Homeland Security will drastically
reshape American government
by Daniel Henninger
Wall Street Journal, Friday,
November 22, 2002
The Department of Homeland Security, approved
by a Senate vote of 90-9 this week, is probably a much bigger
event in the life of this country than most people realize. It
has the potential to change in fundamental ways the structure
of our politics, our law and the way we live our daily lives.
Most of the discussion so far has concerned
civil liberties and balancing those freedoms against public safety
(also known as getting killed). But the implications of Homeland
Security push well beyond the civil-liberties debate, touching
and perhaps reordering many of the political and legal relationships
between the national government, states and localities.
Though these implications haven't been
widely discussed, no one in government is hiding the magnitude
of the department's creation, which President Bush likely will
make law by month's end. Transmitting his proposal to Congress
last June, Mr. Bush said--and it is repeated in every news story--"I
propose the most extensive reorganization of the Federal Government
since the 1940s." That means every other corner of the country's
political system is going to be touched as well by this "reorganization."
Mr. Bush likened his idea to Harry Truman's
decision to collect the armed services into a Department of Defense.
The purpose then was "to meet a very visible enemy in the
Cold War." But this is different. The Soviet Union, no matter
how many thermonuclear devices it held, was not al Qaeda; its
leaders, located in Moscow, weren't inclined to an act that in
turn would destroy their own population. But the political threat,
like the bombs themselves, were real, and a 40-year policy of
deterrence was the right response at that time.
The new threat from Islamic terrorists
is not primarily the familiar suicide bombers, no matter how horrific
the events of September 11. There is no way the government would
undertake a reorganization on the scale of the Homeland Security
Department if the threat were containable to conventional explosions.
The threat that justifies what this department will do to America's
political organization is biologically derived weapons. Or a radiological
bomb. The ideological willingness of Islamic radicals to disengage
themselves from civilized life and massively murder innocent civilians,
abetted by rogue states, makes the threat creditable. The magnitude
of death and disruption likely to be caused by such weapons makes
allowing the threat to occur, by inaction, unthinkable. Thus we
are getting the Department of Homeland Security, or DHS.
(Not that everyone believes the threat
is real, as was reflected in Congress's actually fighting over
whether to exempt manufacturers of antiterror vaccines from tort
litigation.)
I think there is a perception in the public
mind that what Homeland Security means is that if something really
bad happens, America's resources are so vast that "they"--the
government or whoever is in charge--will know how to impose all
this capacity to put the fire out. That's what we always do with
earthquakes or floods and what we did when the World Trade towers
came down.
But natural disasters, and September 11
in lower Manhattan or at the Pentagon, have been local disasters.
Because this new biological (or radiological) threat is geographically
massive, we are being led toward greatly enlarging national control
of domestic security and other functions traditionally controlled
at the state and local level. This imperative has the potential
to significantly tip the federal system--in matters of politics,
police functions and the law--toward Washington to an unprecedented
degree.
No doubt this deserves a moment's thought
on the merits. But no thinking is possible until people recognize
what is going on. Most of the serious analysis I've seen on the
subject has been confined to abstruse publications like Public
Administration Review, whose readers--public managers--will be
expected to make all this work.
The money first. If the national government
is going to foot most of the bills, as the already overspent states
and cities want in areas such as safeguarding critical infrastructure,
the feds will insist on shaping the new system in most of its
significant details.
There is the matter of jurisdictional
control. Bear in mind that behind everything the public sector
does lies a complex network of statutory authorization and law.
Should one of these large-scale attacks on the civilian population
become real, a cascade of hard decisions would present themselves
involving such matters as quarantine, compulsory inoculations,
forced population movements, property seizures, the status of
infrastructure, hospital personnel, media, the deployment of police
and military forces. Should looters be shot?
Who makes those calls? Which ones? Private-sector
managers would also be asked to respond. Who should they listen
to--the mayor, governor, the commander of NORCOM, the new Northern
Command? And of course even within the federal system, issues
of jurisdictional authority already rage.
In peacetime, the American legal system
has struggled to achieve a balance between federal and state assertions
of authority. When securing the homeland creates legal tensions,
whose interpretation of the constitutional balance should prevail?
If the argument for the Commerce Clause is that national commerce
couldn't function subject to many laws, the same might be said
for the imperative of achieving security across state borders.
The Department of Homeland Security, incidentally,
is the sophisticated solution. The crude one would be to wait
for the hit, then impose martial law, for as long as necessary.
Amid a biological attack, no one would question such measures.
We'd muddle through. The resulting political system would be a
secondary disaster.
The president says Homeland Security presages
a long war to suppress weapons of mass destruction. The nature
of the threat may well force a broad federalization, but we should
strive to minimize it, for once taken it will of course become
permanent. The very best way to achieve that balance is obvious:
Eliminate those people who want to and say they are trying to
kill us.
Mr. Henninger is deputy editor of The
Wall Street Journal's editorial page. His column appears Fridays
in the Journal and on OpinionJournal.com.
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