Addicted to the Warfare State
by William Norman Grigg
Which is the more serious threat to life, liberty and property: The illicit
violence practiced by a handful of furtive armed drug smugglers in the Arizona
desert, or the increasingly brazen militarization of U.S. law enforcement –
across the entire country – in the "war on drugs"?
According to some hyperventilating commentators, drug smugglers – with the
guilty acquiescence of Barack Obama – have seized control of a huge swath of
Arizona, thereby asserting alien sovereignty over what was once American soil.
If this were true, points out libertarian journalist (and Arizona resident) J.D.
Tuccille, the narcotics lords would preside over a kingdom "populated by
rattlesnakes and cholla."
What has actually happened is a minor but politically exploitable increase in
criminal activity in one of the many drug smuggling corridors that have long
existed in the southwest, channels of illicit commerce created in order to serve
a huge market that persists despite decades of prohibition.
While Mexican bandits supposedly exercise dominion over reptiles and cacti,
National Guard units throughout the country are actively involved in
transforming nominally civilian law enforcement agencies into a full-blown
domestic army of occupation. Last year, according to Albany, New York Fox
affiliate WXXA, the New York State National Guard "assisted in more than 2,000
arrests ... and had almost $150 million in drug, property, and weapon seizures."
While they do engage in the occasional isolated shoot-out, the drug gangs
supposedly controlling a section of Arizona aren't terrorizing innocent families
in late-night or early-morning armed raids. Nor are they detaining – and
sometimes killing – motorists at checkpoints. They're not plundering people in
roadside shakedowns. Criminal violence of that kind is carried out every day by
police – often with hands-on military assistance – as part of the "war on
drugs."
According to Col. Alden Saddlemire of the New York National Guard, the martial
language used to describe this domestic campaign is literal, not metaphorical.
"The war on drugs is an ongoing war," Saddlemire told WXXA. "It's a domestic
fight [we] firmly believe in."
According to official propaganda, the National Guard Counterdrug Program (NGCDP)
"operates in all 54 states and territories to support local, state, and federal
law enforcement agencies..... [The program] currently operates 125 OH-58 Kiowa
helicopters to support federal, state and local Law Enforcement Agencies' demand
for aviation support in Counterdrug operations."
Guard pilots and support personnel are actively involved in "area
surveillance and reconnaissance; vehicle/fugitive surveillance and tracking,
cover/force protection during RAID/Sweeps" and cannabis eradication operations.
One must hack through a dense thicket of acronyms in order to uncover what's
really happening here. The NGCDP – that's National Guard Counterdrug Program –
"recently realigned CD RAID Detachments into Security and Support Battalions,"
the mystified reader is told without being informed that "CD RAID" refers to
Counter-Drug Recon and Aerial Interdiction Detachments.br />
WWe then learn that although "mission focus" remains on "LEA support to CD
operations" – that is, assisting Law Enforcement Agencies carry out Counter-Drug
programs – "HLS/HLD missions will take on a larger role than before." That
singularly opaque clause refers to Homeland Security/Homeland Defense
operations.
Deprived of semantic camouflage, this is an admission that the escalation of the
military's role in the "war on drugs" will segue into larger, and increasingly
overt, domestic military role in "homeland security." br />
The NGCDP is eager to dispense all kinds of military hardware – complete with
"technical support" personnel – on any "civilian" law enforcement agency that
puts in a request.
YYou want night vision goggles? Forward-Looking Infrared gear (which was used to
such dramatic effect in the murderous final assault on the Branch Davidians)?
Thermal imagers, surveillance aircraft, mobile gamma-ray automobile inspection
units? Just give the National Guard a holler, and they'll be happy to help.
Sure, this means some swivel-hipping around that pesky Posse Comitatus Act, but
it's pretty much a dead letter anyway.
Once the Guard is seamlessly integrated into the domestic counter-drug effort,
they'll be ready to carry out whatever other homeland security missions that
arise: mass arrests of protesters and perfectly harmless civilians during
political conventions, confiscation of firearms during disasters or other
emergencies, or even – as Gen. George S. Patton once recommended – the use of
total war tactics (summary mass detentions, summary executions of conspicuous
troublemakers, the use of toxic gas and white phosphorous munitions) against
organized dissident groups.
All of this has been done already, on a limited scale and in specific
circumstances. Because of the "war on drugs" and the "war on terror," the
infrastructure is now in place to institutionalize those once-exceptional
abuses, if – make that "when" – our self-appointed rulers choose to do so. br />
Some who are properly alarmed over all of this have invested their hopes in
Sheriff Richard Mack's campaign to educate and mobilize county sheriffs to
resist federal usurpation of state and local authority. Sheriff Mack is an
admirable man, and his campaign is worthwhile – but too many sheriffs have
already been bought off by the Feds.
OOne example among many is Sheriff Tom Bosenko of California's Shasta County, who
allocated $340,000 to create a special marijuana suppression unit.
Paul Babeu, the Sheriff of Arizona's Pinal County, has pioneered a new approach
to federalizing local law enforcement: He has actually invited the Feds to
occupy Arizona on the pretext of defending the state from the illegal immigrant
"invasion."
Sheriff Babeu – a PR-fixated political ally of arch-neocon John McCain – is
consciously carving out a media-friendly persona as the heir to Maricopa County
Sheriff Joe Arpaio. It was Babeu who induced a paroxysm of populist outrage by
declaring that the Obama administration had effectively surrendered a swath of
Arizona to Mexico.
"It’s literally out of control," abeu insisted in an interview with Fox News.
"We stood with Senator McCain and literally demanded support for 3,000 soldiers
to be deployed to Arizona to get this under control and finally secure our
border with Mexico."
PPinal County – Sheriff Babeu's jurisdiction – is well inside the border with
Mexico. Pima County, which actually shares a border with Mexico, is the
responsibility of Sheriff Clarence Dupnik, who also takes a hard line on
immigration enforcement but doesn't share Babeu's siege mentality or appetite
for media attention.
Sheriff upnik is one of several Arizona law enforcement veterans who believe
that the problems associated with illegal immigration are being inflated into a
politically useful "crisis."
RRetired Mesa police officer Bill Richardson, who worked in counter-narcotics
task forces in several Arizona counties, believes that Babeu – like Arpaio and
Arizona state senator Russell Pearce (chief sponsor of SB 1070) – is "fanning
the flames of fear, that the undocumented are the root cause of crime in
Arizona. In fact, they are not."
Whether or not this assessment is accurate, both immigration (legal and illegal)
and violent crime have been steadily decreasing in Arizona over the past decade
– a period encompassing Babeu's entire law enforcement career.
Richardson, a long-time Arizona resident with decades of law enforcement
experience, points out that Babeu – who relocated to Arizona after losing a
mayoral race in North Adams, Massachusetts in 2001 – was a police officer in
Chandler for just 5 1/2 years (during which time he served as head of the local
police union) before being elected Pima County Sheriff.
Two of those years were spent in National Guard deployments – one of them in
Iraq, the other on the southern border as part of a joint effort with the Border
Patrol called "Operation Jump Start."br />
Babeu, who enlisted at 21 and currently holds the rank of Major in the National
Guard, often campaigned in uniform as a perennial Republican political candidate
in Massachusetts. He was successful once, winning a spot on the Berkshire County
Commission and a leadership role in the County GOP.
After three unsuccessful bids for higher office, Babeu followed his parents
(long-time Republican activists themselves) to Arizona, which had a more
congenial political climate. (Joe Arpaio, interestingly, is likewise a
transplanted Massachusetts native.)
Babeu, who refers to McCain as his "hero," is hard-wired into the
neo-con-dominated Republican media apparatus, and he clearly has aspirations
above and beyond his current position.
JJust as importantly, 41-year-old Babeu – who is both a county sheriff and a
National Guard major – literally embodies the ongoing merger of the military and
law enforcement. He is the fons et origo of the notion that Obama, in an act of
high treason, surrendered sacred American soil to Mexican drug gangs – which
isn't strictly true, of course, but is irresistibly potent to political
opportunists.
Immigration, Babeu insists, "is the number one issue that faces Arizona." This
could be considered the truth in the sense that it is the most useful issue for
candidates looking to build a political career, and opportunistic incumbents –
including Senator McCain, who once supported amnesty for illegal immigrants but
has re-cast himself as a flint-eyed border guardian in his ongoing re-election
campaign.
As the current issue of Harper's magazine documents, the most serious problems
besetting Arizona have little if anything to do with immigration, and everything
to do with the most recent Federal Reserve-engineered depression.
J.D. uccille points out that concern over immigration is most pronounced in
Phoenix, rather than in the southern part of the state. Phoenix somehow survived
the immigrant onslaught, but it may be doomed as a result of the collapse of the
housing bubble.
KKen Silverstein of Harper's points out that 61.5 percent of all Phoenix
mortgages are "underwater," and unemployment is probably running at about 18
percent or higher. The latter figure can't be explained as a case of immigrants
"stealing" jobs from natives, since the housing implosion led to a dramatic
contraction of the immigrant labor pool.
Forty-five minutes southwest of Phoenix there's a town called Maricopa that
didn't exist ten years ago: It was created at the height of the Fed-induced
housing frenzy. It's quite possible that Maricopa won't exist a decade from now:
It was a town built entirely on fraud.
"They weren't building homes," explains the consistently quotable Jay Butler, an
associate professor of real estate at Arizona State University. "They were
building mortgages that they could put into mortgage-backed securities in order
to sell them to investors in China and France." Amid a pervasive atmosphere of
moral hazard, mortgage loans were extended to practically anybody with a pulse
and the ability sign the necessary documents. The results were utterly
predictable.
Four years ago in Maricopa, speculators were buying whole tracts of houses and
builders were demanding a 12-hour turnaround on permits in order to meet
existing demand. Today, that future ghost town registers a "distress index"
(percentage of home sales involving bank-owned or pre-foreclosure properties) of
76.8 percent. br />
&"In a neighborhood called Maricopa Meadows," writes Ken Silverstein, "we rolled
past a block of McMansions, all but a handful of which had gone into
foreclosure." Silverstein's guide observed: "You've got people doubling up in
houses so they can split utilities.... The story is the same from here to Queen
Creek to Buckeye, in all these places that people scattered before the crash."
As the New York Times recently reported, the real estate industry in Arizona is
now essentially a subsidiary of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are entirely
non-viable tax-subsidized entities sitting on more than $4 trillion worth of bad
debts.
When the Fed's bubble was expanding, Realtors sold homes to unqualified buyers
at grotesquely inflated prices. Now that the bubble has burst, Realtors in are
doing a similarly brisk business in repossessions. Given the dim prospects for
an economic rebound, it's profoundly doubtful that many of those homes will ever
be re-sold. And the coming commercial real estate crash will be at least as
devastating for Arizona, a "branch office" state with little local industry
apart from agriculture. br />
AAs her state descends into economic ruin, Governor Jan Brewer – hailed by
Republican conservatives nation-wide as a heroine for signing SB 1070 – is
working diligently to impose a drastic sales tax increase on the state.
Borrowing a familiar leftist trope, Brewer has claimed that people will "die"
unless the regressive tax increase is enacted in the midst of a deepening
economic contraction.
As Governor, Brewer (who, like Babeu, is allied with McCain) has done nothing to
reduce the size and expense of the state government. The timely and welcome
distraction provided by the controversy over SB 1070, notes Barbara
Hollingsworth of the Washington Examiner, saved Brewer "from a nasty primary
challenge" arising from her $3 billion sales tax increase. Some opinion polls
now place Brewer just five points behind President Obama in a hypothetical 2012
match-up – solely on the strength of her perceived role as a proponent of
"secure borders."
Brewer's reputation was enhanced by an open letter to Obama in which Brewer
demanded a "border surge" involving at least 6,000 troops. And it wasn't
noticeably injured when she made the risible claim that the "majority" of
illegal immigrants are working as "mules" in the employ of drug cartels – a
claim immediately and decisively shot down by T.J. Bonner of the National Border
Patrol Council.
Displaying gallantry through heroic understatement, Bonner said that Brewer's
demented claim "doesn't comport with reality." This isn't surprising, given that
Brewer and her allies aren't in the reality business. Like narcotics pushers,
they're in the business of promoting altered states of consciousness for profit
– such as the perception that Arizona is about to be devoured in a Mexican anschluss.
Brewer persisted in her reality-aversive treatment of the immigration issue by
repeatedly making the horrifying and entirely unsubstantiated claim that illegal
immigrants had committed "beheadings" in Arizona.
&q"We cannot afford all this illegal immigration and everything that comes with
it, everything from the crime and to the drugs and the kidnappings and the
extortion and the beheadings," stated Brewer in an interview with Fox News.
While it's true that some drug-related murders in Mexico have involved
beheading, there's not been a single documented case of that kind in Arizona.
This didn't deter Brewer from reiterating that claim – citing unspecified "law
enforcement agencies" as sources – in a subsequent interview.
Following up on those interviews, a href="http://www.arizonaguardian.com/azg/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2201:county-coroners-cant-back-brewer-beheadings-claim&catid=937:campaigns-a-elections-fp">
the Arizona Guardian reported that six county medical examiners, including
four from border counties, "say they have never heard of such attacks." In other
words, this is another terrifying claim that doesn't "comport with reality." It
is, however, extremely useful for Brewer's brand of what Mencken described as
"practical politics" – "keep[ing] the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to
be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of
them imaginary."
If Brewer and her allies were interested in reality-based solutions to
narcotics-related violent crime, they would agitate for the repeal of drug
prohibition and an end to the subsidies and military aid to Mexico that are
fueling the narcotics wars in that country. Instead, they're doing their
considerable best to keep their constituents hopelessly addicted to the domestic
warfare state.
July 12, 2010
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