RAW correspondant Ron Rosenbaum on why we shouldn’t be paranoid, yet should be very wary of National Security Presidential Directive 51, a poorly defined contingency plan to retain a Constitutional government in the aftermath of an undetermined disaster.
It’s so secret that even Homeland Security committee members can’t look at the details:
Who Will Rule Us After the Next 9/11?
The reality of NSPD-51 is almost as bad as the paranoia.Oh, god. I’m reluctant to write this particular column. I’ve been scarred by this kind of story before. I’ve learned that it’s difficult to write about the sources of paranoia without spreading paranoia.
But the subject, NSPD-51—that’s National Security Presidential Directive 51—and the attendant explosion of blogospheric paranoia about it deserve attention. Even if you don’t believe, as I don’t, that NSPD-51 is a blueprint for a coup in the guise of plans for “continuity of government” in the event of a national emergency (such as a terrorist attack during an election campaign). Even if you don’t believe, as I don’t, that it will be used as a pretext for canceling the upcoming presidential election and preserving “continuity” of this administration in office.
Nonetheless, the specifics of the directive are a matter of legitimate concern that has not been given the urgent and sustained attention it deserves by Congress or the mainstream media.
…Snip
Just how wise and fair—and constitutional—are the brand-new mechanisms for “continuity of government” that NSPD-51 has put into effect with almost no prior and little subsequent discussion last May?And there’s another paranoia-inducing element of the story: The existence of “classified continuity annexes” whose content has been kept secret even from the House Committee on Homeland Security. A troubling aspect of the story that, so far as I know, only one mainstream media reporter, Jeff Kosseff of the Portland Oregonian, has pursued.
…Snip
The document is also hazy on when our new continuity policies will be set in motion. The directive tells us that they’ll kick in whenever the nation faces a “catastrophic emergency.” But look how vaguely “catastrophic emergency” is first defined: “Catastrophic Emergency” means any incident, regardless of location, that results in extraordinary levels of mass casualties, damage, or disruption severely affecting the U.S. population, infrastructure, environment, economy, or government functions.
These are profoundly, potentially calamitously, broad terms. Who defines what is extraordinary? Who defines how severe severely is? Is there any procedure to challenge the junking of constitutional government?
…Snip
Here’s where Jeff Kosseff of the Portland Oregonian comes in. In an e-mail to me, he said he believed he was the first mainstream media reporter to pursue the classified annex issue (although Charles Savage reported on the disturbing public aspects of the directive itself in the Boston Globe in May).Kosseff told me he got onto the story when Oregon Rep. Peter DeFazio expressed puzzlement that he was having trouble seeing what was in the classified “annexes.” DeFazio was a member of the homeland security committee and cleared to read classified material in a supersecure “bubble room” designed to prevent any kind of surveillance. But DeFazio’s initial request was, as Kosseff reported, “denied” by the White House, which cited “national security concerns.”
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