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http://www.theconservativevoice.com/article/26651.html
Mr. Chertoff's "Gut
Feelings"
Paul
R. Hollrah, July 13,
2007
In an
October 5, 2006
report titled,
Homeland Security
Technology, Global
Partnerships, and
Winning the Long
War, the
Heritage Foundation
reported on the
burgeoning
bureaucracy
surrounding the
search for
technologies to keep
us safe in an era of
international
terrorism.
According to the
Heritage report,
“The U.S. government
spends considerably
more money on
developing homeland
security
technologies than is
spent by any other
national government.
The
Department of
Homeland Security
(DHS) Appropriations
Act of
2006 allocated
approximately
$6 billion for
homeland security
technologies…”
The
report tells us that
DHS spends
approximately $4
billion annually on
R&D, one-third of
that sum, $1.4
billion, managed by
DHS under its
Science and
Technology (S&T)
Directorate. Also
involved in the
search for new
security
technologies are the
Domestic Nuclear
Detection Office
(DNDO), the Defense
Advanced Research
Projects Agency
(DARPA), the
Department of Health
and Human Services
(HHS), the
Department of Energy
(DOE), the Los
Alamos and Lawrence
Livermore National
Laboratories, as
well as numerous
colleges,
universities, and
private defense
contractors.
Attempting to
reassure their
readers regarding
the bureaucratic
morass surrounding
the search for
effective security
technologies, the
Heritage report
states that,
“Several efforts are
underway to
coordinate
interagency efforts
to research and
develop homeland
security
technologies.”
Those involved in
this effort include
the Homeland
Security Council,
the director of the
White House Office
of Science and
Technology Policy,
and the Technical
Support Working
Group, a joint
operation of the
State Department and
the Department of
Defense.
However, the fear
that homeland
security could
easily become the
largest cottage
industry in
Washington, with
individual jobs,
titles, and
political careers
becoming an even
greater concern than
actually winning the
War on Terror, may
not be far off the
mark. What it
appears we are
already seeing is a
lot of sound and
fury, wasteful
spending, and
bureaucratic
empire-building, but
with few
technological
innovations to show
for it. And while
the Washington
bureaucracy focuses
on the search for
bells, whistles, and
magic boxes, the
most successful
security system in
the world, the
Israeli system,
focuses on screening
people, not
things. We
should follow their
example.
While
the Israelis operate
just four major
international
airports and six
international border
crossings, the
United States has
some
326 official ports
of entry and 15
pre-clearance
offices in
Canada and the
Caribbean.
That being the case,
it would appear
extremely helpful if
DHS had access
to technology that
would allow TSA and
Customs agents to
confront all foreign
nationals
attempting to enter
the country and to
determine, within a
matter of seconds,
whether or not a
particular
individual
represents a
potential security
threat and should be
singled out for
in-depth
scrutiny.
But
wait! That
technology already
exists. The National
Institute for Truth
Verification (NITV®)
of West Palm
Beach, Florida has
developed
Computerized Voice
Stress Analysis
(CVSA®),
an
interrogation tool
now used by more
than 1700 law
enforcement agencies
across the country,
including the FBI
and certain special
operations units of
the U.S. military…
but not by DHS and
the Transportation
Security
Administration
(TSA).
Although NITV®
received strong
congressional
support for the
development of Voice
Stress Analysis in
the post-9/11
period, the funding
for the CVSA®
initiative was
blocked by powerful
civilian bureaucrats
affiliated with the
Department of
Defense Polygraph
Institute.
Nevertheless, in
spite of opposition
from senior
officials, the
Pentagon’s Special
Operations Command
(SOCOM) undertook an
independent study to
evaluate the utility
of Voice Stress
Analysis as a truth
verification tool.
They
concluded that Voice
Stress Analysis was
being used with
great success by
state and local
police organizations
across the country.
When asked why they
preferred CVSA®
over the polygraph,
police officials
replied that: a) it
is more reliable, b)
it is less
expensive, c) it is
far more
user-friendly, and
d) unlike the
polygraph, it does
not require the
cooperation of the
individual being
interrogated.
Given
the apparent
reluctance of DHS
and TSA to utilize
the best available
technology for
airline passenger
screening
applications, NITV®
announced on July 7,
2007 the results of
a “privately-funded
research initiative
designed to optimize
the credibility
assessment of
individuals passing
through security
checkpoints in high
volume venues.”
That
research has
produced the next
generation of Voice
Stress Analysis, the
CVSA®II,
a fully automated
version of earlier
CVSA®
models. To date,
extensive validation
trials, with data
from both in-house
testing and law
enforcement field
evaluations, have
produced an accuracy
rate consistently
exceeding 96%, with
a false positive
rate of less than
0.7%.
Homeland Security
Secretary Michael
Chertoff has
recently expressed a
“gut feeling” that
the United States is
under increased risk
of terrorist attack
this summer. If
he’s really serious
about his “gut
feeling” he might
want to put in a
call to NITV®
in West Palm Beach
and place an order
for a couple
thousand of their
CVSA®
devices. Better
late than never.
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