By Tom
Barry, Truthout | Op-Ed
As the nation transitions away from its post-9/11 fears and wars, US border
strategy needs to be overhauled and updated. A new strategy for border control
should be closely linked to a penetrating review of counterterrorism, the drug
war, and immigration policies.
The creation of the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) after 9/11 precipitated the border
security muddle - with strategic, political, and economic consequences.
Without duly
considering the strategic implications, the administration shifted the border
and immigration-enforcement agencies from the Justice Department to DHS.
From
the start, DHS was an unwieldy bureaucracy, the function of which was never
entirely clear. The department's law enforcement, intelligence,
counterterrorism, and security responsibilities overlap with those found within
the Justice Department, White House, intelligence community and Defense
Department - creating a strategic mess. The federal government has yet to
formulate a definition of homeland security that would justify the continued
existence of this hastily established, unwieldy department.
Instead of adding a
counterterrorism dimension to its law-enforcement mission, security became the
core mission of the Border Patrol. Its core function - namely patrolling the border
to deter or apprehend illegal border crossers - was rhetorically reconfigured
to match its post-9/11 mission. Accordingly, immigrants and illegal drugs were
relabeled as security threats, as "dangerous people and goods."
Janet Napolitano,
DHS secretary, Alan Bersin, former commissioner of US Customs and Border
Protection (CBP), and Border Patrol Chief Michael Fisher repeatedly attempted
to counter the rising fury among House Republicans and border security
activists with a shower of statistics demonstrating the extent of the Obama
administration's commitment to border security.
Still, DHS and the
Border Patrol are caught in contradictions and threat-assessments of their own
making. The bombastic declarations by the Bush administration and by the Border
Patrol about the Secure Border Initiative - about the high level of border
security the combination of a border wall, a virtual fence, and a near doubling
of the Border Patrol would achieve in several years - has made it difficult for
the Border Patrol to scale down the expectations and demands of the border
security hawks.
The dramatic
decrease in illegal border crossings by immigrants, along with the skyrocketing
fees demanded by immigrant smugglers, provide indisputable statistical evidence
that the border security buildup is certainly making it ever more difficult to
cross the southwestern border illegally.
More gruesome
evidence can be found in the increasing number of immigrant deaths as desperate
women, men and children attempt, unsuccessfully, to cross the border along its
most forbidding stretches of deserts, mountains and raging waters.
The rising seizures
of illegal drugs do point to increased border vigilance. Yet, the continuing
capability of smugglers to satisfy increasing US demand for most illegal drugs
underscores the validity of the charges by border hawks that the border is
still not "secured."
The Border Patrol's
recently released "2012-2016 Border Patrol Strategic Plan" illustrates the disjuncture between the
agency's new counterterrorism mission and its longtime border-control
operations. Rather than determining that security objectives should be guided
by targeted strategic planning, the Border Patrol persists in its awkward
efforts to shoehorn traditional border control functions into a border security
strategy.
DHS and the Border
Patrol have unwisely doubled down on a security-centered strategy for border
control. Yet, as the new strategic plan makes clear, the identified risks and
threats almost exclusively concern the traditional targets of border patrols -
immigrants and drugs.
The border security
muddle has also had political consequences.
DHS categorizes all
illegal border crossing entries as security threats - thereby committing the
nation to the impractical and monumentally costly goal of securing the border.
As the Border Patrol knows well, it is virtually impossible to ensure effective
control over America's boundaries. That would mean sealing more than 7,500 miles
of land border and more than 12,000 miles of coast while monitoring the legal
entry of more than 175 million visitors each year.
By promising border
security through "operational control," the Border Patrol has left
itself open to critics who charge that America remains vulnerable despite the
billions of dollars spent in border security programs. As a result, the Border Patrol
has found itself subject to sharp political criticism and escalating demands
that the border be secured.
Instead of toning
down its border security commitments and adopting more pragmatic positions, the
Border Patrol has further muddled border policy in its new strategic plan. The
agency once again failed to explain in a straightforward manner its dual
challenge. On the one hand, it is now tasked with protecting the nation against
the entry of foreign terrorists and weapons of mass destruction. On the other
hand, it is charged with enforcing immigration laws and fighting the war on
drugs.
The two functions
should be guided by different strategies and involve different types of
operations. Unfortunately, the new strategic plan subsumes all border
operations under its counterterrorism role - maintaining the post-9/11 myth
that all pressures the agency faces on the border are security threats. Indeed,
the new strategic plan increases the strategic emphasis on security, risks and
threats. It is no surprise, then, that the agency is floundering as it attempts
to formulate meaningful performance measures.
In addition, the
border security muddle is fraught with adverse economic consequences.
In the name of
securing the border, the Border Patrol has insisted that no expense should be
spared. Nearly 10 years ago, the Border Patrol committed itself to a new
mission of securing the border against threats to the homeland. During this
period, DHS has spent more than $100 billion in various border security
operations.
The General Accounting Office (GAO) and Congressional members have
long demanded that the Border Patrol measure the cost-effectiveness of the
agency's various initiatives and operations. But Border Patrol has held itself
above the most basic standards of transparency and accountability while
resisting the most elementary cost-benefit evaluations.
Auspicious
Time for Border Policy Reform
As the nation
transitions away from its post-9/11 fears and wars, US border strategy needs to
be overhauled and updated. A new strategy for border control should be closely
linked to a penetrating review of counterterrorism, the drug war, and
immigration policies.
The time is
auspicious for such a revision. New budgetary and debt concerns, escalating
critiques of immensely expensive and shamefully ineffective border security
programs and expanding critiques of the drug war have opened up new political
space.
Moving forward, DHS
must define what it means by "border security," and the Border Patrol
must go back to the drawing board to formulate a more comprehensive and cogent
strategy, along with closely linked performance measures.
The Border Patrol
must also demonstrate that its "metrics" are indeed based on closely
considered threat assessments and risk-management processes. As part of its
strategic thinking, the agency must do the following: categorize risks and
threats, prioritize them, justify this prioritization, mount programs to target
these prioritized threats, and establish a methodology to measure performance.
DHS must distinguish
between vulnerability and probability in its border operations. Simply because
it is possible that a band of foreign terrorists, along with weapons of mass
destruction, could enter the United States by illegally crossing the border
doesn't mean that it is likely. Border Patrol operations must assess risks
based on probability - not on mere possibility. Without risk assessments based
in probability, there would be virtually no limit to border security spending.
Similarly, the costs of border security investments should be proportional to
verifiable benefits.
The Border Patrol
is fond of making bold pronouncements about border security and is constantly
launching new initiatives, as amply demonstrated in this new plan. New
rhetorical flourishes about border security are not needed. Rather, US border
policy merits a serious strategic review of the border security mission with
the aim of producing a strategic plan that contains substance and displays
vision.
Unfortunately, the
Department of Homeland Security and the Border Patrol remain trapped in a
policy muddle of their own making.
(This article
contains excerpts from a new international policy report, The Border Patrol's Strategic Muddle, published by the
Center for International Policy.)
3 comments:
What makes you think that the nation is transitioning away from post 9/11 fears?
What an interesting article. I can't believe how much things have changed. I just know that the law still needs to be enforced just as always. News of the dallas immigration attorneys that can uphold the laws make me proud. Keep on posting.
** A new strategy for border control should be closely linked to a penetrating review of counterterrorism, the drug war, and immigration policies. security
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