By Patrick Martin – World Socialist Web
Site
According to a report published
Monday by the Washington Post, the
Pentagon has developed its first ever war plans
for operations within the continental United
States, in which terrorist attacks would be used
as the justification for imposing martial law on
cities, regions or the entire country.
The front-page article cites sources
working at the headquarters of the military’s
Northern Command (Northcom), located in Colorado
Springs, Colorado. The plans themselves are
classified, but “officers who drafted the plans”
gave details to Post reporter Bradley Graham,
who was recently given a tour of Northcom
headquarters at Peterson Air Force Base. The
article thus appears to be a deliberate leak
conducted for the purpose of accustoming the
American population to the prospect of military
rule.
According to Graham, “the new
plans provide for what several senior officers
acknowledged is the likelihood that the military
will have to take charge in some situations,
especially when dealing with mass-casualty
attacks that could quickly overwhelm civilian
resources.”
The Post account declares,
“The war plans represent a historic shift for
the Pentagon, which has been reluctant to become
involved in domestic operations and is legally
constrained from engaging in law enforcement.”
A total of 15 potential crisis scenarios
are outlined, ranging from “low-end,” which
Graham describes as “relatively modest
crowd-control missions,” to “high-end,” after as
many as three simultaneous catastrophic
mass-casualty events, such as a nuclear,
biological or chemical weapons attack.
In each case, the military would deploy
a quick-reaction force of as many as 3,000
troops per attack—i.e., 9,000 total in the
worst-case scenario. More troops could be made
available as needed.
The Post quotes a
statement by Admiral Timothy J. Keating, head of
Northcom: “In my estimation, [in the event of] a
biological, a chemical or nuclear attack in any
of the 50 states, the Department of Defense is
best positioned—of the various eight federal
agencies that would be involved—to take the
lead.”
The newspaper describes an
unresolved debate among the military planners on
how to integrate the new domestic mission with
ongoing US deployments in Iraq, Afghanistan and
other foreign conflicts. One major document of
over 1,000 pages, designated CONPLAN 2002,
provides a general overview of air, sea and land
operations in both a post-attack situation and
for “prevention and deterrence actions aimed at
intercepting threats before they reach the
United States.” A second document, CONPLAN 0500,
details the 15 scenarios and the actions
associated with them.
The Post reports:
“CONPLAN 2002 has passed a review by the
Pentagon’s Joint Staff and is due to go soon to
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and top
aides for further study and approval, the
officers said. CONPLAN 0500 is still undergoing
final drafting” at Northcom headquarters.
While Northcom was established only in
October 2002, its headquarters staff of 640 is
already larger than that of the Southern
Command, which overseas US military operations
throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.
About 1,400 National Guard troops have
been formed into a dozen regional response
units, while smaller quick-reaction forces have
been set up in each of the 50 states. Northcom
also has the power to mobilize four active-duty
Army battalions, as well as Navy and Coast Guard
ships and air defense fighter jets.
The
Pentagon is acutely conscious of the potential
political backlash as its role in future
security operations becomes known. Graham
writes: “Military exercises code-named Vital
Archer, which involve troops in lead roles, are
shrouded in secrecy. By contrast, other homeland
exercises featuring troops in supporting roles
are widely publicized.”
Military lawyers
have studied the legal implications of such
deployments, which risk coming into conflict
with a longstanding congressional prohibition on
the use of the military for domestic policing,
known as posse comitatus. Involving the
National Guard, which is exempt from posse
comitatus, could be one solution, Admiral
Keating told the Post. “He cited a
potential situation in which Guard units might
begin rounding up people while regular forces
could not,” Graham wrote.
Graham adds:
“when it comes to ground forces possibly taking
a lead role in homeland operations, senior
Northcom officers remain reluctant to discuss
specifics. Keating said such situations, if they
arise, probably would be temporary, with lead
responsibility passing back to civilian
authorities.”
A remarkable phrase:
“probably would be temporary.” In other words,
the military takeover might not be temporary,
and could become permanent!
In his
article, Graham describes the Northern Command’s
“Combined Intelligence and Fusion Center, which
joins military analysts with law enforcement and
counterintelligence specialists from such
civilian agencies as the FBI, the CIA and the
Secret Service.” The article continues: “A
senior supervisor at the facility said the staff
there does no intelligence collection, only
analysis. He also said the military operates
under long-standing rules intended to protect
civilian liberties. The rules, for instance,
block military access to intelligence
information on political dissent or purely
criminal activity.”
Again, despite the
soothing reassurances about respecting civil
liberties, another phrase leaps out:
“intelligence information on political dissent.”
What right do US intelligence agencies have to
collect information on political dissent?
Political dissent is not only perfectly legal,
but essential to the functioning of a
democracy.
The reality is that the
military brass is intensely interested in
monitoring political dissent because its
domestic operations will be directed not against
a relative handful of Islamic fundamentalist
terrorists—who have not carried out a single
operation inside the United States since
September 11, 2001—but against the democratic
rights of the American people.
The plans
of Northcom have their origins not in the
terrible events of 9/11, but in longstanding
concerns in corporate America about the
political stability of the United States. This
is a society increasingly polarized between the
fabulously wealthy elite at the top, and the
vast majority of working people who face an
increasingly difficult struggle to survive. The
nightmare of the American ruling class is the
emergence of a mass movement from below that
challenges its political and economic
domination.
As long ago as 1984—when
Osama bin Laden was still working hand-in-hand
with the CIA in the anti-Soviet guerrilla war in
Afghanistan—the Reagan administration was
drawing up similar contingency plans for
military rule. A Marine Corps officer detailed
to the National Security Council drafted plans
for Operation Rex ’84, a headquarters exercise
that simulated rounding up 300,000 Central
American immigrants and likely political
opponents of a US invasion of Nicaragua or El
Salvador and jailing them at mothballed military
bases. This officer later became well known to
the public: Lt. Colonel Oliver North, the
organizer of the illegal network to arm the
“contra” terrorists in Nicaragua and a principal
figure in the Iran-Contra scandal.
As for
the claims that these military plans are driven
by genuine concern over the threat of terrorist
attacks, these are belied by the actual conduct
of the American ruling elite since 9/11. The
Bush administration has done everything possible
to suppress any investigation into the
circumstances of the attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon—most likely because its
own negligence, possibly deliberate, would be
exposed.
While the Pentagon claims that
its plans are a response to the danger of
nuclear, biological or chemical attacks, no
serious practical measures have been taken to
forestall such attacks or minimize their impact.
The Bush administration and Congress have
refused even to restrict the movement of rail
tank cars loaded with toxic chemicals through
the US capital, though even an accidental leak,
let alone a terrorist attack, would cause mass
casualties.
In relation to bioterrorism,
the Defense Science Board determined in a 2000
study that the federal government had only 1 of
the 57 drugs, vaccines and diagnostic tools
required to deal with such an attack. According
to a report in the Washington Post August
7, in the five years since the Pentagon report,
only one additional resource has been developed,
bringing the total to 2 out of 57. Drug
companies have simply refused to conduct the
research required to find antidotes to anthrax
and other potential toxins, and the Bush
administration has done nothing to compel
them.
As for the danger of nuclear or
“dirty-bomb” attacks, the Bush administration
and the congressional Republican leadership
recently rammed through a measure loosening
restrictions on exports of radioactive
substances, at the behest of a Canadian-based
manufacturer of medical supplies which conducted
a well-financed lobbying
campaign.
Evidently, the administration
and the corporate elite which it represents do
not take seriously their own warnings about the
imminent threat of terrorist attacks using
nuclear, chemical or biological weapons—at least
not when it comes to security measures that
would impact corporate profits.
The
anti-terrorism scare has a propaganda purpose:
to manipulate the American people and induce the
public to accept drastic inroads against
democratic rights. As the Pentagon planning
suggests, the American working class faces the
danger of some form of military-police
dictatorship in the United States.
-
World Socialist Web Site -