“Counterterror NYC” Ignores Inconvenient Truths
February 7, 2011
“Counterterror NYC,” a National Geographic special that aired a week ago, blindly and uncritically endorsed Police Commissioner Ray Kelly’s 24/7, high-tech approach to fighting terrorism. It failed to address Kelly’s fatal flaw, which hampers the NYPD’s fight against terrorism: his out-of-control ego.
That ego, which dictates that Kelly, and Kelly alone, control all anti-terrorism operations regarding New York City, has not only created fissures between the NYPD and other law enforcement agencies that are fighting terrorism; it directly caused the NYPD to fumble the most serious terrorist plot against the city since 9/ll.
The Nat. Geo. special — which aired January 30th — begins at last year’s U.S. Tennis Open, with action scenes of a “Hercules” anti-terrorism team — those cops you see around the city carrying assault rifles at subway turnstiles, outside Grand Central Station and at God knows how many other high-profile locales. Kelly calls them “a heavily armed, intimidating force,” which indeed they are. How effective they are in fighting terrorism remains unclear.
At the Open, a sniper team patrols the rim of the stadium from on high, armed with long-range weapons. Peering down with binoculars, a counter-terrorism officer notices a disturbance below and says, “Something doesn’t look right.” Sure enough, he has spotted a fight among some spectators. The fight has nothing to do with terrorism.
Even though its television crew was embedded with the NYPD’s anti-terror units for the last four months of 2010, Nat. Geo. either missed or neglected to report on a sniper team’s potentially deadly mistake, which was recently revealed by the Daily News.
The News reported last week that a member of the sniper team guarding the tree-lighting ceremony at Rockefeller Center last November accidentally fired a rifle round. Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne explained that the unit had been “the front line of an NYPD [terror] response.” The round struck a building a block and a half away from the tree. No one was hurt. So far as we know, no terrorists were involved.
Back at “Counterterror NYC,” we turn to the subways. Kelly explains that transportation hubs are potential terrorist targets, as they were in London, Madrid and Moscow. There was a subway bombing in London in 2004, a train bombing in Madrid in 2005 and an airport bombing last month in Moscow. We are shown pictures of bomb-sniffing dogs and officers stopping and searching people at subway stations.
Author Christopher Dickey describes “a nightmare scenario” of gunmen entering the subways with explosives, going from car to car. Dickey, who was granted the same access as the Nat. Geo. crew, produced an equally blind and uncritical book, “Securing the City: Inside America’s Best Counterterror Force — the NYPD.”
Next, we move to the water. Manhattan, of course, is an island with a large waterfront. We are shown officers manning a patrol boat, equipped with a floating radiation detector capable of identifying a dirty bomb.
On to Times Square, which is described as a “jewel” of the city. We are shown pictures of New Year’s Eve with more sniper teams on guard.
But the special fails to point out the obvious when it mentions the would-be Times Square bomber, Faisal Shahzad. All the NYPD’s fire power didn’t prevent Shahzad from leaving his car parked in Times Square, packed with explosives last May. Two street vendors happened to see smoke coming from the vehicle and notified police. A bomb had been ignited but failed to detonate. It was dismantled and no one was injured. Shahzad, a Pakistani native who lived in Bridgeport, Conn., was arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment.
We next turn to the United Nations where Assistant Chief Thomas Galati of the Intelligence Division intones about the importance of protecting dignitaries. Back in 2007 when Galati joined Intel, he deliberately violated diplomatic protocol by ordering his officers to detain the arriving Iranian delegation at Kennedy airport and search them for weapons.
Apparently on instructions from Deputy Commissioner of Intelligence David Cohen, whom Kelly recruited after Cohen left the CIA, Galati held up the Iranians for 40 minutes while his counterparts from the Secret Service, State Department and Port Authority seethed.
He and/or Cohen only relented after the Chief of the Port Authority Police contacted the NYPD’s Chief of Department, Joe Esposito, who apparently talked some sense into them. The Nat Geo folks never mentioned this back story.
They did, however, mention the case of the Colorado-based terrorist Najibullah Zazi — the most serious terrorism threat to the city since 9/ll. But they misled viewers about what the NYPD actually did.
Zazi drove to New York City, planning to join local cohorts in detonating bombs in the subway — Dickey’s nightmare scenario come true. The Nat. Geo. folks interviewed Judith Miller, the enterprising but discredited former New York Times reporter, who appears to be a confidant of Cohen’s.
Miller made what was perhaps the most disingenuous statement of the program, saying that as Zazi drove from Colorado to New York, “he was monitored. The NYPD program worked,” she added.
Listening to her, one might conclude that it was the NYPD that had monitored him. In fact it was the FBI. What happened next is this: Learning of the FBI’s investigation, Cohen’s Intelligence Division, without informing the FBI, contacted one of its own informants and showed him a picture of Zazi. The informant then tipped off Zazi to the NYPD’s inquiries, prompting him to abort his subway plot and return to Colorado.