By Ralph R. Reiland on 10.17.07 @ 12:06AM
Looking for al Qaeda at a Toby Keith concert.
There's big controversy here in Pittsburgh about the mayor
taking the city's anti-terrorism van to a Toby Keith concert during
the summer. But, really, where would our federally-supplied
anti-terrorism vehicle have been that August night if the mayor
hadn't taken it? Riding around the city streets looking for al
Qaeda? Checking out the Ali Baba eatery, or Pita Land?
I'd say the mayor got it right that night, whether by design or
chance, in terms of national security.
The Department of Homeland Security, seeing Pittsburgh as a
potential target of Islamic fundamentalists, gave us the GMC Yukon
for surveillance, to identify potential terrorism targets, and for
intelligence gathering -- to ride around and keep an eye out for
anything that looks suspicious or out of place.
The vehicle isn't a tank. There's no button on the dashboard to
launch a surface-to-air missile and knock down an incoming plane
that's been taken over by a gang of religious martyrs. The vehicle
is just for blending in, for shadowing, especially in target-rich
environments.
Now, pretend for a minute that you're a full-blown jihadist in
Pittsburgh, looking for the fight of your life that summer night.
Downtown's completely dead. The Marine recruiting offices are
closed. The mall movies are ho-hum. Hands down, there's no better
place to explode yourself than in front of a jingoistic country
singer who has a crowd all pumped up with his two-fisted response
to 9/11:
This big dog will fight
When you rattle his cage
And you'll be sorry that you messed with
the U.S. of A
'Cause we'll put in a boot in your ass
It's the American way.
The U.S. Attorney here, Mary Beth Buchanan, is investigating
whether our federally-supplied anti-jihad asset was misallocated.
It's my guess that the Toby Keith concert was probably the only
time the Yukon was in the right place at the right time. Where, for
example, was the vehicle last night -- parked outside a meeting of
the International Student Association at Chatham University?
There's also a complaint that the SUV came back from the concert
containing several Marlboro Light butts and clear evidence of a
tailgate party, i.e., some traces of charcoal and barbecue -- a
complaint that the mayor didn't get out his Dirt Devil at 1 in the
morning. But that's how you catch shoe-bombers: by tossing a burger
on the grill, blending in, and checking the tennies of passersby
for fuses.
The real issue here has nothing to do with the mayor. The van
shouldn't even be in Pittsburgh, not when there's not enough money
in the budget to train agents in Islamic languages and the
radiation detection equipment deployed to screen cargo containers
can't tell the difference between highly enriched uranium and Comet
cleanser.
The real problem is the massive misallocation of the nation's
limited anti-terrorism resources, a federal bureaucracy that's
passing out free SUVs and treating billions in anti-terrorism
spending as just so much more pork to be politically distributed,
regardless of any meaningful risk assessments or cost-benefit
analysis.
In "What Does Homeland Security Spending Buy?" -- published in
2005 by the American Enterprise Institute -- Veronique de Rugy
provides clear evidence of how the nation's security resources have
been squandered. For example:
* $500,000 spent by Outagamie, Wis. -- population 165,000 and
hardly a top al-Qaeda target -- to buy chemical suits, generators,
rescue saws, disaster-response trailers, emergency lighting, escape
hoods and a bomb-disposal vehicle.
* $30,000 used by officials in Lake County, Tenn., to help a
high school buy a defibrillator to have on hand for a baseball
tournament.
* $557,400 awarded to North Pole, a town in Alaska with a
population of 1,570, for homeland security rescue and communication
equipment.
* $98,000 spent on a training course in incident management by
the Tecumseh Fire Department in Lenawee County, Mo., that no one
attended.
* $63,000 spent on a decontamination unit that ended up in
storage in a warehouse in rural Washington because the state didn't
have a hazmat team to use it.
* $58,000 for a rescue vehicle capable of boring through
concrete in Colchester, a Vermont town with a population of 18,000
and little concrete.
There's also anti-terrorism money for D.C.'s summer jobs program
and port protection in Martha's Vineyard. "At Christmas, the
Department of Homeland Security handed out about $153 million for
programs offering food and shelter for the poor, to be spent in
2004," reports Rugy. Maybe our security bureaucrats saw the
homeless as potential al Qaeda recruits.
We're lucky these guys weren't running World War II.
topics:
Islam, Environment, Movies, Alaska