Those who remember recent history will not be
surprised to learn that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has been amassing
files on the American Civil Liberties Union, Greenpeace, and other critics of
the George W. Bush administration.
Back in the 1960s and 1970s, the FBI, the Central Intelligence Agency, the
Department of Defense, and other intelligence agencies all conspired to engage
in widespread spying on ordinary U.S. citizens – and illegal covert operations.
The targets back then were left-wing groups and individuals, civil rights and
anti-Vietnam activists, and, of course, President Richard Nixon's "enemies
list."
The leader of the pack was the FBI's powerful first director, J. Edgar Hoover
– who had started his witch-hunting career in the 1920s under Attorney
General Mitchell Palmer.
Palmer's infamous "Red Raids" were enabled by a national environment
of fear and suspicion and led to the jailing or deportation of hundreds of communists,
Bolsheviks, and other dissidents, including Emma Goldman, the well-known Russian
émigré anarchist.
The FBI under Hoover collected information on all the country's leading politicians.
Known as Hoover's "secret files," this incriminating material was
used to make sure that the eight presidents under whom he served would be too
frightened to sack him. The strategy worked and Hoover was still in office when
he died, aged 77, in 1972.
But it was the FBI's spying on Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. that ended that
era of government snooping. The FBI had used wiretaps and a covert operation,
personally directed by Hoover, to unearth derogatory information intended to
destroy King as a national civil rights leader.
Today, in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on New York and Washington,
the FBI is again armed with expanded powers to collect information on ordinary
citizens. And it has been doing so.
That is what the FBI itself disclosed in federal court yesterday. It acknowledged
that it has collected 1,173 pages of files on the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU); 2,383 on Greenpeace, the environmental advocacy group; and an undetermined
number of files on an organization called United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ),
a coalition of more than 1,000 antiwar groups. The coalition allegedly was planning
protests at the time of the Republican Party National Convention in New York.
Six pages of internal documents from the FBI's Los Angeles Bureau reportedly
related to UFPJ, and referred to possible anarchist connections of some protesters
and the prospect for disruptions.
But it also quoted at greater length from uncontroversial statements the protesters
posted on their Web site and elsewhere in advance of the Republican convention.
The government's court filing came in response to a lawsuit under the Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) brought by the ACLU and other groups that maintain
that the FBI has engaged in a pattern of political surveillance against critics
of the Bush administration.
The ACLU is seeking FBI records since 2001 or earlier on some 150 groups that
have questioned the Iraq war and other policies. The ACLU first filed FOIA requests
in 10 states and the District of Columbia seeking information about the FBI's
use of Joint Terrorism Task Forces (JTTFs) and local police to engage in political
surveillance. The FOIAs sought the actual FBI files of groups and individuals
targeted and information about how the practices and funding structure of the
JTTFs encouraged spying. JTTFs are legal partnerships between the FBI and local
police, in which local officers are "deputized" as federal agents
and work in coordination with the FBI to identify and monitor individuals and
groups. While their purpose is to investigate terrorism, they have targeted
peaceful political and religious groups with no connection to terrorism. When
the FBI failed to respond to the FOIA request, the ACLU sued the government.
The FOIA law was passed in 1968 to give the public greater access to government
documents.
The Justice Department is opposing the ACLU request to expedite the review
of material it is seeking under FOIA, saying it does not involve a matter of
urgent public interest, and department lawyers say the sheer volume of material,
in the thousands of pages, will take them eight to 11 months to process for
Greenpeace and the ACLU alone.
Earlier, the ACLU went to court in a separate case to obtain some 60,000 pages
of records on the government's detention and interrogation practices. The organization
said the FBI records on the dozens of protest groups could total tens of thousands
of pages.
DOJ officials did not reveal what was in the ACLU and Greenpeace files, citing
the pending lawsuit. But they denied that they have sought to monitor the political
activities of any activist groups, and say that any intelligence-gathering activities
related to political protests were intended to prevent disruptive and criminal
activity at demonstrations, not to silence free speech.
Beau Grosscup, a professor of international relations at California State University
and author of The
Newest Explosions of Terrorism: Latest Sites of Terrorism in the '90s and Beyond,
told IPS, "All one has to do is look at the annual FBI report on terrorism
to discover that as they watch the ACLU, Earth First, Greenpeace, and the peace
movement, they refuse to apply their political attention to the violence of
the right-wing and in particular anti-environmental groups."
"Why would the FBI collect almost 1,200 pages on a civil rights organization
engaged in lawful activity? What justification could there be, other than political
surveillance of lawful First Amendment activities?" asked ACLU Executive
Director Anthony D. Romero.
A smaller batch of documents already turned over by the government sheds light
on the interest of FBI counterterrorism officials in protests surrounding the
Iraq war and last year's Republican National Convention.
These documents are reportedly similar in tone to a bulletin distributed among
FBI counterterrorism officials in October 2003 analyzing the activities of antiwar
demonstrators who were then planning protests in Washington and San Francisco.
When an FBI employee charged that the memo blurred the line between lawfully
protected speech and illegal activity, the Justice Department conducted an internal
investigation but found that the bulletin did not raise legal problems and that
any First Amendment impact posed by the FBI's monitoring of the political protests
was negligible and constitutional.
(Inter Press Service)