Citibank told me that
the transaction hadn’t gone through. Why not? All my fault, they
insisted, for not having provided complete information. Long story
short: we went round and round for a couple of weeks, as I coughed up
ever more morsels of previously unsolicited personal information. Only
then did a bit of truth emerge.
The bank wasn’t actually holding up the delivery of the money. The
funds had, in fact, left my account weeks before, along with a wire
transfer fee. The responsible party was OFAC.
Oh what? I wondered. OFAC. It rhymes with Oh-Tack, but you’ve got to
watch how you pronounce it. Speak carelessly and the name sounds like
just what you might say upon learning that you’ve been sucked into the
ultimate top-secret bureaucratic sinkhole. It turns out, the bank
informs me, that OFAC is a division of the U.S. Treasury Department that
“reviews” transactions.
“Why me?” I ask. As a long-time reporter I find it a strange question, as strange as finding myself working on a story about me.
By way of an answer, the bank refers me to an Internet link that calls up a 521-page report
so densely typed it looks like wallpaper. Entitled “Specially
Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons,” it turns out to be a list of
what seems to be every Muslim business and social organization on the
planet. That’s when I Google OFAC, go to its site, and find out that
the acronym stands for the Office of Foreign Assets Control.
Its mission description reads chillingly.
It “administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions based on U.S.
foreign policy and national security goals against targeted foreign
countries and regimes, terrorists, international narcotics traffickers,
those engaged in activities related to the proliferation of weapons of
mass destruction, and other threats to the national security, foreign
policy or economy of the United States.” And it turns out to be a
subsidiary of something much bigger that goes by the unnerving name of
“Terrorism and Financial Intelligence.”
Off With Her Head
Whoa! Perhaps it doesn’t help, at this moment, that I’ve just been reading Top Secret America: The Rise of the New American Security State, the scary new book by Washington Post
reporters Dana Priest and William M. Arkin about our multiple, overfed,
overzealous, highly-classified intelligence agencies, staffed in
significant part not by civil servants but by profit-making private
contractors. Suddenly, I feel myself in the grip of the national
post-9/11 paranoia that hatched all that new “security.” (And you, too,
could find yourself in my shoes fast.)
I check OFAC’s list more carefully. It’s in a kind of alphabetical
order, but with significant incomprehensible diversions -- and if my
name is there, I sure can’t find it. Since I’ve spent most of the last
decade working with international aid organizations as well as reporting from some of the more strife-ridden lands on the planet, including Afghanistan, the only thing I can imagine is that maybe all those odd visas in my fat passport raised a red flag somewhere in Washington.
Next,
I search for the name of my Norwegian landlady. Did I say that the
wired funds that never arrived were meant to pay her my rent? She’s in
India, a volunteer health-care worker with Tibetan refugees, currently
helping refurbish an orphanage for 144 kids. (What could be more
suspicious than that?) I can’t find her name either. No Anns or Heidis
at all, in fact, among the raft of Mohammads and Abduls.
Heidi is a Buddhist. I’m an atheist. Almost everybody on the list
seems to be Muslim, including really dangerous-sounding guys like “Ahmed
the Egyptian.” But I guess that to a truly committed and well-paid
terrorist hunter, we must all look alike.
I’m desperate to get the rent to Heidi so she can cover her own
expenses as a volunteer; an international organization pays for the
children’s needs, but Heidi does the work. So I call the American
Embassy in Oslo and speak to a nice young woman in the section devoted
to “American Citizen Services.” I tell her about me and OFAC and Ahmed
the Egyptian. She says, “I’ve never heard of such a thing. But there
are so many of these intelligence offices now, I guess I’ll be hearing
these stories more often.” (Maybe she’s been reading Top Secret America, too.)
She takes it up with her superiors and calls me back. The Embassy
can’t help me, citizen or not, she says, because they don’t handle money
matters and have nothing to do with the Treasury Department.
“What? The State Department doesn’t deal with the Treasury?”
“No,” she says, “I guess not.”
Perhaps since I last paid attention the Treasury stopped being
considered part of the government. Maybe it now belongs to Lockheed
Martin.
At least the State Department has some compassion left in it. If I’m really destitute, she assures me, the Embassy might be
able to give me a loan to pay for a plane ticket that would get my two
cats and me back to the States. I guess it doesn’t occur to her that
under the circumstances I might feel more secure in Norway.
Down the Rabbit Hole
Still, all I want to do is clear up this mess, so I put my head in
the lion’s mouth and send an email directly to OFAC. I tell them that
I’m in Norway for the year on a Fulbright grant as a researcher -- that
is, as part of an international exchange program founded by a U.S.
Senator and sponsored by the U.S. Government, or at least one part of
the State Department part of it. Among my informal responsibilities, I
add, is to be a goodwill ambassador for the United States, but I’m
finding it really hard to explain to Norwegians that I can’t pay my rent
because a bunch of terrorist-trackers in the pay of my government have
made off with the money and left nothing behind but a list of Muslim
names.
Remarkably quickly OFAC itself writes back, giving me the creepy
feeling that it was lurking behind the door the whole time. It is sorry
that I am “frustrated.” It will help me, but only if I supply a whole
long list of information, mostly the same stuff I have already provided
three times to the bank, the same information the bank later said wasn’t
the issue after all. (Still later, the bank would say that I had given
not too little information, but too much.) I send the requested tidbits
back to “Dear OFAC Functionary or Machine as the case may be.”
Two days later comes another message from OFAC, this time signed by
“Michael Z.” Like Afghans, or spies, he evidently has only one name,
but my hopes that he might be an actual person inexplicably rise anyway
-- only to sink again when he claims OFAC needs yet more information.
All this so that Michael Z., presumed person, may help me “more
effectively.” (More than what, I wonder?) He is, he insists, trying to
locate my money with the help of my bank, which by the way is now
blocking me from seeing information about my own account online.
It seems odd to me that this top-secret office of Financial
Intelligence somehow can’t manage to lay hands on the money it snatched
from me, but what do I know? I’m just a citizen.
Then -- are you ready for this? -- comes what should be a happy
ending. A message from the bank tells me that the money has slipped
through after all, and sure enough there it is at last in a Norwegian
bank, only a month late. I won’t be evicted after all, and Heidi will
make sure those Tibetan kids get some fresh fruit and brand new bright
green curtains.
Still, this is not a cheery story. So I have to send my apologies to
the long-dead Senator J. William Fulbright: I’m sorry indeed that
certain changes in the spirit and operations of the United States have
occurred since that day in 1948 when you launched your farsighted
program of grants to encourage open international educational and
cultural exchange. And I apologize that some of those changes may have
temporarily cramped my style as a goodwill ambassador; I’ll try to get
back on the job if I can just figure out what hit me.
Was this all simply a mistake? A technical glitch? An error at the
bank? I’d like to think so, but what about that list of “Specially
Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons”? Why was I directed to that?
And what about Michael Z., who presumably is some kind of intelligence
analyst at OFAC and who, when last heard from, was still seeking
information and trying to find the money?
Frankly, this month-long struggle has left me mighty tired and
uneasy. Right now, Senator Fulbright, I’m lying low, down here at the
bottom of the rabbit hole, trying to make sense of things. (I took a
last look at the “Blocked Persons” list, and just this week it’s grown
by another page.) So I want to tell you the truth, Senator, and I think
that with your great interest in peaceable international relations, you
just may understand. Strange as it may seem, since I’ve been hunkered
down here in the rabbit hole, I’ve worked up some sympathy for Ahmed the
Egyptian who, I have a sneaking feeling, could be down here, too. It’s
hard to tell when you’re kept in the dark, but maybe he’s just another
poor sap like me, snarled in the super-secret security machine.
Ann Jones is in Norway under the auspices of the Fulbright
Scholar Program, researching the Norwegian economic, social, and
cultural arrangements that cause it to be named consistently by the
United Nations as the best place to live on earth. A TomDispatch regular, she is the author of Kabul in Winter (2006) and War Is Not Over When It’s Over (2010).
Copyright 2011 Ann Jones