Discussion in an email forum about the sometimes-violent police responses to peaceful Occupy demonstrators evoked this odd and disturbing story. The Bureau of Reclamation is proposing to relocate the road over little Vallecito dam in remote southwestern Colorado because, according to BuRec—
[N]ew concerns about keeping federal facilities safer from possible terrorist attacks have resulted in the Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) restricting access to its dams. Relocating this road would also help achieve this need.
A local resident who is in our forum reported this:
[T]he head of BOR, at an open public meeting at the community center, told me that no, he couldn't answer the question about whether it was true or not that Homeland Security paid for the road, and that I should get used to not knowing things. "It's as if you are living in Israel from now on and you should get used to this." I swear to God, he really said those words you are living in Israel to me, in the open, at this meeting. I've had TSA people in the airport throw Israel at me as well. Someone is training them, telling them to say this.
Whether government officials are trained to refer to Israel or whether such statements are unauthorized candor is unkown, but Max Blumenthal says in this long and extensively-sourced investigative report that federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies all over America are being trained by Israeli agencies not just in counterterrorism, intelligence gathering, and transportation security but also in crowd control. Bye bye community policing; hello police at war with their communities.
Some excerpts from the Blumenthal piece:
The process of Israelification began in the immediate wake of 9/11, when national panic led federal and municipal law enforcement officials to beseech Israeli security honchos for advice and training. America's Israel lobby exploited the climate of hysteria, providing thousands of top cops with all-expenses paid trips to Israel and stateside training sessions with Israeli military and intelligence officials. By now, police chiefs of major American cities who have not been on junkets to Israel are the exception.
"Israel is the Harvard of antiterrorism," said former US Capitol Police Chief Terrance W. Gainer, who now serves as the US Senate Sergeant-at-Arms. Cathy Lanier, the Chief of the Washington DC Metropolitan Police, remarked, "No experience in my life has had more of an impact on doing my job than going to Israel." "One would say it is the front line," Barnett Jones, the police chief of Ann Arbor, Michigan, said of Israel. "We're in a global war."
. . . .
The Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA) is at the heart of American-Israeli law enforcement collaboration. JINSA is a Jerusalem and Washington DC-based think tank known for stridently neoconservative policy positions on Israel's policy towards the Palestinians and its brinkmanship with Iran. The group's board of directors boasts a Who's Who of neocon ideologues. Two former JINSA advisors who have also consulted for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Douglas Feith and Richard Perle, went on to serve in the Department of Defense under President George W. Bush, playing influential roles in the push to invade and occupy Iraq.
Through its Law Enforcement Education Program (LEEP), JINSA claims to have arranged Israeli-led training sessions for over 9000 American law enforcement officials at the federal, state and municipal level. "The Israelis changed the way we do business regarding homeland security in New Jersey," Richard Fuentes, the NJ State Police Superintendent, said after attending a 2004 JINSA-sponsored Israel trip and a subsequent JINSA conference alongside 435 other law enforcement officers.
During a 2004 LEEP trip, JINSA brought 14 senior American law enforcement officials to Israel to receive instruction from their counterparts. The Americans were trained in "how to secure large venues, such as shopping malls, sporting events and concerts," JINSA's website reported. . . .
Cathy Lanier, now the Chief of Washington DC's Metropolitan Police Department, was among the law enforcement officials junketed to Israel by JINSA. "I was with the bomb units and the SWAT team and all of those high profile specialized [Israeli] units and I learned a tremendous amount," Lanier reflected. "I took 82 pages of notes while I was there which I later brought back and used to formulate a lot of what I later used to create and formulate the Homeland Security terrorism bureau in the DC Metropolitan Police department."
Some of the police chiefs who have taken part in JINSA's LEEP program have done so under the auspices of the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF), a private non-governmental group with close ties to the Department of Homeland Security. Chuck Wexler, the executive director of PERF, was so enthusiastic about the program that by 2005 he had begun organizing trips to Israel sponsored by PERF, bringing numerous high-level American police officials to receive instruction from their Israeli counterparts.
PERF gained notoriety when Wexler confirmed that his group coordinated police raids in 16 cities across America against "Occupy" protest encampments. As many as 40 cities have sought PERF advice on suppressing the "Occupy" movement and other mass protest activities. Wexler did not respond to my requests for an interview.
. . . .
Besides JINSA, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) has positioned itself as an important liaison between American police forces and the Israeli security-intelligence apparatus. . . . Through the ADL's Advanced Training School course on Extremist and Terrorist Threats, over 700 law enforcement personnel from 220 federal and local agencies including the FBI and CIA have been trained by Israeli police and intelligence commanders. This year, the ADL brought 15 high-level American police officials to Israel for instruction from the country's security apparatus. According to the ADL, over 115 federal, state and local law enforcement executives have undergone ADL-organized training sessions in Israel since the program began in 2003. "I can honestly say that the training offered by ADL is by far the most useful and current training course I have ever attended," Deputy Commissioner Thomas Wright of the Philadelphia Police Department commented after completing an ADL program this year. . . .
The ADL claims to have trained over 45,000 American law enforcement officials through its Law Enforcement and Society program, which "draws on the history of the Holocaust to provide law enforcement professionals with an increased understanding of…their role as protectors of the Constitution," the group's website stated. All new FBI agents and intelligence analysts are required to attend the ADL program, which is incorporated into three FBI training programs. According to official FBI recruitment material, "all new special agents must visit the US Holocaust Memorial Museum to see firsthand what can happen when law enforcement fails to protect individuals."
Fighting "crimiterror"
Among the most prominent Israeli government figure to have influenced the practices of American law enforcement officials is Avi Dichter, a former head of Israel's Shin Bet internal security service and current member of Knesset who recently introduced legislation widely criticized as anti-democratic. During the Second Intifada, Dichter ordered several bombings on densely populated Palestinian civilian areas, including one on the al-Daraj neighborhood of Gaza that resulted in the death of 15 innocent people, including 8 children, and 150 injuries. "After each success, the only thought is, 'Okay, who's next?'" Dichter said of the "targeted" assassinations he has ordered.
Despite his dubious human rights record and apparently dim view of democratic values, or perhaps because of them, Dichter has been a key figure in fostering cooperation between Israeli security forces and American law enforcement. In 2006, while Dichter was serving at the time as Israel's Minister of Public Security, he spoke in Boston, Massachusetts before the annual convention of the International Association of Chiefs of Police. Seated beside FBI Director Robert Mueller and then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez, Dichter told the 10,000 police officers in the crowd that there was an "intimate connection between fighting criminals and fighting terrorists." Dichter declared that American cops were actually "fighting crimiterrorists." The Jerusalem Post reported that Dichter was "greeted by a hail of applause, as he was hugged by Mueller, who described Dichter as his mentor in anti-terror tactics."
. . . .
"Occupy" meets the Occupation
When a riot squad from the New York Police Department destroyed and evicted the "Occupy Wall Street" protest encampment at Zuccotti Park in downtown Manhattan, department leadership drew on the anti-terror tactics they had refined since the 9/11 attacks. According to the New York Times, the NYPD deployed "counterterrorism measures" to mobilize large numbers of cops for the lightning raid on Zuccotti. The use of anti-terror techniques to suppress a civilian protest complemented harsh police measures demonstrated across the country against the nationwide "Occupy" movement, from firing tear gas canisters and rubber bullets into unarmed crowds to blasting demonstrators with the LRAD sound cannon.
Given the amount of training the NYPD and so many other police forces have received from Israel's military-intelligence apparatus, and the profuse levels of gratitude American police chiefs have expressed to their Israeli mentors, it is worth asking how much Israeli instruction has influenced the way the police have attempted to suppress the Occupy movement, and how much it will inform police repression of future upsurges of street protest. But already, the Israelification of American law enforcement appears to have intensified police hostility towards the civilian population, blurring the lines between protesters, common criminals, and terrorists. As Dichter said, they are all just "crimiterrorists."
The deliberate blurring of crime and terrorism shows up clearly in the use of the Patriot Act. New York magazine reported that the "sneak and peak" warrants have been used only 15 times in terrorism investigations but have been used 122 times for fraud and 1,618 times for drug crimes.
One final point: The employment of tactics learned from Israel, which has been charged several times with denying human rights with its "security" measures, may be putting the US in violation of international law, including the specific "responsibility to protect" duty that the US invoked to justify NATO's recent attack on Libya. From Huffpo:
The United Nations envoy for freedom of expression is drafting an official communication to the U.S. government demanding to know why federal officials are not protecting the rights of Occupy demonstrators whose protests are being disbanded -- sometimes violently -- by local authorities.
Frank La Rue, who serves as the U.N. "special rapporteur" for the protection of free expression, told HuffPost in an interview that the crackdowns against Occupy protesters appear to be violating their human and constitutional rights.
"I believe in city ordinances and I believe in maintaining urban order," he said Thursday. "But on the other hand I also believe that the state -- in this case the federal state -- has an obligation to protect and promote human rights."
Max Blumenthal discusses some aspects of this on RT.