(Editor’s note: The
eruption of national protests against police
brutality following the murder of George
Floyd have shed new light on Israel’s
training of local police officers across the
country.
100 members of the 800-strong
Minneapolis police department were trained
at a conference in Israel in 2012. That
means at least one of every eight members
the city’s force has been influenced by the
methods of an occupying apartheid entity.
The Grayzone editor Max Blumenthal
produced one of the first comprehensive
surveys of Israeli training of US local and
federal law enforcement officials in the
following article published by
Al Akhbar English in 2011.)
June 15, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - In October, the Alameda
County Sheriff’s Department turned parts of the campus
of the University of California in Berkeley into an
urban battlefield. The occasion was
Urban Shield 2011, an annual SWAT team exposition
organized to promote “mutual response,” collaboration
and competition between heavily militarized police
strike forces representing law enforcement departments
across the United States and foreign nations.
At the time, the Alameda County Sheriff’s Department
was preparing for an imminent confrontation with the
nascent “Occupy” movement that had set up camp in
downtown Oakland, and would demonstrate the brunt of its
repressive capacity against the demonstrators a month
later when it attacked the
encampment with teargas and rubber bullet rounds,
leaving an Iraq war veteran in critical
condition and dozens injured. According to Police
Magazine, a law enforcement trade publication,
“Law enforcement agencies responding to…Occupy
protesters in northern California credit Urban Shield
for their effective teamwork.”
Training alongside the American police departments at
Urban Shield was the
Yamam, an Israeli Border Police unit that
claims to specialize in “counter-terror” operations but
is better known for its extra-judicial
assassinations of Palestinian militant leaders and
long record of repression and abuses in
the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Urban Shield also
featured a unit from the military of Bahrain, which had
just crushed a largely non-violent democratic uprising
by opening
fire on protest camps and arresting wounded
demonstrators when they attempted to enter hospitals.
While the involvement of Bahraini soldiers in the drills
was a novel phenomenon, the presence of quasi-military
Israeli police – whose participation in Urban Shield was
not reported anywhere in US media – reflected a
disturbing but all-too-common feature of the post-9/11
American security landscape.
The Israelification of America’s security apparatus,
recently unleashed in full force against the Occupy Wall
Street Movement, has taken place at every level of law
enforcement, and in areas that have yet to be exposed.
The phenomenon has been documented in bits and pieces,
through occasional news reports that typically highlight
Israel’s national security prowess without examining the
problematic nature of working with a country accused of
grave human rights abuses. But it has never been the
subject of a national discussion. And collaboration
between American and Israeli cops is just the tip of the
iceberg.
Having been schooled in Israeli tactics perfected
during a 63 year experience of controlling,
dispossessing, and occupying an indigenous population,
local police forces have adapted them to monitor Muslim
and immigrant neighborhoods in US cities. Meanwhile,
former Israeli military officers have been hired to
spearhead security operations at American airports and
suburban shopping malls, leading to a wave of disturbing
incidents of racial profiling, intimidation, and FBI
interrogations of innocent, unsuspecting people. The New
York Police Department’s disclosure that it deployed
“counter-terror” measures against Occupy protesters
encamped in downtown Manhattan’s Zuccotti Park raised
serious questions about the extent to which
Israeli-inspired tactics have been used to suppress the
Occupy movement in general.
The process of Israelification began in the immediate
wake of 9/11, when national panic led federal and
municipal law enforcement officials to beseech Israeli
security honchos for advice and training. America’s
Israel lobby exploited the climate of hysteria,
providing thousands of top cops with all-expenses paid
trips to Israel and stateside training sessions with
Israeli military and intelligence officials. By now,
police chiefs of major American cities who have not been
on junkets to Israel are the exception.
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“Israel is the Harvard of antiterrorism,” said former
US Capitol Police Chief Terrance W. Gainer, who now
serves as the US Senate Sergeant-at-Arms. Cathy
Lanier, the Chief of the Washington DC Metropolitan
Police, remarked, “No
experience in my life has had more of an impact on
doing my job than going to Israel.” “One would say
it is the front line,” Barnett Jones, the police
chief of Ann Arbor, Michigan, said of
Israel. “We’re in a global war.”
Changing the way we do business
The Jewish
Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA) is
at the heart of American-Israeli law enforcement
collaboration. JINSA is a Jerusalem and Washington
DC-based think tank known for stridently neoconservative
policy positions on Israel’s policy towards the
Palestinians and its brinkmanship with Iran. The group’s
board of directors boasts a Who’s Who of neocon
ideologues. Two former
JINSA advisers who have also consulted for Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Douglas Feith and
Richard Perle, went on to serve in the Department of
Defense under President George W. Bush, playing
influential roles in the push to invade and occupy Iraq.
Through its Law
Enforcement Education Program (LEEP), JINSA claims
to have arranged Israeli-led training sessions for over
9000 American law enforcement officials at the federal,
state and municipal level. “The Israelis changed the way
we do business regarding homeland security in New
Jersey,” Richard Fuentes, the NJ State Police
Superintendent, said after
attending a 2004 JINSA-sponsored Israel trip and a
subsequent JINSA conference alongside 435 other law
enforcement officers.
During a 2004 LEEP
trip, JINSA brought 14 senior American law
enforcement officials to Israel to receive instruction
from their counterparts. The Americans were trained in
“how to secure large venues, such as shopping malls,
sporting events and concerts,” JINSA’s website reported.
Escorted by Brigadier General Simon Perry, an Israeli
police attaché and former Mossad official, the group
toured the Israeli separation wall, now a mandatory stop
for American cops on junkets to Israel. “American
officials learned about the mindset of a suicide bomber
and how to spot trouble signs,” according to JINSA. And
they were schooled in Israeli killing methods. “Although
the police are typically told to aim for the chest when
shooting because it is the largest target, the Israelis
are teaching [American] officers to aim for a suspect’s
head so as not to detonate any explosives that might be
strapped to his torso,” the New York Times reported.
Cathy Lanier, now the Chief of Washington DC’s
Metropolitan Police Department, was among the law
enforcement officials junketed to Israel by JINSA. “I
was with the bomb units and the SWAT team and all of
those high profile specialized [Israeli] units and I
learned a tremendous amount,” Lanier reflected. “I
took 82 pages of notes while I was there which I later
brought back and used to formulate a lot of what I later
used to create and formulate the Homeland Security
terrorism bureau in the DC Metropolitan Police
department.”
Some of the police chiefs who have taken part in
JINSA’s LEEP program have done so under the auspices of
the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF), a private
non-governmental group with close ties to the Department
of Homeland Security. Chuck Wexler, the executive
director of PERF, was so enthusiastic about the program
that by 2005 he had begun organizing
trips to Israel sponsored by PERF, bringing numerous
high-level American police officials to receive
instruction from their Israeli counterparts.
PERF gained notoriety when Wexler confirmed that
his group coordinated police raids in 16 cities across
America against “Occupy” protest encampments. As many as
40 cities have sought
PERF advice on suppressing the “Occupy” movement and
other mass protest activities. Wexler did not respond to
my requests for an interview.
Lessons from Israel to Auschwitz
Besides JINSA, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) has
positioned itself as an important liaison between
American police forces and the Israeli
security-intelligence apparatus. Though the ADL promotes
itself as a Jewish civil rights group, it has
provoked controversy by publishing a blacklist of
organizations supporting Palestinian rights, and for
condemning a proposal to construct an Islamic community
center in downtown New York, several blocks from Ground
Zero, on the basis that some opponents of the project
were entitled to “positions that others would
characterize as irrational or bigoted.”
Through the ADL’s Advanced
Training School course on Extremist and Terrorist
Threats, over 700 law enforcement personnel from 220
federal and local agencies including the FBI and CIA
have been trained by Israeli police and intelligence
commanders. This year, the ADL brought 15 high-level
American police officials to Israel for instruction from
the country’s security apparatus. According to the ADL,
over 115 federal, state and local law enforcement
executives have undergone ADL-organized training
sessions in Israel since the program began in 2003. “I
can honestly say that the training offered by ADL is by
far the most useful and current training course I have
ever attended,” Deputy Commissioner Thomas Wright of the
Philadelphia Police Department commented after
completing an ADL program this year. The ADL’s
relationship with the Washington DC Police Department is
so cozy its members are invited to accompany DC cops on
“ride along” patrols.
The ADL claims to have trained over 45,000 American
law enforcement officials through its Law
Enforcement and Society program, which “draws on the
history of the Holocaust to provide law enforcement
professionals with an increased understanding of…their
role as protectors of the Constitution,” the group’s
website stated. All new FBI agents and intelligence
analysts are required to attend the ADL program, which
is incorporated into three FBI training programs.
According to officialFBI
recruitment material, “all new special agents must
visit the US Holocaust Memorial Museum to see firsthand
what can happen when law enforcement fails to protect
individuals.”
Fighting “crimiterror”
Among the most prominent Israeli government figure to
have influenced the practices of American law
enforcement officials is Avi
Dichter, a former head of Israel’s Shin Bet internal
security service and current member of Knesset who
recently introduced legislation widely criticized as anti-democratic. During
the Second Intifada, Dichter ordered several bombings on
densely populated Palestinian civilian areas, including
one on the al-Daraj neighborhood of Gaza that resulted
in the death of 15 innocent people, including 8
children, and 150 injuries. “After each success, the
only thought is, ‘Okay, who’s next?’” Dichter said of
the “targeted” assassinations he has ordered.
Despite his dubious human rights record and
apparently dim view of democratic values, or perhaps
because of them, Dichter has been a key figure in
fostering cooperation between Israeli security forces
and American law enforcement. In 2006, while Dichter was
serving as Israel’s Minister of Public Security, he
spoke in Boston, Massachusetts before the annual
convention of the International Association of Chiefs of
Police. Seated beside FBI Director Robert Mueller and
then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez, Dichter told the
10,000 police officers in the crowd that there was an
“intimate connection between fighting criminals and
fighting terrorists.” Dichter declared that
American cops were actually “fighting crimiterrorists.”
The Jerusalem Post reported that Dichter was
“greeted by a hail of applause, as he was hugged by
Mueller, who described Dichter as his mentor in
anti-terror tactics.”
A year after Dichter’s speech, he and then-Secretary
of the Department of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff signed a
joint memorandum pledging security collaboration between
America and Israel on issues ranging from airport
security to emergency planning. In 2010, Homeland
Security Secretary Napolitano authorized a
new joint memorandum with Israeli Transport and Road
Safety Minister Israel Katz shoring up cooperation
between the US Transportation Security Agency – the
agency in charge of day-to-day airport security – and
Israel’s Security Department. The recent joint
memorandum also consolidated the presence of US Homeland
Security law enforcement personnel on Israeli soil. “The
bond between the United States and Israel has never been
stronger,” Napolitano remarked at
a recent summit of AIPAC, the leading outfit of
America’s Israel lobby, in Scottsdale, Arizona.
The Demographic Unit
For the New York Police Department, collaboration
with Israel’s security and intelligence apparatus became
a top priority after 9/11. Just months after the attacks
on New York City, the NYPD assigned a permanent,
taxpayer-funded liaison
officer to Tel Aviv. Under the leadership of Police
Commissioner Ray Kelly, ties between the NYPD and Israel
have deepened by the day. Kelly embarked on his first
trip to Israel in early 2009 to demonstrate his
support for Israel’s ongoing assault on the Gaza Strip,
a one-sided attack that left over 1400 Gaza residents
dead in three weeks and led a United Nations
fact-finding mission to conclude that Israeli military
and government officials had committed war crimes.
Kelly returned to Israel the following year to speak at
the Herziliya Conference, an annual gathering of
neoconservative security and government officials who
obsess over supposed “demographic threats.” After Kelly
appeared on stage, the Herziliya crowd was addressed by
the pro-Israel academic Martin Kramer, who claimed that
Israel’s blockade of Gaza was helping to reduce the
numbers of “superfluous young men of fighting age.”
Kramer added, “If a state can’t control these young men,
then someone else will.”
Back in New York, the NYPD set up a secret “Demographics
Unit” designed to spy on and monitor Muslim
communities around the city. The unit was developed with
input and intensive involvement by the CIA, which still
refuses to name the former Middle East station chief it
has posted in the senior ranks of the NYPD’s
intelligence division. Since 2002, the NYPD has
dispatched undercover agents known as “rakers” and
“mosque crawlers” into Pakistani-American bookstores and
restaurants to gauge community anger over US drone
strikes inside Pakistan, and into Palestinian hookah
bars and mosques to search out signs of terror
recruitment and clandestine funding. “If a raker noticed
a customer looking at radical literature, he might chat
up the store owner and see what he could learn,” the Associated
Press reported. “The bookstore, or even the
customer, might get further scrutiny.”
The Israeli imprimatur on the NYPD’s Demographics
Unit is unmistakable. As a former police official told
the Associated Press, the Demographics Unit has
attempted to “map the city’s human terrain” through a
program “modeled in part on how Israeli authorities
operate in the West Bank.”
Shop ‘til you’re stopped
At Israel’s Ben Gurion International Airport,
security personnel target non-Jewish and non-white
passengers, especially Arabs, as a matter of policy. The
most routinely harassed passengers are Palestinian
citizens of Israel, who must brace
themselves for five-hour interrogation sessions and
strip searches before flying. Those singled out for
extra screening by Shin Bet officers are sent to what
many Palestinians from Israel call the “Arab room,”
where they are subjected to humiliating questioning
sessions (former White House Health and Human Services
Secretary Donna Shalala encountered such mistreatment during
a visit to Israel last year). Some Palestinians are
forbidden from speaking to anyone until takeoff, and may
be menaced by
Israeli flight attendants during the flight. In one
documented case, a six-month-old was awoken for a strip
search by Israeli Shin Bet personnel. Instances of
discrimination against Arabs at Ben Gurion International
are too numerous to detail – several incidents occur
each day – but a few of the more egregious instances
were outlined in a 2007 petition the
Association for Civil Rights in Israel filed with the
country’s Supreme Court.
Though the Israeli system of airline security
contains dubious benefits and clearly deleterious
implications for civil liberties, it is quietly and
rapidly migrating into major American airports. Security
personnel at Boston’s Logan International Airport have
undergone extensive training from
Israeli intelligence personnel, learning to apply
profiling and behavioral assessment techniques against
American citizens that were initially tested on
Palestinians. The new procedures began in August, when
so-called Behavior Detection Officers were placed in
security queues at Logan’s heavily trafficked Terminal
A. Though the procedures have added to traveler stress
while netting exactly zero terrorists, they are likely
to spread to other cities. “I would like to see a lot
more profiling” in American airports, said Yossi
Sheffi, an Israeli-born risk analyst at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for
Transportation and Logistics.
Israeli techniques now dictate security procedures at
the Mall of America, a gargantuan shopping mall in
Bloomington, Minnesota that has become a major tourist
attraction. The new methods took hold in 2005 when the
mall hired a former Israeli army sergeant named Mike
Rozin to lead a special new security unit. Rozin, who
once worked with a canine unit at Ben Gurion Airport in
Israel, instructed his employees at the Mall of America
to visually profile every shopper, examining their
expressions for suspicious signs. His security team accosts
and interrogates an average of 1200 shoppers a year,
according to the Center for Investigative Reporting.
One of the thousands who fell into Rozin’s dragnet
was Najam Qureshi, a Pakistani-American mall vendor
whose father accidentally left his cell phone on a table
in the mall food court. A day after the incident, FBI
agents appeared at Qureshi’s doorstep to ask if he knew
anyone seeking to harm the United States. An army
veteran interrogated for two hours by Rozin’s men for
taking video inside the mall sobbed
openly about his experience to reporters.
Meanwhile, another man, Emile Khalil, was visited by FBI
agents after mall security stopped him for taking
photographs of the dazzling consumer haven.
“I think that the threat of terrorism in the
United States is going to become an unfortunate part of
American life,” Rozin remarked to
American Jewish World. And as long as the threat
persists in the public’s mind, Israeli securitocrats
like Rozin will never have to worry about the next
paycheck.
“Occupy” meets the occupation
When a riot squad from the New York Police Department
destroyed and evicted the “Occupy Wall Street” protest
encampment at Zuccotti Park in downtown Manhattan,
department leadership drew on the anti-terror tactics
they had refined since the 9/11 attacks. According to
the New York Times, the NYPD deployed
“counterterrorism measures” to mobilize large
numbers of cops for the lightning raid on Zuccotti. The
use of anti-terror techniques to suppress a civilian
protest complemented harsh police measures demonstrated
across the country against the nationwide “Occupy”
movement, from firing tear gas canisters and rubber
bullets into unarmed crowds to blasting demonstrators
with the LRAD
sound cannon.
Given the amount of training the NYPD and so many
other police forces have received from Israel’s
military-intelligence apparatus, and the profuse levels
of gratitude American police chiefs have expressed to
their Israeli mentors, it is worth asking how much
Israeli instruction has influenced the way the police
have attempted to suppress the Occupy movement, and how
much they will inform police repression of future
examples of street protest. What can be said for certain
is that the Israelification of American law enforcement
has intensified police fear and hostility towards the
civilian population, blurring the lines between
protesters, criminals, and terrorists. As Dichter said,
they are all just “crimiterrorists.”
Max Blumenthal is an award-winning journalist and
the author of several books, including best-selling
Republican Gomorrah, Goliath,
The Fifty One Day War, and
The Management of Savagery. He has produced print
articles for an array of publications, many video
reports, and several documentaries, including Killing
Gaza. Blumenthal founded The Grayzone in 2015 to
shine a journalistic light on America’s state of
perpetual war and its dangerous domestic repercussions.
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