This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/4068

Chertoff- Country "Won't Be Safe" Under Obama's Tepid Anti-Terror Policies

August 30, 2009

Chertoff - Country "Won't Be Safe" Under Obama's Tepid Anti-Terror Policies

August 30, 2009 - San Francisco, CA - PipeLineNews.org - In an interview published in today's L.A. Times, Former Dept. of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff gravely observed that the DOJ's naming of a special prosecutor in the matter of CIA's interrogation of al-Qaeda terrorist suspects will result in a country that, "won't be safe" because those charged with counter-terrorism's dirty work will now take the path of least resistance rather than acting affirmatively and suffer the consequences of a future administration criminalizing activities they had every reason to assume had been thoroughly vetted.

Chertoff more than implied that DOJ's prosecution of CIA interrogators would send a clear and harmful message to our enemies, that, "I should be as nonaggressive as possible...People will take the most risk-averse option. And of course the country won't be safe." [source LA Times, Ex-Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff sees risk in current anti-terror policies, http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-chertoff30-2009aug30,0,5876553.story]

The former Homeland Security chief also chided Congress over its lack of interest in writing procedures under which terror suspects such as those in GITMO would receive the punishment they deserve if found guilty, "Congress has shown no interest in actually writing a set of rules and laws that would govern the problem of people who can't be prosecuted in a criminal court, maybe can't be prosecuted in a military commission, but are clearly too dangerous to release." [source, ibid]

http://www.pipelinenews.org/index.cfm?page=chertoff8.30.09%2Ehtm

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Michael Chertoff looks back on Homeland Security years
The former department chief talks about America's safety, counter-terrorism and the threats of the 21st century.
By Sebastian Rotella August 30, 2009


Los Angeles Times

www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-chertoff30-2009aug30,0,5876553.story

Reporting from Washington - Former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, who has a new book out this week, warned in an interview that national security will suffer if counter-terrorism warriors fear that bosses will second-guess their front-line actions after the fact. Chertoff said his book, "Homeland Security: Assessing the First Five Years," lays out an architecture for defending the nation against the threats of the 21st century. As Homeland Security chief from 2005 to this year, Chertoff oversaw 218,000 employees and a $50-billion budget. He was also head of the Justice Department's criminal division from 2001 to 2003 and led the investigation of the Sept. 11 attacks as well as prosecutions of cases including the Enron scandal. Dressed casually and speaking in rapid-fire sentences, he spoke with a reporter in the offices of his security consulting company, the Chertoff Group. The following is an edited account of the interview.

Making the headlines these days are such issues as shutting down the detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and possible prosecutions of CIA interrogators. Some critics, including former Vice President Dick Cheney, say such moves make America less safe. Where do you stand?

What we owe the people who are at the point of the spear is certainty. Right after 9/11 . . . there was a lot of criticism about prior timidity in being too lawyered up and too cautious about killing [Osama] bin Laden. . . . Now, I think you'd be fair to say as an agent: I should be as nonaggressive as possible. . . . Unfortunately that's the message coming out. . . . People will take the most risk-averse option. And of course the country won't be safe. And if you think the country should tolerate that, that's a fair argument. But you've got to be clear about it and . . . if it turns out that something happens as a result and Americans get killed, then you have to take responsibility.

You don't talk much in the book about detention or interrogation issues. There's a lot of criticism that there was excess and abuse during the George W. Bush administration. How do you feel about that looking back?

I think it's a reasonable criticism to say that we in the last administration took too long to get these military commissions and processes up and running. By waiting a long time to get that done, it kind of soured the process. On the other hand, I have to say, Congress has shown no interest in actually writing a set of rules and laws that would govern the problem of people who can't be prosecuted in a criminal court, maybe can't be prosecuted in a military commission, but are clearly too dangerous to release. I spent four years working real hard to keep people who were trained in Al Qaeda camps from coming into the country. The idea that we [might] bring them in and let them go is not a happy prospect.

In addition to terrorism, you write about this idea of groups like the Mexican cartels or the Central American Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13, gang that have a destabilizing capacity.

When you deal with groups like the FARC [Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia] or MS-13 or some of the cartels along the northern part of Mexico, they are almost at the level of acting in a political way. They use violence for political purposes, they do threaten the stability of at least the local authorities. If you look at Venezuela, that's a great example of the confluence of Hezbollah, Iran, Venezuela, the FARC -- all these actors have found each other, and the traditional line between what's criminal and what's war and the national defense has really eroded. . . . [Venezuelan President Hugo] Chavez has made a deliberate decision to set himself up against the United States. . . . He has aligned himself with non-state actors . . . and so there we see the entire spectrum of basically a unity of effort on the part of both a state actor that's hostile to the U.S. and non-state actors who are hostile to the U.S. and/or interested in criminal activity. That to me is unfortunately the wave of the future.

This item is available on the Militant Islam Monitor website, at http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/4068