Miranda Wrongs
IBDEditorials.com
Homeland Security: For months, our new "High-Value Detainee
Interrogation Group" has supposedly been on call. Why was it AWOL before the
Christmas Day bomber was improperly read his right to remain silent?
The White House is against Bush administration-style enhanced interrogation.
But is it so dominated by the quasi-constitutional mind-set of the American
Civil Liberties Union that it's really against any kind of interrogation?
Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair told the Senate Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs Committee last week that "we should have
automatically deployed" the High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG), set
up by President Obama last year, against Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab. The Nigerian
is the suspected al-Qaida agent who allegedly tried to blow up a U.S. jet with
nearly 300 passengers aboard on Dec. 25.
Blair's after-the-fact promise — "that's what we will do now" — doesn't cut
it. Imagine if Abdulmutallab's botched detonation was only the first piece of a
larger operation involving other airliners. Think of the precious time lost
because HIG's elite team of interrogators, overseen directly by the Obama
administration rather than any of our intelligence agencies, was never called
onto the scene.
It was never activated to perform its specific purpose: to interrogate
terrorists so as to extract information that will prevent planned attacks and
save American lives.
Instead, Attorney General Eric Holder's Justice Department reportedly made
the decision to have this enemy combatant, a would-be murderer of hundreds of
innocent people in an act of war, be read his Miranda rights like some local
hoodlum shaking down a 7-Eleven. Senate Judiciary Committee ranking Republican
Jeff Sessions of Alabama has written Holder demanding to know who exactly made
such a "hasty" decision.
"We need to make those decisions more carefully," Blair conceded to senators.
Really, Mr. Director? You think so? Another excuse was the assumption that HIG
would grill suspects in foreign locales. "We did not think about" a case such as
Abdulmutallab's "in which a terrorist was apprehended, as this one was, in the
United States and we should have thought of that."
That's pathetic. More than eight years after 9/11 such "decisions" should be
automatic.
Adding to the spectacle, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and
National Counterterrorism Center Director Michael Leiter both said they were not
consulted about treating Abdulmutallab as a POW rather than a civilian criminal
— nor were they consulted regarding his interrogation. Incomprehensibly, Leiter
even revealed that the U.S. government is unable to conduct a search on a
suspected jihadist across all U.S. intelligence agency databases.
As Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., quipped during another Senate Judiciary
Committee hearing that addressed Abdulmutallab's name being misspelled in the
U.S. terrorist watch list: "I can search on Google, and it'll give me other
suggestions for spelling. Why can't our people do that?" Why indeed.
"We must take a hard look at the systemic failures that occurred with this
latest attack," Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., chairman of the Senate Homeland
Security panel, said in an understatement.
For all our high-tech resources, we're failing to keep terrorists off U.S.
flights. Then, we're failing to question them effectively before they clam up
while in the ordinary criminal justice system. All this is asking for another
9/11.
Home | Articles | BLOG | Quotes | Photo Gallery | Favorites | Stupid Frogs Game | Store | Feedback | Search | Subscribe | About Us
|