It’s finally coming into focus, and it’s not even a difficult
equation to grasp. It goes like this: take a country in the grips of an
expanding national security state and sooner or later your “safety”
will mean your humiliation, your degradation. And by the way, it will
mean the degradation of your country, too.
Just ask Rolando Negrin, a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) screener who passed through one of those new “whole body image” scanners last May as part of his training for airport security. His co-workers claimed to
have gotten a look at his “junk” and mocked him mercilessly, evidently
repeatedly asking, “What size are you?” and referring to him as “little
angry man.” In the end, calling it “psychological torture,” he insisted
that he snapped, which in his case meant that he went after a
co-worker, baton first, demanding an apology.
Consider that a little parable about just how low this country has
sunk, how psychologically insecure we’ve become while supposedly
guarding ourselves against global danger. There is no question that, at
the height of Cold War hysteria, when superpower nuclear arsenals were
out of this world and the planet seemed a hair-trigger from destruction,
big and small penises were in play, symbolically speaking. Only now,
however, facing a ragtag set of fanatics and terrorists -- not a mighty
nation but a puny crew -- are those penises perfectly real and,
potentially, completely humiliating.
Tomgram: Engelhardt, The United States of Fear
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Failed Bombs Do the Job
We live, it seems, in a national security “homeland” of little angry bureaucrats who couldn’t be happier to define what “safety” means for you and big self-satisfied officials who can duck the application
of those safety methods. Your government can now come up with any
wacky solution to American “security” and you’ll pay the price. One guy
brings a failed shoe bomb on an airplane, and you’re suddenly in your socks. Word has it that bombs can be mixed from liquids in airplane bathrooms, and there go your bottled drinks. A youthful idiot flies
toward Detroit with an ill-constructed bomb in his underwear, and
suddenly they’re taking naked scans of you or threatening to grope your
junk.
Two bombs don’t go off in the cargo holds of two planes and all of a sudden sending things around the world threatens to become more problematic and expensive. Each time, the price of “safety” rises and some set of lucky corporations, along with the lobbyists
and politicians that support them, get a windfall. In each case, the
terror tactic (at least in the normal sense) failed; in each case, the
already draconian standards for our security were ratcheted up, while
yet more money was poured into new technology and human reinforcements,
which may, in the end, cause more disruption than any successful terror
attack.
Directly or indirectly, you pay for the screeners and scanners and a
labyrinthine intelligence bureaucracy that officially wields an $80 billion
budget, and all the lobbyists and shysters and pitchmen who accompany
our burgeoning homeland-security complex. And by the way, no one’s the
slightest bit nice about it either, which isn’t surprising since it’s a
national security state we’re talking about, which means its mentality
is punitive. It wants to lock you down, quietly and with full
acquiescence if possible. Offer some trouble, though, or step out of
line, and you'll be hit with a $10,000 fine or maybe put in cuffs. It’s all for your safety, and fortunately they have a set of the most inept terror plots in history to prove their point.
By now, who hasn’t written about the airport “porno-scans,” the crotch gropes and breast jobs, the “don’t touch my junk” uproar, the growing lines, and the exceedingly modest protests on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, not to speak of the indignity of it all?
Totally been there, completely done that; totally written about, fully read. Shouldn’t we move on?
Taking Off the Gloves (and Then Everything Else)
And yet there are a few dots that still need to be connected. After
all, since the beginning of George W. Bush’s second term, Americans have
been remarkably quiet when it comes to the national security disasters
being perpetuated in their name. America’s wars, its soaring Pentagon budgets, its billion-dollar military bases, its giant new citadels still called embassies but actually regional command centers, its ever-escalating CIA drone war along the Pakistani tribal borderlands, the ever-expanding surveillance at home, and the incessant “night raids” and home razings thousands of miles away in Afghanistan, not to speak of Washington’s stimulus-package spending
in its war zones have caused no more than the mildest ripple of
protest, much less genuine indignation, in this country in years.
American
“safety” has, in every case, trumped outrage. Now, for the first time
in years, the oppressiveness of a national security state bent on
locking down American life has actually gotten to some Americans. No
flags are yet flying over mass protests with “Don’t Scan on Me”
emblazoned on them. Still, the idea that air travel may now mean a
choice between a spritz of radiation and a sorta naked snapshot or --
thrilling option B -- having some overworked, overaggressive TSA agent grope you has caused outrage, at least among a minority of Americans, amid administration confusion. (If you want evidence that Hillary Clinton is considering a run for president in 2012, check out what she had to say about her lack of eagerness to be patted down at the airport.)
Local authorities have threatened
to bring sexual battery charges against TSA agents who step over the
line in pat-downs. Some legislators are denouncing the TSA’s new
security plans. Ron Paul has introduced the American Travel Dignity Act. And good for them all.
But here’s the thing: in our deluded state, Americans don’t tend to
connect what we’re doing to others abroad and what we’re doing to
ourselves at home. We refuse to see that the trillion or more dollars
that continue to go into the Pentagon, the U.S. Intelligence Community,
and the national security state yearly, as well as the stalemated or
losing wars Washington insists on fighting in distant lands, have
anything to do with the near collapse of the American economy,
job-devastation at home, or any of the other disasters of our American
age.
As a result, those porno-scanners and enhanced pat-downs are
indignities without a cause -- except, of course, for those terrorists
who keep launching their bizarre plots to take down our planes. And yet
whatever inconvenience, embarrassment, or humiliation you suffer in an
airport shouldn’t be thought of as something the terrorists have done to
us. It’s what the American national security state that we’ve quietly
accepted demands of its subjects, based on the idea that no degree of
danger from a terrorist attack, however infinitesimal, is acceptable.
(When it comes to genuine safety, anything close to that principle is
absent from other aspects of American life where -- from eating to driving, to drinking, to working -- genuine danger exists and genuine damage is regularly done.)
We now live not just with all the usual fears that life has to offer, but in something like a United States of Fear.
So think of it as an irony that, when George W. Bush and his cronies
decided to sally forth and smite the Greater Middle East, they exulted
that they were finally “taking the gloves off.”
And so they were: aggressive war, torture, abuse, secret imprisonment,
souped-up surveillance, slaughter, drone wars, there was no end to it.
When those gloves came off, other people suffered first. But wasn’t it
predictable -- since unsuccessful wars have a nasty habit of coming home
-- that, in the end, other things would come off, and sooner or later
they would be on you: your hat, your shoes, your belt, your clothes, and
of course, your job, your world?
And don’t for a second think that it’s going to end here. What
happens when the first terrorist with a suppository bomb is found aboard
one of our planes? After all, such weapons already exist. In the meantime, the imposition of more draconian safety and security methods is, of course, being considered
for buses, trains, and boats. Can trucks, taxis, cars, and bikes be
far behind? After all, once begun, there can, by definition, be no end
to the search for perfect security.
You Wanna Be Safer? Really?
You must have a friend who’s extremely critical of everyone else but
utterly opaque when it comes to himself. Well, that’s this country,
too.
Here’s a singular fact to absorb: we now know that a bunch of Yemeni
al-Qaeda adherents have a far better hit on just who we are,
psychologically speaking, and what makes us tick than we do. Imagine
that. They have a more accurate profile of us than our leading
intelligence profilers undoubtedly do of them.
Recently, they released an online magazine laying out just how much the two U.S.-bound cargo-bay bombs
that caused panic cost them: a mere $4,200 and the efforts of “less
than six brothers” over three months. They even gave their plot a name,
Operation Hemorrhage (and what they imagined hemorrhaging, it seems,
was not American blood, but treasure).
Now, they're laughing at us for claiming the operation failed because
-- thanks reportedly to a tip from Saudi intelligence -- those bombs
didn’t go off. “This supposedly ‘foiled plot,’” they wrote, “will
without a doubt cost America and other Western countries billions of
dollars in new security measures. That is what we call leverage.”
They are, they claim,
planning to use the "security phobia that is sweeping America” not to
cause major casualties, but to blow a hole in the U.S. economy. "We
knew that cargo planes are staffed by only a pilot and a co-pilot, so
our objective was not to cause maximum casualties but to cause maximum
losses to the American economy" via the multi-billion-dollar U.S.
freight industry.
This is a new definition of asymmetrical warfare. The terrorists never
have to strike an actual target. It’s not even incumbent upon them to
build a bomb that works. Just about anything will do. To be
successful, they just have to repeatedly send things in our direction,
inciting the expectable Pavlovian reaction from the U.S. national
security state, causing it to further tighten its grip (grope?) at yet
greater taxpayer expense.
In a sense, both the American national security state and al-Qaeda
are building their strength and prestige as our lives grow more
constrained and our treasure vanishes.
So you wanna be safer? I mean, actually safer? Here’s a
simple formula for beginning to improve American safety and security at
every level. End our trillion dollar wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; set
our military to defending our own borders (and no, projecting power
abroad does not normally qualify as a defense of the United States);
begin to shut down our global empire of bases; stop building grotesque embassy-citadels abroad (one even has a decorative moat,
for god’s sake!); end our overseas war stimulus packages and bring some
of that money home. In short, stop going out of our way to tick off
foreigners and then pouring our treasure into an American war machine
intent on pursuing a generational global war against them.
Of course, the U.S. national security state has quite a different
formula for engendering safety in America: fight the Afghan War until hell freezes over; keep the odd base or two in Iraq; dig into the Persian Gulf region; send U.S. Special Operations troops into any country where a terrorist might possibly lurk; and make sure the drones
aren’t far behind. In other words, reinforce our war state by ensuring
that we’re eternally in a state of war, and then scare the hell out of
Americans by repeatedly insisting that we’re in imminent danger, that
shoe, underwear, and someday butt bombers will destroy our country, our
lives, and our civilization. Insist that a single percent of risk is 1%
too much when it comes to terror and American lives, and then demand
that those who feel otherwise be dealt with punitively, if they won’t
shut up.
It’s a formula for leaving you naked in airports, while increasing
the oppressive power of the state. And here’s the dirty, little,
distinctly Orwellian secret: the national security state can’t do
without those Yemeni terrorists (and vice versa), as well as our homegrown variety.
All of them profit from a world of war. You don’t -- and on that
score, what happens in an airport line should be the least of your
worries.
The national security state is eager to cop a feel. As long as
Americans don’t grasp the connections between our war state and our
“safety,” things will only get worse and, in the end, our world will
genuinely be in danger.
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com. His latest book is The American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s
(Haymarket Books). You can catch him discussing war American-style and
that book in a Timothy MacBain TomCast video by clicking here.
Copyright 2010 Tom Engelhardt