CBP presentation to National Defense Industrial Association
Published by TruthOut, May 18, 2013
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/16422-drones-over-the-homeland-from-border-security-to-national-security
Tom Barry
The Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) says it is the "leading edge" of drone
deployment in the United States. Since 2005, DHS has been purchasing Predator
drones - officially called unmanned aerial systems (UAS) - to "secure the
border," yet these unarmed Predator drones are also steadily creeping into
local law enforcement, international drug-interdiction and national security
missions - including across the border into the heart of Mexico.
DHS will likely double
its drone contingent to two-dozen unmanned UAS produced by General Atomics as
part of the border security component of any immigration reform. The
prominence of border security in immigration reform can't be missed. The
leading reform proposal, offered by eight US senators, is the Border Security,
Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act of 2013 - which
proposes to spend $6.5 billion in additional "border security"
measures, mostly high-tech surveillance by drones and ground surveillance
systems.
Most of the concern
about the domestic deployment of drones by DHS has focused on the crossover to
law-enforcement missions that threaten privacy and civil rights, and that,
without more regulations in place, the program will accelerate the transition
to what critics call a "surveillance society." Also alarming is the
mission creep of border drones, managed by the DHS' Customs and Border
Protection (CPB) agency with increasing interface between border drones,
international drug interdiction operations and other military-directed national
security missions.
The prevalence of
military jargon used by US Customs and Border (CBP) officials - such as
"defense in depth" and "situational awareness" - points to
at least a rhetorical overlapping of border control and military strategy.
Another sign of the increasing coincidence between CBP/Office of Airforce and
Marine (OAM) drone program and the military is that the commanders and deputies
of OAM are retired military officers. Both Major General Michael Kostelnik and
his successor Major General Randolph Alles, retired from US Marines, were
highly placed military commanders involved in drone development and
procurement.
Kostelnik has been
involved in the development of the Predator by General Atomics since the
mid-1990s and was an early proponent of providing Air Force funding to
weaponize the Predator. As commander of the Marine Corps Warfighting
Laboratory, Alles was a leading proponent of having each military branch work
with military contractors to develop their own drone breeds, including near replicas
of the Predator manufactured for the Army by General Atomics.
In promoting - and
justifying - the DHS drone program, Kostelnik has routinely alluded to the
national security potential of drones slated for border security duty. On
several occasions Kostelnik has pointed to the seamless interoperability with
Department of Defense (DOD) Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) forces. At a moment's
notice, Kostelnik said, that OAM (Office of Airforce and Marine) could be
"CHOP'ed" - meaning undergo a Change in Operational Command from DHS
to DOD.
DHS has not
released operational data about CBP (Customs and Border Protection)/OAM drone
operations. Therefore, the extent of the participation of DHS drones in
domestic and international operations is unknown. But statements by CBP
officials and media reports from the Caribbean point to a rapidly expanding
participation of DHS Guardian UAVs in drug-interdiction and other unspecified
operations as far south as Panama. CBP states that OAM "routinely provides
air and marine support to other federal, state and local law enforcement
agencies" and "works with the US military in joint international
antismuggling operations and in support of National Security Special Events
[such as the Olympics]."
According to
Kostelnik, CBP planned a "Spring 2011 deployment of the Guardian to a
Central American country in association with Joint Interagency Task Force South
(JIATF-South) based at the naval station in Key West, Florida."
JIATF-South is a subordinate command to the United States Southern Command
(USSOUTHCOM), whose geographical purview includes the Caribbean, Central
America and South America. In mid-2012, CBP/OAM participated in a JIATF-South
collaborative venture called "Operation Caribbean Focus" that
involved flight over the Caribbean Sea and nations in the region - with the
Dominican Republic acting as the regional host for the Guardian operations,
which CBP/OAM considers a "prototype for future transit zone UAS (drone)
deployments."
CBP has been
secretly deploying Predators into Mexican territory. In its description of the
OAM operations, CBP states, "OAM works in collaboration with the
Government of Mexico in addressing border security issues." But it has
never publicly specified the form and the objectives of this collaboration.
Nor has it publicly acknowledged that its Predator drones have entered Mexican
territory.
As part of the US
global drug war and as an extension of border security, the US Northern Command
acknowledged that the military was deploying - with the approval of the Mexican
government - the $38 million Global Hawk drone into Mexico as part of the joint US-Mexico attempt to
suppress the Mexican drug cartels.
CBP says that OAM
drones have not been deployed within Mexico, but notes that "OAM works in
collaboration with the Government of Mexico in addressing border security
issues, "without specifying the form and objectives of this
collaboration." As part of the US global drug war and as an extension of
border security, unarmed drones are also crossing the border into Mexico. The
US Northern Command has acknowledged that the US military does fly a
$38-million Global Hawk drone into Mexico to assist the Mexico's war against
the drug cartels.
An April 28
Washington Post article by Dana Priest raises new questions and
concerns about the increasing mission creep of homeland drones into foreign
missions involving the U.S. military, CIA and Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA).
President Felipe
Calderón began requesting US drone flights into Mexico on targeted killings
missions soon after he became president in December 2006. However, it wasn't
until the July 2009 killing of a US Border Patrol agent by suspected Mexican
drug smugglers that the US government began deploying unarmed Predator drones.
According to
Washington Post reporter Priest, "[H]ours after Mexican smugglers shot and
killed a U.S. Border Patrol agent while trying to steal his night-vision
goggles, U.S. authorities were given permission to fly an unarmed Predator
drone into Mexican airspace to hunt for suspects. Intelligence from the flights
was passed to the Mexican army. Within 12 hours, the army brought back more
information, according to two U.S. officials involved in the operation.
Eventually, four suspects were captured. Three pleaded guilty, one is awaiting
trial and a fifth remains at large."
"That
first flight dispelled Mexican fears that U.S. authorities would try to take
control of drone operations,” noted the Washington Post article, "An
agreement was reached that would temporarily give operational control to
Mexican authorities during such flights. U.S. pilots sitting in the states
would control the planes remotely, but a Mexican military or federal police
commander would be able to direct the pilot within the boundaries of a
Mexico-designated grid. By late 2010, drones were flying deeper into Mexico to
spy on the cartels ..."
CBP has never
stated for the public record that its Predators are being deployed over Mexican
territory. In an attempt to clarify the nature and extent of Predator
surveillance in Mexico, Truthout asked CBP to confirm that OAM drones stationed
along the border were indeed being deployed into Mexico and whether CBP
maintained operational control of these missions or whether CBP drones were
piloted by nonagency personnel from the military or intelligence sector.
CBP officials
declined to speak for attribution. Instead, a CBP official responded
anonymously and ambiguously, stating:
"As part of
the bilateral security cooperation, the Government of Mexico has asked the US
government - in certain instances - for the support of unmanned aircraft to
gather specific intelligence, particularly along the border region, in order to
achieve concrete security goals. When such operations take place, Mexican
authorities have the operational authorization, oversight and supervision.
"In 2009, the
United States requested approval from the Mexican government to fly in Mexican
airspace to support law enforcement officers assigned to search and apprehend
Agent Rosas' murder suspects who fled into Mexico.
"During the
current administration, the emphasis on the collaboration of information
sharing has assisted in the fight of criminal organizations that affects
populations on both sides of the border. Within this framework, information and
greater intelligence gathering capabilities have been made available to both
governments, to include support of unmanned aircraft."
Left hanging was
the question about the role of DOD and the intelligence sector in piloting CBP
drones and in analyzing the resulting surveillance data. It also remains
unclear whether the Mexican government interacts directly with DHS and CBP/OAM
or, in making its requests for drone surveillance, it bypasses DHS entirely.
Increased border
security funding and more drones are a core part of all immigration reform
proposals being introduced in Congress. However, because of the secrecy and
lack of transparency and accountability that is systemic in the DHS border
agencies, it is likely neither the Congress nor the US public understands that
increasing the number of border security Predators also likely increases the
foreign deployment of these drones in nonborder missions over foreign nations
and international waters.
Communities, state
legislatures and even some congressional members are proceeding to enact
legislation and revise ordinances to decriminalize or legalize the consumption
of drugs, especially marijuana, targeted by the federal government's drug war
of more than four decades. At the same time, DHS has been escalating its
contributions to the domestic and international drug war - in the name of both
homeland security and national security. Drug seizures on the border and drug
interdiction over coastal and neighboring waters are certainly the top
operative priorities of OAM. Enlisting its Guardian drones in SOUTHCOM's drug
interdiction efforts underscores the increasing emphasis within the entire CBP
on counter-narcotic operations.
CBP is a DHS agency
that is almost exclusively focused on tactics. While CBP, as the umbrella
agency, the Office of the Border Patrol and OAM all have strategic plans, these
plans are marked by their rigid military frameworks, their startling absence of
serious strategic thinking and the diffuse distinctions between strategic goals
and tactics. As a result of the border security buildup, south-north drug flows
(particularly cocaine and more high-value drugs) have shifted back to marine
smuggling, mainly through the Caribbean, but also through the Gulf of Mexico
and the Pacific.
Rather than
reevaluating drug prohibition and drug control frameworks for border policy,
CBP/OAM has rationalized the procurement of more UAVs on the shifts in the
geographical arenas of the drug war - albeit couching the tactical changes in
the new drug war language of "transnational criminal organizations"
and "narcoterrorism." The overriding framework for CBP/OAM operations
is evolving from border security and homeland security to national security, as
recent CBP presentations about its Guardian deployments illustrate.
Shortly before
retiring after seven years as OAM's first chief, Major Gen. Kostelnik told a
gathering of military contractors: "CPB's UAS Deployment Vision
strengthens the National Security Response Capability." He may well be
right, but the US public and Congress need to know if DHS plans to institute
guidelines and limits that regulate the extent of DHS operational collaboration
with DOD and the CIA.
Copyright, Truthout. May not be reprinted without permission.
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