Pubdate: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2001 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Reggie Rivers, Denver Post Columnist Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) INVASION OF A DIFFERENT SORT I hope our new war on terrorism isn't filled with the ambiguous goals, outrageous spending and systematic abuses that have been the hallmarks our long-standing but ineffective war on drugs. President Bush has announced that America is declaring war on terrorism. Good. Like most Americans, I want to see Osama bin Laden and whoever else was involved in these attacks brought to justice. That justice may be served in a courtroom or from the belly of an Air Force plane. Either way is fine with me. But I worry that it won't be bin Laden who will suffer. It'll be innocent people in Afghanistan who will die in the bombings that are sure to come, and innocent people in the United States who will lose their freedom. The new war on terrorism has a lot in common with the war on drugs. Both seek to eradicate the same type of indistinct enemy that moves in the shadows and infiltrates our country to do damage. In both cases, the enemy isn't limited to a particular, place, and he's difficult to locate and destroy. Both wars require congressional financing, which amounts to trillions of dollars being spent indiscriminately with no clear plan of attack and nebulous results. Already Congress has cut the first check for $40 billion to be spent on "whatever is needed," and there will be many more to come. The war on drugs has caused the expansion of our prison population so that it's now the largest in the world. It's restricted our basic civil rights and it has increased the power of police to make stops, conduct searches, use wiretapping and other invasive surveillance technology and perform dangerous no-knock raids. We've seen property confiscated and/or condemned because of drug use, neighborhoods turned into deadly battle grounds, and high speed chases on our highways, all in the name of the drug war. Now we have a war on terrorism, which is a laudable goal, but I worry that it will be us, not the terrorists, who pay the price. On Page 2A of yesterday's Denver Post, a headline read, "Bush alters law to assist terror probe; Legal immigrants may be held indefinitely if suspect." Already it begins. As the law stood before this change, police could arrest any legal immigrant they suspected, but they had 24 hours in which to charge him with a crime or with violating the terms of his visa. Maybe 24 hours was too short. Given the nature of he current investigation under way, I think we can all agree that an extension may have been warranted. Give the police 48 hours, 72 hours or even a week. But indefinitely? We've already seen this approach taken with illegal immigrants, some of whom sit in jails for six to nine months without ever being charged with a crime. Now we're going to do the same to people who are in the country legally. "Indefinitely" means they could be held for months or years, despite the fact that there's not enough evidence to charge them with a crime. This is an executive order from the president, but Congress will have its turn at the wheel in a few days when it considers anti-terrorism legislation. Last week, the Justice Department announced that it would ask Congress for expansive new surveillance authority to place wiretaps on phones and computers and a variety of other powers to combat terrorism, and I'll bet the Justice Department will get everything it wants. On Page 1A of yesterday's Denver Post was the headline, "Face-ID technology gains new support; Colorado legislators rethinking opposition." Our legislators were planning to restrict its use for reasons of privacy, but in the new war on terrorism will there be any privacy left? Our new laws may become a more enduring form of terrorism than the crimes they purport to prevent. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake