9/11: Survival Comes First
September 12, 2011
Those two jetliners, striking the World Trade Center. People leaping through their high-floor office windows. And then those mammoth Twin Towers collapsing like sandcastles. It was like a science fiction movie. And yet it happened.
It has changed all of us. Ten years later, the terror has become a low-grade, chronic fear that New Yorkers live with.
Fear has made normally cynical New Yorkers more accepting of authority, especially law enforcement authority. Fear has also made New Yorkers gullible in accepting what they tell us.
First there were Rudy Giuliani and Bernie Kerik. Following the 9/11 attack, many viewed Giuliani as the only person capable of leading the city. The Queen of England granted him an honorary knighthood. Time magazine named him Man of the Year.
New Yorkers thought him so indispensible that he sought to extend his mayoralty for three months, a move that all but one of the 2001 mayoral candidates supported, including Michael Bloomberg.
But by 2008, Giuliani’s luster had faded. Initially the Republican presidential front-runner, he ended up receiving but one delegate vote.
Then there was Kerik. He, too, was considered indispensable. After elected mayor, Bloomberg he said he would try to convince Kerik to remain as police commissioner.
Bloomberg announced that he had assigned Ray Kelly to persuade Kerik. Kelly said he himself had no interest in the job.
Well, Kerik is now serving four years in federal prison on corruption charges.
And Kelly is on track to become the longest-serving police commissioner in the city’s history.
While the public is tiring of Bloomberg, Kelly has become a cult figure.
Many New Yorkers view him now as the only man standing between the city and another terrorist attack.
Both civilians and law enforcement officials stand in awe — and fear — of him, not unlike peoples’ reaction to J. Edgar Hoover in his prime.
In a January 2006, interview, the new head of the FBI’s New York office, Mark Mershon, said, “My first business call was to Ray Kelly. He took the call. He knew who I was.”
After attending a news conference with Kelly about a terrorism subway threat, Mershon said that, as he was driving home, FBI Director Robert Mueller called him. “He said, ‘Mark, I hope you don’t mind. I just called Ray Kelly to thank him for working together.”’
Many people refuse to utter a word of criticism of Kelly. This seems especially true of black politicians, despite Kelly’s Stop and Frisk policy, which many see as directed against black New Yorkers.
Many of the same politicians criticized the same policy under Giuliani.
Although the police handcuffed two African-American city officials at the West Indian Day parade, they both sounded deferential towards Kelly.
“Let me just say it wasn’t the police commissioner who threw me to the ground and shoved my face into the grass,” said Kristen John Foy, communications director for Public Advocate Bill de Blasio. “Ray Kelly is a man of honor, he’s a man of good character.”
Ditto Black City Councilman Jumaane Williams. He accused the NYPD of racism in his arrest but seemed to shield Kelly from blame.
“The commissioner came to where we were, actually, after we were released to personally find out what happened,” said Williams. “I’m not sure if he said exactly it was wrong, but he did seem very apologetic that it occurred.”
Last week, the Associated Press [with a slight assist from this column], continued its reporting on the CIA’s influence within the NYPD, particularly its systemic spying on virtually every level of Muslim life in New York City.
While this column had reported that a former CIA agent, Larry Sanchez, worked as an Assistant Commissioner in the NYPD’s Intelligence Division, the AP pointed out that, for part of that time, Sanchez was actually on the agency’s payroll.
The AP also reported that another agent, currently on the agency’s payroll, has succeeded Sanchez at the NYPD. However his role is different than Sanchez’s.
“This senior officer’s assignment is part of a program that gives him an opportunity to observe the best practices, leadership lessons, and management methodology of a large organization also involved in the fight against terrorism,” says an official familiar with the CIA’s involvement with the NYPD. “He is not serving in the same role that Larry Sanchez did.”