You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Land of the Free
Coup du Jour: The Militarization of Daily Life
2014-07-16
An excerpt:
"It's better to be over-prepared," smirked Jim Porter of the US Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Illinois in response to questions about wildly disproportionate use of force. Dutifully regurgitating pre-digested soundbites Porter insisted that the most important consideration for the raiders is to be prepared for what they "reasonably expect might happen." And since their indoctrination describes the public as an undifferentiated mass of menace, and their role as subduing any potential resistance, rather than protecting property rights, their default setting is "overkill."

This obsession with "force protection" — or, as it is commonly called, "officer safety" — is the primary driver behind the 124 SWAT raids that occur, on average, every day in the United States. These are not "paramilitary" raids; they are fully realized military operations carried out with financial support from Washington and material assistance from the Pentagon. The only significant difference between counter-insurgency operations overseas and the ones conducted domestically is the fact that military personnel operate under more restrictive rules of engagement than police officers.

The SWAT concept itself could be considered a domestic variant of the "Counter-terror teams" assembled by the CIA as part of the murderous "Phoenix Program" in Vietnam. Amid mounting — and overdue, but welcome -- public antipathy toward police militarization, the Homeland Security apparatus has ramped up its longstanding campaign to collect information on activists and commentators who promote "anti-police" attitudes — another homefront adaptation of counter-insurgency methods.
Posted by:badanov

#4  Had an escapee this morning during transport from the local funny farm to somewhere else. Handcuffed.

You would have thought an airliner went down based upon the number of uniformed police and the helicopters (yes, plural), but the turnout was merited owing to the public safety concern.

Then the MRAP arrived...
Posted by: Uncle Phester   2014-07-16 22:37  

#3  The Phoenix Program gets a bad rap again. Always by people who don't know what they are talking about. Otherwise spot-on.
Posted by: Sgt. D.T.   2014-07-16 11:36  

#2  I should have added, that if you don't have the support of the locals you basically have a police state with increasing pushback.
Posted by: JohnQC   2014-07-16 09:47  

#1  These counter-insurgency methods don't work if you don't have the support of the locals.
Posted by: JohnQC   2014-07-16 09:46  

00:00