Will Share Data
with "Foreign
Partners"
Big Brother
wants your
irises.
By Matthew
Rothschild
12/06/08 "The
Progressive"
-- - George
Bush just issued
a directive to
expand the
acquisition of
biometric
information, and
to ensure that
agencies across
the executive
branch share it.
And the Bush
Administration
may give it to
foreign
governments,
too.
All this
according to
National
Security
Presidential
Directive Number
59, also known
as Homeland
Security
Presidential
Directive Number
24, which George
W. Bush signed
on June 5.
The directive is
aimed at “known
and suspected
terrorists,” as
well as “other
persons who may
pose a threat to
national
security.”
The directive
does not say how
these other
persons who “may
pose a threat”
are to be
defined.
And the
directive is so
broadly worded
that it appears
to cover anyone
the government
has biometric or
other personal
data on.
“To be most
effective,
national
security
identification
and screening
systems will
require timely
access to the
most accurate
and most
complete
biometric,
biographic, and
related that
are, or can be,
made available
throughout the
executive
branch,” the
document states.
Bush ordered
executive
departments and
agencies to “use
mutually
compatible
methods and
procedures in
the collection,
storage, use,
analysis, and
sharing of
biometric and
associated
biographic and
contextual
information of
individuals.”
Agencies are
supposed to
share this
information with
each other “to
the fullest
extent permitted
by law” whenever
“there is an
articulable and
reasonable basis
for suspicion”
that an
individual poses
a “threat to
national
security.”
The directive
does not specify
what an
“articulable and
reasonable
basis” might be.
“Known and
suspected
terrorists,” or
KSTs, as the
document calls
them, are not
the only concern
of the Bush
Administration.
It has whole
groups of other
people that it
wants to gather
biometric
information on.
Within 90 days,
the Attorney
General is
tasked to
“recommend
categories of
individuals in
addition to KSTs
who may pose a
threat to
national
security,” and
he is ordered to
“set forth
cost-effective
actions and
associated
timelines for
expanding the
collection and
use of
biometrics to
identify and
screen for such
individuals.”
The Attorney
General is to
coordinate this
“with the
Secretaries of
State, Defense,
and Homeland
Security, the
DNI [Director of
National
Intelligence],
and the Director
of Science and
Technology
Policy.”
The Attorney
General is also
required to
identify “legal
authorities” to
implement the
directive.
The directive
states that it
wants to expand
the use of
biometrics on
individuals “in
a lawful and
appropriate
manner, while
respecting their
information
privacy and
other legal
rights under
United States
law.”
But the
directive offers
no suggestion
about how those
rights would be
protected.
The directive
also says that
the Secretary of
State “shall
coordinate the
sharing of
biometric and
associated
biographic and
contextual
information with
foreign
partners.”
Under what
circumstances
the Secretary of
State would
share such
information with
“foreign
partners”
remains unclear.
All the
directive says
is that it would
happen “in
accordance with
applicable law,
including
international
obligations
undertaken by
the United
States.”
Given the Bush
Administration’s
demonstrated
disdain for
applicable law
and
international
obligations, and
given its record
of violating
people’s privacy
rights, this is
not reassuring.
Matthew
Rothschild is
the editor of
The Progressive
magazine, which
is one of the
leading voices
for peace and
social justice
in this country.
Rothschild has
appeared on
Nightline,
C-SPAN, The
O'Reilly Factor,
and NPR, and his
newspaper
commentaries
have run in the
Chicago Tribune,
the L.A. Times,
the Miami
Herald, and a
host of other
newspapers.
Copyright 2008
The Progressive
Magazine
