(First in a BorderLines series on border security
outsourcing.)
“Until Washington gets serious, Texas will fight to make our
border safe.” That’s how Governor Rick
Perry concludes his “Securing Our Future” campaign ad promoting his border
security plan.
But what Perry isn’t saying is that the fundamentals –
strategy, planning, coordination, intelligence – of the Texas border security
strategy have been outsourced to a Washington Beltway consulting firm. The
Arlington, Virginia company, Abrams
Learning & Information Systems (ALIS), is responsible not only for
formulating the Texas Border Security Campaign Plan but also the state’s
Homeland Security Strategy Statement as well as the strategic plan of the Texas
Department of Public Safety (DPS).
Together with his Homeland Security chief and DPS director
Steve McCraw, Perry boasts that Texas is constructing a border security “model”
and “paradigm” for border security called Border Star that other border states
and the federal government itself should adopt.
In his campaign aid, Perry said he “confronted Barack Obama with
detailed steps to reduce drug cartel violence along our border.” Earlier in 2010 Perry wrote
to Janet Napolitano, secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS),
inviting her to visit Texas “to observe Operation Border Star so that you might
consider this approach as a national model to increase border security.”
But the federal government hasn’t taken Perry up on his
offers. Like his counterpart in Arizona, Gov. Jan Brewer, Perry says that
President Obama is indifferent to border security. “I don’t think he cares,”
Perry told the conservative magazine Human
Events. Although apparently he has not withdrawn his February invitation to
Napolitano, Perry more recently has
said the DHS secretary is “arrogant” and “hypocritical.”
Border security is one of the main issues driving the
election debate in Texas as well as in Arizona, New Mexico, and California. Along the border, the debate usually pits local
and state politicians and law enforcement officials against the federal
government – with the federal government saying that it is doing more than ever
to “secure the border” with regional figures like Perry contending that
Washington isn’t doing enough to meet its responsibility, thereby obligating border
states to step into the breach.
Clearly, there are many questions about how effective the
federal government is to border security, given the continuing flows of illegal
immigrants and drugs across the border. But few questions are being asked about
just how effective are the border security strategies and operations undertaken
by border states and border sheriffs. Nor
do these local border enforcers make clear just where the money is coming from
to formulate these strategies and mount these operations.
What is the Texas border security model, where does it come
from, and who pays for it?
The key player in the Texas border security model is a name
that never appears in the governor’s stream of press releases and campaign ads
about border security or in the get-tough pronouncements of Col Steve
McCraw. Just about the only place that the
name of the model-builder for Texas border security appears on the public
record is in outsourcing contracts that DPS has entered into with ALIS – the Beltway
firm established in mid-2004 by General John W. Abrams and which now boasts as being
a “recognized leader in homeland security.”
Over the past three years, under the directorship of Steve
McCraw, DPS has spent nearly $20 million in state and federal funds in
continuing contracts with ALIS to “refine plans and strategies for seamless
integration of border security operations in the State of Texas.” Not only does
ALIS formulate the state’s border security model, it has also been charged with
coordinating and overseeing many of the Border Star operations, including the “Unified
Commands.
The centerpiece of the state’s border security operations is
intelligence-driven operations that are managed by the Border Security
Operations Center (BSOC) in Austin and six Joint Operations Information Centers
(JOICS) along the border. ALIS provides the program manager, analysts,
technicians, and information specialists for BSOC and JOICs.
(Tomorrow: More on
ALIS and its border security responsibilities.)
For related analysis and reporting, see: At War in Texas in Boston Review, at:
http://bostonreview.net/BR35.5/barry.php
For related analysis and reporting, see: At War in Texas in Boston Review, at:
http://bostonreview.net/BR35.5/barry.php
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