Call them what you will: bottom feeders, corporate con-men, flim-flam artists, peddlers of crisis, you name it. You
can't help but marvel how enterprising security firms have the uncanny
ability to sniff-out new opportunities wherever they can find, or
manufacture, them. After all, nothing sells like fear and in "new normal" America fear is an industry with a limitless growth potential.
While
Republicans and Democrats squabble over who's "tougher" when it comes
to invading and pillaging other nations (in the interest of "spreading
democracy" mind you), a planetary grift dubbed the "War on Terror,"
waiting in the wings are America's new snake-oil salesmen.
Welcome to Scannergate!
With
airport security all the rage, companies that manufacture whole body
imaging technologies and body-scanners stand to make a bundle as a
result of last December's aborted attack on Northwest Airlines Flight
253.
Like their kissin' cousins at the Pentagon, poised to bag a $708
billion dollar windfall in the 2011 budget, securocrats over at the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) stand to vacuum-up some $56.3
billion next year, a $6 billion increase.
According to the agency's February 1
budget announcement,
funding requirements will prioritize "efforts to enhance security
measures that protect against terrorism and other threats ...
reflecting the Department's commitment to fiscal discipline and
efficiency."
In keeping with America's unstoppable slide to the right, President
Obama created a commission on Thursday by executive order promising to
"fix" the yawning budget deficit by establishing--what else!--a
"bipartisan fiscal commission."
Promising to "slash" the deficit, by shredding the already-tattered
social safety net, disemboweling programs such as Medicare, Medicaid
and Social Security, Obama named former Republican Senator Alan Simpson
and former Clinton White House chief of staff Erskine Bowles to lead
the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform,
BusinessWeek reported.
According to the
World Socialist Web Site, Simpson, a troglodytic right-winger, told The Washington Post,
"How did we get to a point in America where you get to a certain age in
life, regardless of net worth or income, and you're 'entitled'?" he
asked. "The word itself is killing us."
Bowles, a major fundraiser for the Clinton's, is "currently on the
board of directors of Morgan Stanley, one of the big five Wall Street
investment houses" as well as a director of General Motors, socialist
critic Patrick Martin informs us. Tellingly, "Bowles served as chairman
of the compensation committee at both companies, and still holds that
position at Morgan Stanley, making him the point man for the awarding
of eight-figure salaries and bonuses to the executives of both
companies," Martin averred.
"Off the table," are any proposals that would slash the Pentagon's
bloated budget or any of the other fiscal goodies financing the "War on
Terror."
Reflecting Homeland Security's "fiscal discipline and
responsibility," at the top of the wish-list are what officials
describe as increased spending for Advanced Imaging Technology (AIT) by
the Transportation Security Agency (TSA).
In 2011, the Department says it is requesting $217.7M to "install
500 advanced imaging technology machines at airport checkpoints to
detect dangerous materials, including non-metallic materials."
"This
request," coupled "with planned deployments for 2010, will provide AIT
coverage at 75 percent of Category X airports and 60 percent of the
total lanes at Category X through II airports."
Next up is a $218.9M demand for "Transportation Security Officers
(TSOs) to Staff AITs." New funds are required for "additional TSOs,
managers and associated support costs to operate AITs at airport
checkpoints."
You can't have one without the other, so it's a real job creator and win-win all around! Right? Well, not exactly...
Annals of Homeland Stupidity
As
a secret state agency, TSA has proven itself so effective in protecting
us from terrorists, especially the "homegrown" variety referred to in
the literature as "clean skins," that the American Civil Liberties
Union filed a
lawsuit February 10 on behalf of Pomona College student Nicholas George.
According to the civil liberties' watchdog group, George was
"abusively interrogated, handcuffed and detained for nearly five hours
at the Philadelphia International Airport," by TSA, Philadelphia police
and the FBI. His "crime"? George was kept prisoner because "of a set of
English-Arabic flashcards he was carrying in connection with his
college language studies."
Ben Wizner, a staff attorney with the ACLU's National Security
Project, said in a press release: "Nick George was handcuffed, locked
in a cell for hours and questioned about 9/11 simply because he has
chosen to study Arabic, a language that is spoken by hundreds of
millions of people around the world. This sort of harassment of
innocent travelers is a waste of time and a violation of the
Constitution."
Memo to the ACLU: as is well known to
Fox News viewers and Glenn Beck fans, only "terrorists" speak Arabic; ipso facto, George is a terrorist. How else explain his dubious interest in learning a language spoken by none other than Osama bin Laden himself!
But wait, there's more!
The
Philadelphia Inquirer reported
February 15 that the four-year-old disabled son of a Camden, NJ police
officer "wasn't allowed to pass through airport security" until he took
his leg braces off!
Inquirer columnist Daniel
Rubin writes, "Ryan was taking his first flight, to Walt Disney World,
for his fourth birthday." Developmentally delayed, the result of his
premature birth, the child had just starting walking in March.
After breaking down the stroller, the family passed through the
metal detector when, ding! ding! ding! the alarm sounded. That's when
the screener told the family: either take off the leg braces or no
Disney World for you, suckers.
Understandably, the family was "dumbfounded" by TSA's insensitive
behavior. Ryan's father, Bob Thomas said, "I told them he can't walk
without them on his own."
"He [the screener] said, 'He'll need to take them off'."
Reluctantly, they complied and the family passed through, in single file. Mercifully, the child made it without falling.
Quite naturally, the parents were "furious."
Rubin reports that after demanding to see a supervisor, one of TSA's "finest" asked the couple "what was wrong."
"I told him, 'This is overkill. He's 4 years old. I don't think he's a terrorist.'"
The supervisor told Bob Thomas and his wife, Leona, "You know why we're doing this."
(Yes, we know all-too-well why you're "doing this.")
Keeping Us "Safe"
Why
does TSA need nearly a half billion dollars in taxpayer-funded
largesse? Because "passenger screening is critical to detecting and
preventing individual carrying dangerous or deadly objects from
boarding planes," grammar-challenged DHS securocrats inform us.
Right, it keeps us safe!
Wait a minute, didn't
Heimat Secretary Janet Napolitano tell CNN reporter Candy Crowley on the Sunday chat show "
State on the Union" December 27 that "the system worked," after a
real terrorist, not a college kid or four-year-old, nearly brought down an airliner with a bomb hidden in his underwear?
Perhaps what Ms. Napolitano meant to say is that the system would have worked if
TSA's "Intelligence Community" partners over at the NCTC and CIA hadn't
allowed Abdulmutallab, a watch listed individual, to board Flight 253
on Christmas Day.
After all, as NCTC's Director Michael E. Leiter testified January
20 before the Senate Homeland Security Committee they wanted him "here
in the country for some reason or another."
Wouldn't it be reasonable then, to conclude that handing out even more boodle to corporate grifters won't keep us any safer.
Heavens no!
On New Year's eve, former Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff penned a
Washington Post op-ed that argued "whole-body imagers" should be deployed world-wide.
Countering critics who charge that said scanners are
overly-intrusive and will do little or nothing to stop a determined
individual from smuggling a liquid bomb onto a plane, Chertoff
dismissed naysayers as uninformed Cassandras.
"From the outset" Chertoff declared, "deployment of the machines
has been vigorously opposed by some groups." Citing charges by the
American Civil Liberties Union (
ACLU) and the Electronic Privacy Information Center (
EPIC) that body-scanners amount to a virtual strip-search, Chertoff said such claims are "calculated to alarm the public."
According to the former Bushist official, "it's either pat downs or imaging."
Currently TSA has fielded 40 machines at 19 airports with more on the way. Indeed, the agency handed out a $25 million
contract last October to
Rapiscan Security Systems for 30 more peep-show devices with funds generously provided by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
What Chertoff failed to disclose however, is that since leaving the secret state's employ his security consulting firm,
The Chertoff Group, "includes a client that manufactures the machines" according to
The Washington Post.
Nevertheless, in the wake of the Christmas Day provocation, TSA announced in January "it will order 300 more machines."
While
Rapiscan was the only company to qualify for the contract "because it
had developed technology that performs the screening using a
less-graphic body imaging system," the Post reports
that the giant defense and security firm, L-3 Communications, have
jogged onto the field and are eager to grab as much as they can.
Not everyone however, is enthralled with Chertoff's shameless strategem to feather his own nest.
Kate Hanni, the founder of
FlyersRights.org, which opposes scanner deployment told the
Post,
"Mr. Chertoff should not be allowed to abuse the trust the public has
placed in him as a former public servant to privately gain from the
sale of full-body scanners under the pretense that the scanners would
have detected this particular type of explosive."
Hanni wrote a
blog post January 29, citing a 2005 study published by the Canadian Journal of Police & Security Services "that there is not one end-all, be-all way to prevent terrorists from smuggling explosives on board airliners."
"The Rapiscan full-body scanner" is less than adequate when it comes to detecting liquid explosives, Hanni avers.
"In
fact" she writes, "though it can depict a person's unclothed body with
shocking detail (a virtual strip search), it is capable of detecting
only objects within one tenth of an inch of the outer skin on a human
body. Translation: A terrorist who conceals explosives in a body
cavity, crevice, adult diaper, feminine protection, etc., will walk
through a full-body scanner completely undetected."
But since "abusing the public trust" amounts to little more than
business as usual in Washington, one can be reasonably certain that
security grifters will make a killing exploiting America's latest
panic: the dreaded "body-scanner gap."
Laughing All the Way to the Bank
To get the skinny on scanners however, one needs to refer to numerous investigative reports published in the press--the British press, that is.
The Independent on Sunday reported
January 3, that the "explosive device smuggled in the clothing of the
Detroit bomb suspect would not have been detected by body-scanners set
to be introduced in British airports, an expert on the technology
warned last night."
Indeed, officials at the British Department of Transport and the
Home Office "already tested the scanners and were not persuaded that
they would work comprehensively against terrorist threats to aviation."
Since December's failed attack, TSA has touted the efficacy of
deploying "millimeter-wave" whole body scanners that come with a hefty
built-in price tag.
One security expert, Conservative MP Ben Wallace told IoS that
scientists at the UK defense firm Qinetiq, a powerhouse in the
"homeland security" market in Britain and the U.S., demonstrated that
"the millimetre-wave scanners picked up shrapnel and heavy wax and
metal, but plastic, chemicals and liquids were missed."
"If a material is low density, such as powder, liquid or thin
plastic--as well as the passenger's clothing--the millimetre waves pass
through and the object is not shown on screen," journalist Jane Merrick
informs us.
Wallace added, "X-ray scanners were also unlikely to have detected the Christmas Day bomb."
Why then would TSA be so keen on such an enormous cash outlay for a technology with a less than sterling track record?
The Guardian reported January 18 that since the aborted attack, "investors have been quick to spot a rapid profit."
Guardian correspondent
Andrew Clark tells us that Michael Chertoff's client, Rapiscan, "has
seen its shares in its parent company, OSI Systems, leap by 27% since
Christmas. American Science and Engineering, is up by 16% and has
deployed its chief executive to have his own body scanned on live
television."
The Financial Times reported
January 4, that Rapiscan's "executive vice-president for global
government affairs, said interest in the company's full-body scanners,
which are approved for use in the US, had been 'extreme'."
"We are spending a tremendous amount of time right now answering
questions about production capacity, delivery capabilities and
basically mapping out positioning in airports," the executive told the Financial Times.
You bet they are!
Business analysts said that "installing scanners within the US could cost $300m--paid for, in part, by economic stimulus money."
And,
as American security officials strong-arm other nations into scanning
passengers on U.S.-bound flights "the outlay could double
internationally," The Guardian averred.
Los Angeles-based Imperial Capital analyst Michael Kim told The Guardian,
"We estimate that there are approximately 2,000 security lanes at US
airports, each of which would require a body scanning machine if that's
the route the TSA chooses to take. Our information is that the cost of
each scanner is around $150,000."
But Rapiscan isn't the only game in town and will soon be facing stiff competition from security giant
L-3 Communications.
Clocking-in at
No. 8 on Washington Technology's "Top 100" list of prime federal contractors with some $4,236,653,555 in revenues, L-3 has entered the
heimat market in a big way.
Heavily-leveraged in defense and security, major customers include
the Defense Department, with contracts from the Army, Navy, Marines and
Air Force. While the firm's business lines include C3ISR (Command,
Control, Communication, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance),
L-3 provides extensive IT support to NSA on its illegal domestic
surveillance and data mining programs.
L-3's move has already proved to be a boon to shareholders. The Guardian reported that TSA has ordered "$165m-worth of scanners, using both millimetre and X-ray technology" from the firm.
While L-3 will reap a windfall from the American people, Government Accountability Office investigators
reported in
2008 that the firm has 15 foreign subsidiaries in C3ISR powerhouses
such as Barbados (1), Bermuda (1), Cayman Islands (1), Costa Rica (1),
Hong Kong (1), Ireland (1), Singapore (5) and the U.S. Virgin Islands
(3).
As
Antifascist Calling revealed
February 14, moving operations offshore helped defense contractors
reduce taxes owed to federal and state governments by avoiding Social
Security, Medicare and unemployment insurance payroll taxes for
American workers hired by the foreign subsidiaries.
Another statistic the firm is probably not too keen on publicizing
is their prominent place on the Project on Government Oversight's
(POGO)
Federal Contractor Misconduct Database that
tracks government contracts to firms "with histories of misconduct such
as contract fraud and environmental, ethics, and labor violations."
Listed at No. 7, POGO
reports that
L-3 has been fined some $43.2M for the "Misappropriation of Proprietary
P-3 Aircraft Data; Fraudulent Overbilling on IT Support Services
Contracts; False Claims (Iraq Reconstruction); Bribery (Baghdad, Iraq);
Court Martial of a Civilian Contractor" and for the "Overbilling on
Helicopter Maintenance Contracts in Iraq."
Not that any of this matters to our corrupt representatives in Congress.
During
the 2008 election cycle, L-3's Political Action Committee handed-out
some $603,839 to compliant officials in Washington, according to the
Center for Responsive Politic's
OpenSecrets.org data base.
Democrats received the lion's share of the boodle, bagging 64%,
while Republicans nabbed only 34% of the firm's congressional
investments. Unsurprisingly, Carl Levin (D-MI), chairman of the Senate
Armed Services Committee, scored $10,000 from the L-3 PAC.
In 2010, the campaign finance watchdogs
report that
the L-3 PAC is headed for a new record with $441,456 already on hand as
of January 31, with 66% going to "change" Democrats and 33% to
"conservative" Republicans.
All in all, L-3 is a perfect partner for DHS securocrats and
congressional regulators, with House Homeland Security Committee
chairman, Bennie Thompson (D-MS), pulling down $10,000 from L-3 to
"keep us safe," according to OpenSecrets.
No matter; billions in federal dollars are at stake for our
corporatist masters. As is readily observable every day--from the bank
bailout to the ongoing home foreclosure crisis, and from endless wars
of aggression to massive domestic spying--the business of government,
first, last and always, is business and the American people be damned.