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August 16, 2005
HARMAN: WE MUST DEFEAT TERRORISM AND STRENGTHEN HOMELAND
SECURITY
-- In Speech to Town Hall LA, Harman stresses the importance of winning
the argument with the next generation of potential terrorist recruits
--
LOS ANGELES, CA- Congresswoman Jane Harman (D-CA), Ranking Member of
the House Intelligence Committee, today delivered the following speech
to Town Hall Los Angeles, a non-profit educational organization that provides
a forum for leaders and opinion makers.
SPEECH EMBARGOED UNTIL 11 A.M. PST TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2005
"Thank you Jim [Albaugh] for that warm introduction. You and I have
worked on some tough problems over the years, and I'm grateful for the
extraordinary work that Boeing does here in Los Angeles and around the
nation. Boeing's commercial aircraft are the best in the world, and your
defense sector work is critical to our national security.
"It's been my high honor to represent the 36th Congressional District
over the past 12 years.
"When I first ran for Congress, I knew I had to focus intensively
on national security issues because the district I wanted to represent
was 'the aerospace center of the universe' and remains home to many of
our space systems.
"I had worked in the Senate, the White House and the Pentagon in
the 1970s, and I made it my mission to become an expert on intelligence,
military affairs, and foreign policy - in a way that could serve the district
and the country.
"I came to Congress in 1992, the so-called "Year of the Woman."
And I think I've been unique among members of that class - men or women
- in that I've served on almost all of the national security committees:
Armed Services, Science, Homeland Security, and for seven years now on
the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, the past three as the
Ranking Member.
"As a woman and a Democrat, I often call myself a member of the
oppressed minority. But I've found a way, during my six terms, to get
a number of things done
mostly by working in a bipartisan fashion.
"The Intelligence Committee is an island of sanity in a sea of partisanship.
And we have accomplished real reform.
"Last year, all nine Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee
introduced HR 4104, a bill to reorganize the US Intelligence Community
and create a Director of National Intelligence.
"Our bill became the basis for the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission
and the landmark Intelligence reform legislation that passed Congress
last fall and was signed into law by the President in December.
"Though I spend a huge amount of time in Washington, LA is home
and always on my mind.
"Los Angeles is literally the crossroads for many of the pressing
national security issues of our time -
" There is a constant stream of terrorist threats against our city,
which I monitor very closely.
" The Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach comprise the largest port
complex in the United States - with more than 40% of the containerized
goods in the entire country. Over 13 million containers a year pass in
and out of the complex.
" LAX, through which thousands of people enter our country every
day, has been the intended target of at least three terrorist attacks.
" The Space and Missiles Command at Los Angeles Air Force Base develops
and procures our intelligence technical systems.
" Most of California's aerospace industry is located in the South
Bay. Its workers literally won the Cold War.
" And Los Angeles has a large and diverse population, whom we must
protect - and whose privacy and civil liberties we must be sure to maintain.
"So, you literally cannot represent key parts of Los Angeles without
focusing on national security.
"I want to spend some time talking about where we are in our efforts
to defeat terrorism and strengthen homeland defense
because, I
believe we have truly entered a new era.
"In just a few weeks, we will observe the fourth anniversary of
9/11. Lots of people ask me if we are safer.
"In some ways we are. We have reorganized our homeland security
agencies into a new department, which, despite a slow start, is now on
the right track.
"I am impressed by Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff,
a seasoned prosecutor, former judge and systems thinker.
"He came to Los Angeles earlier this year to see our ports, airport,
and an elementary school under the LAX flight path where impressive preparedness
planning goes on.
"Congress has also, as I mentioned, reformed the U.S. Intelligence
Community. The Intelligence Community we had on 9/11 was created by the
National Security Act of 1947. We were operating on a 1947 business model
designed to face an enemy - the Soviet Union - that no longer existed!
"The new law brings 15 agencies under the direction of a single
unified commander - Ambassador John Negroponte. I am closely monitoring
the work of Ambassador Negroponte and his deputy Gen. Michael Hayden to
ensure that our intelligence agencies work jointly to collect, analyze,
and disseminate the critical intelligence to prevent and disrupt terrorist
plots.
"So, in some critical ways, we have made progress.
"But, in a more fundamental way, I am deeply concerned that we do
not yet have effective strategies in place to deal with the growing jihadist
threat.
"I do not agree with Vice President Cheney that the Iraqi insurgency
is in its 'last throes.'
"We do not have intelligence dominance in Iraq. Iraqi borders remain
porous and we too often fail to discover IEDs - improvised explosive devices
- until our troops are harmed. We have just ended the bloodiest month
since the military action began!
"And the terror attacks in London on 7/7 and 7/22 and the triple
bombing in Sharm el-Sheik are the latest indications that the global terrorism
continues.
"The terrorist threat we faced on 9/11 has changed dramatically.
It has morphed from a centralized, top-down command structure led by Bin
Ladin, operating out of Afghanistan
sort of a classic corporate
model with a CEO (think IBM)
to a diffuse, network of cells that
are inspired by Bin Ladin but that don't necessarily seek his permission.
These cells operate as franchises. Think McDonalds.
"These franchise cells are very, very difficult to detect.
"Think for a moment about the men who attacked the trains in London.
For the most part, they were homegrown. Several had some contacts with
outside facilitators. But they appear to have planned and executed the
attacks on their own. It is extremely difficult to stop the terrorist
who is the "boy (or girl) next door" and is prepared to die.
"We have also been slow to recognize just how vital the internet
has become to the terrorists. The internet serves many purposes for them.
"First, it is a fairly secure communications tool. Many of them
still rely on cell phones, but they have realized that emailing and uploading
files helps them remain anonymous and obscures their location.
"But the internet is more than just a communications device. It
is also a way to broadcast their message, their propaganda, their training
manuals, and their recruitment pitches.
"The Washington Post ran an excellent series last week about how
al Qaeda has become the first guerilla movement in history to migrate
from physical space to cyberspace.
On 9/11, there were about 10 jihadist websites. Today, there are more
than 4,000.
"When U.S. and Iraqi forces nearly nabbed Zarqawi in Iraq earlier
this year, he left behind his best weapon. It wasn't a rifle or a bomb.
It was a laptop computer
that served as his mobile office from
which he was directing the insurgency.
"According to reports, al Qaeda-affiliated cells in Qatar, Egypt,
and Europe have recently carried out or planned bombings relying heavily
on the internet, such as the attacks in Sharm el-Sheik.
"If you examine their websites, it makes your hair stand on end.
They have on-line manuals explaining how to mix chemical weapons, make
bombs, sneak across borders, and carry out suicide bombings.
"They also target kids, the next generation of suicide bombers.
"Bin Ladin and Zawahiri understand the value of video. And they
succeeded in making recordings of themselves and then getting those videos
to Arab media outlets such as al Jazeera, as well as the internet.
"On June 29, Zarqawi released a 46-minute video of live-action war
in Iraq, made directly for the Internet. It gave viewers options - you
could choose Windows Media or Real Player. It could be accessed by broadband
or dialup. This was a very slick recruiting tool.
"In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, the President was right to
call this a "war on terror." In the initial assault on Afghanistan,
it certainly resembled a traditional war.
"But it is no longer a traditional war, with a finite battlefield
and a finite enemy.
"We live in an 'era of terror.' The battlefield is not merely physical,
and the enemy is 'virtually' everywhere.
"So, what does it take to win in an era of terror?
"First, I think we need better tactical intelligence about where
the terrorist leaders are, how they communicate, and how they operate.
We need to penetrate these cells and their internet sites to disrupt their
attacks before they happen.
"This is not going to happen overnight. We need intelligence officers
who can speak the languages of the enemy and blend in. Here at home, we
need to accelerate the FBI's efforts to become a true intelligence agency,
and to mesh that role with its culture that properly respects the rule
of law.
"Second, we need to harden our targets
because we should
assume that the terrorist are either here or will be here soon. And here,
I want to focus for a moment on Los Angeles.
"9 out of 10 dollars of the transportation security budget goes
to aviation, leaving gaping holes in port security. I call it our country's
'Achilles heel.'
"Our ports are critical to the country's economic vitality. An attack
on the U.S. maritime transportation system could devastate our economy.
Some 95% of American trade, worth nearly $1 trillion, enters the U.S.
through one of 361 seaports on board over 8,500 foreign vessels per year.
"As I mentioned, the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach move more
than 42% of the nation's containerized goods. Yet unlike airports, there
is no dedicated, multi-year funding for port security.
"Senator Susan Collins, whom I call her my 'Senate Sister,' chairs
the Homeland Security and Governmental Reform Committee. She and I have
introduced legislation to use custom duties collected at ports to provide
multi-year grant funding for security improvements.
"The bill would also encourage the integration of port-wide security;
information and intelligence sharing.
"When Secretary Chertoff was here in May, he announced the installation
of equipment for detection of nuclear and radiation materials. These radiation
portals, while welcome, have limitations and cannot detect shielded highly
enriched uranium. So, there is much more that needs to be done.
"We also need a greater emphasis on rail security, as we now see
from the events in London. Any notion that fighting the terrorists in
Iraq means we won't have to fight them at home was dispelled by those
tragic attacks.
"Currently both public transportation and rail security are severely
under-funded. Estimated to cost $3 billion dollars annually, they received
$150 million from the Federal government in '05!
"Later this week, I'll be meeting with local MTA officials for briefings
on their security efforts.
"But third and finally, to beat terrorism, we must win the argument
with the next generation of potential terrorist recruits.
"Secretary Rumsfeld asked in an internal memo two years ago, 'Are
we capturing, killing, or deterring and dissuading more terrorists every
day than the madrassas and radical clerics are recruiting, training, and
deploying against us?'
"I think the answer is no.
"I don't think we can rehabilitate the current crop of hard-core
haters. They must be killed or captured. But we need to win the hearts
and minds of the next generation in the Arab and Muslim world.
"But winning the argument is not just a US responsibility - it is
the responsibility of moderate Muslims around the world. As Tom Friedman
has noted, this is also a war within Islam.
"I've been very impressed, for example, by the work of the LA-based
Muslim Public Affairs Council and will be meeting with its leadership
later today. The Council is adamant that Muslims in the United States
be robust participants in politics and the community, and has offered
its assistance to the FBI and other agencies focused on thwarting the
terrorists.
"Over the next several years, the Middle East is going to have to
create 80 million jobs. If we don't work together with the countries in
the region to accomplish this goal, we are going to have 80 million disaffected
young people who have no stake in the system.
"Winning the argument also requires that we stand firm for our values
of liberty and freedom. The terrorists have successfully recruited people
to fight us because they have argued that our promises of liberty are
a façade
and that our true nature is to dominate and exploit.
We need to show them that our commitment to freedom and the rule of law
is not a façade - it is our most cherished value.
"That is why I have been so disturbed about the allegations of Abu
Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay. We need to interrogate high-value targets to
obtain good tactical intelligence. But we must avoid a moral black-eye
for America.
"When I get back to Washington in September I plan to restart an
effort I began earlier this year - to craft legislation to set clear rules
for detentions and interrogations.
"This is not about protecting terrorists' rights. It's about protecting
the values that our brave men and women are fighting for - and protecting
our troops if they are captured.
"Military might alone won't permit us to compete with a networked,
internet-savvy enemy bent on exploiting the disaffection of millions of
Arabs and Muslims who are suspicious of America.
"We must use all of the tools in our toolbox - our economic power,
our diplomacy, and the power of our example - to defend America's interests
in an era of terror.
"In the internet age, we are all interconnected as never before
"From LA to London, to Mosul to Marrakech, from Baghdad to Beirut
to Jerusalem and Ramallah - we share a common fate. We must build a future
of hope, prosperity and security together, or we who have known these
things will lose them.
"I often say I'm an optimist - or I would never stay in politics.
The challenges we face are, in my view, an opportunity - for the world's
superpower which harbors no wish to aggrandize territory, to, instead,
help shape a world free of tyranny, hopelessness and inequality.
"Will we do it?"
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