Guest Writers

Happy Birthday, DHS!

by Guest Writers  ::  Filed Under U.S. Domestic Issues  ::  March 15th, 2008 @ 4:26 pm EST

(originally posted at MWC News)

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) just turned five years old. It seems like it was born just yesterday.

The department’s growing pains have made it a slow learner and a downright ugly child. Born in an atmosphere of tension and fear, and cobbled together from pieces of other government departments and agencies, the prospects for this Frankenstein offspring were always dim. Yet, as Congress frequently does in times of crisis, the legislative body, in the wake of 9/11, had to be seen as doing something—anything—to respond to the crisis, even if its actions were ineffective and even counterproductive.

And predictably, the Department of Homeland Security has been a disaster. In the wake of the federal government’s failure to prevent or stop 9/11—when the principal problem was the failure of large, slothful security agencies to coordinate against a small, agile terrorist group—the last thing the country needed was another ponderous department. Yet Congress glued together 22 disparate agencies, superimposed another layer of bureaucracy on top of them to manage the new department, astronomically increased the department’s budget to $38 billion per year and its personnel from 170,000 to 208,000 employees, and oversaw the department’s activities with 86 congressional committees and subcommittees. In creating more bureaucracy to coordinate, Congress never told the American people exactly how security against nimble, non-bureaucratic terrorist groups would be enhanced.

In fact, over its five years, the department has become the butt of jokes for its color-coded terror warning system, grossly incompetent response to Hurricane Katrina, pork-barrel spending, intrusive and largely ineffectual airline security, and expensive security projects gone awry.

Throughout its history, the color-coded warning system seems to just toggle between the mid-levels, orange and yellow, leading to suspicion that it is designed as merely for show, to demonstrate to the American public that their government is ever vigilant against terrorists. Setting the dial at red would cause everyone to stay locked down in their homes—afraid to go to the shopping mall to buoy the faltering economy. If the government were to move the indicator to blue or green and a terrorist attack occurred, fingers would be pointed at DHS for sleeping as the threat worsened. So the indicator stays between orange and yellow, even though the department has not made clear what the public should do at any of the levels.

Most politically damaging to DHS was its abysmal and incompetent response to Hurricane Katrina. Yet many members of Congress became “disgusted” with the department’s response in New Orleans at the same time they were sending DHS money elsewhere to their own states and congressional districts for useless pork-barrel projects. Much of DHS spending still spreads the pork to cities and states around the country to help the reelection chances of politicians, rather than sending money to cities that might actually have a remote chance of being hit by a terrorist attack (for example, New York and Washington).

Politics has also been involved in security for air travel. Even if the federal government had done nothing, air security would have improved dramatically after Sept. 11. Prior to 9/11, airline crewmembers and passengers had been encouraged to cooperate with any airplane hijackers. In many hijackings over the years, a familiar pattern had emerged, wherein the hijackers would at worst shoot a couple of passengers to show they meant business and order the plane to Cuba or some other remote location. The hijackers’ purpose was to draw attention to their cause, and if the crew and passengers played ball, most could expect to live.

That paradigm changed drastically on 9/11. On the fourth plane, apparently the passengers and crew realized that they were being forcibly recruited for a suicide mission that would end not only all of their lives, but potentially those of many more people in any building the plane would hit. Heroically, they evidently got nasty with the terrorists and foiled the hijacking attempt. Later, a similarly surly crew and passengers famously foiled an attempt by Richard Reid to set his explosive shoes on fire. With far more aggressive passengers and crew – having visions of dying in a mass suicidal bombing mission—pity (not really) the terrorists who try to take over or destroy a plane in a post-9/11 world.

If this monumental security improvement, which DHS had nothing to do with, was not enough, the department probably could have stopped once it had hardened cockpit doors. Federalizing airport security checkpoints, making passengers partially disrobe and requiring them to throw away liquid toiletries, provides only marginal security improvement but much passenger frustration. Despite such security “enhancements,” repeated investigative studies have shown that alarming amounts of contraband still get through the checkpoints undetected.

DHS overinvests in such checkpoint measures because many voters fly and thus are reminded that their government is taking very visible actions (however annoying) to make them safe. In contrast, less money is spent, for example, on the security of air cargo, ports, or chemical plants, because few voters visit air cargo terminals (or even the baggage compartment of their own plane), the dock where their new Toyota is being delivered, or the factories where the petrochemical ingredients of many consumer products are made. Once again, DHS’ priorities are based more on politics than on actual threats.

Finally, the DHS bureaucracy has wasted billions of taxpayer dollars by blowing the development and purchase of many new high-tech security systems. Even with the excessive emphasis on air security, the department has projected that it could require $22 billion and 16 more years to deploy advanced systems for screening airline baggage, and has been inept at fielding new “puffer devices,” which blow air on passengers to detect explosives, according to the Washington Post.

At the ports and borders, DHS is also struggling. Granted, the congressional demand that all inbound shipping containers be scanned is unrealistic, unnecessary, and ridiculous, but Congress was reacting to DHS’ having put port security on the back burner. In addition, DHS has proven incompetent in fielding equipment to detect nuclear devices. At the borders, despite prescient warnings by outside experts, the expensive “virtual” border fence of sensors was so poorly designed that DHS had to pay the contractor to start over, and the first phase of the project may not be completed until 2011. Finally, the project to track the entry and exit of foreign visitors using photos and fingerprints has been scrapped indefinitely (on the exit side) because of its excessive cost and technological difficulties.

Thus, at the age of five, DHS has all the bureaucratic sclerosis of an octogenarian and is on the road to juvenile delinquency.

Ivan Eland is Director of the Center on Peace & Liberty at The Independent Institute. Dr. Eland is a graduate of Iowa State University and received an M.B.A. in applied economics and Ph.D. in national security policy from George Washington University. He has been Director of Defense Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, and he spent 15 years working for Congress on national security issues, including stints as an investigator for the House Foreign Affairs Committee and Principal Defense Analyst at the Congressional Budget Office. He is author of the books, The Empire Has No Clothes: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed, and Putting “Defense” Back into U.S. Defense Polic

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DISCUSSION

7 RESPONSES to “Happy Birthday, DHS!”

josh says  ::  March 15th, 2008 @ 6:48 pm EST

The good thing about the DHS is that it is going to be keeping many millions of tourists away from the United States who would otherwise have spent a lot of depreciated dollars in an economy that can clearly use a boost or two.
If the US thinks that people will pay for the privilege of being treated like a criminal by a new-born nazi in a uniform who is drunk on the power to annoy people for no other reason than that they cannot get away from him/her, they will have another thing coming.
Together with the outright bad and irresponsible management by people for whom only money [and quickly depreciating money at that] is important, nobody who appreciates democracy is going to gladly submit to asinine policies that do nothing at all to provide security [what a crock] but a great deal to alienate those few friends the US still had.

The US is not a democracy [by democratic standards], it is no longer number one [unless it is considered an achievement to have the absolute largest public debt in the history of the species], it is badly managed, very badly managed even and even when it spends more on defense than all other countries in the world combined, they STILL can’t win from a bunch of guys with an AK-47 and a roadside bomb.

It wasn’t enough to have one Viet Nam in one generation, if you’re the US you have to have at least two. That chicken is now coming home to roost and it’s saying a very big and heartfelt ‘CLUCK!’ The citizens will pay the price for having the stupendously bad judgement to trust their politicians and not caring enough to insist on firm checks and balances. It has cost the US friends and prestige and ultimately the empire it so industriously sought to become. All the moral superiority that it was once thought to have has all but evaporated. The US can no longer look any other country in the eyes and call them on human rights violations. It will only earn them a contemptuous smirk because it is now generally understood that ‘a dunk in the water’ is not torture. Way to go, red, white and blue!

If your children and grand children don’t care to put you in a decent retirement home, folks, it’s because they’re still pissed off because they are left footing the bill for your ludicrous delusions of grandeur that they get to pay interest on for the rest of their lives.

bob says  ::  March 15th, 2008 @ 11:03 pm EST

I will never hire an ex DHS employee. I will never hire an ex-security contractor/mercenary. Airport baggae screeners? Also blacklisted. Sorry but you are part of the problem, garbage humans who cannot be trusted. Maybe you sad sacks of skin can find employment at Footlocker but I will not hire any of you to work any of our jobs.

bob says  ::  March 15th, 2008 @ 11:06 pm EST

I will never hire an ex DHS employee. I will never hire an ex-security contractor/mercenary. Airport baggage screeners? Also blacklisted. Sorry but you are part of the problem, garbage humans who cannot be trusted. Maybe you sad sacks of skin can find employment at Footlocker but I will not hire any of you to work any of our jobs.

AshleyJHi says  ::  March 15th, 2008 @ 11:13 pm EST

I work in HR and I see resumes from Blackwater. I see some from DHS. I’m throwing them out. They are all lazy and overpaid, skilless and bossy. There is no point in interviewing them. They also make me feel unsafe. look we don’t hire fast food people, we shouldnt hire government goons either. F them all, I won’t hire them.

Nisey01 says  ::  March 15th, 2008 @ 11:36 pm EST

HAPPY BIRTHDAY DHS…I would like to commend you all on a job well done. In this ever changing world, with all of it’s obscurities, you can’t help but go by your best judgement in whatever your choice may conclude. Occurrences happen, yet to have a well established source as you are, it is truly a plus and an advantage in your concerns for the safety of the American people both here and abroad. Keep up the good work , that the conceivable may continually manifest in all of your endeavors.

NVMojo says  ::  March 16th, 2008 @ 2:47 am EST

I’ve had to work with this worthless organization. What a joke. They destroyed FEMA and it was one federal program that worked before it was shoved underneath DHS. Don’t even get me going on INS which is now Immigration Customs Enforcement.

D. R. says  ::  March 16th, 2008 @ 5:51 am EST

I am a Canadian who has been a staunch supporter of the US for many years. I have always felt pride at being the neighbour of a country who stood for the best of human values, and insisted on decency, integrity and honourable behaviour in others. In part that is why I have travelled, about four times yearly, to various cities in the US to vacation, work, and enjoy a remarkable culture. On such trips, I realize I am a guest in a great nation and have conducted my self accordingly.

Today, I am unlikely to visit America again. I am intensely dismayed at decisions by the US government to support torture, the silly practice of turning airports into places where rights are suspended, and the persistent and sometimes obnoxious belief in American exceptionalism.

That can be tolerate as most countries, mine included, do or believe silly things. I have learned, however, that the US government plans to fingerprint me and people like me in the future when we visit. I will refuse. I will not be treated like a criminal because I live north rather than south of our shared border. So, my few small trips will cease - no harm to the economy will ensue - but a bond of kinship in our shared North American adventure will be irreparably severed.

I wish America well in its efforts to rebuild its economy and the lives of its people, but cannot count myself among America’s admirers any longer.

Comments are closed

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