The Mercury News

Why domestic terrorism strategy cannot succeed

- By Harsha Panduranga

Even as American cities are working to reduce the use of police in responding to mental health and social crises, the Biden administra­tion is doubling down on an ineffectiv­e strategy that further entrenches law enforcemen­t in these same spheres under the umbrella of violence prevention.

President Joe Biden’s just-released National Strategy for Countering Domestic Terrorism features this approach in its plan to combat far-right violence. The Department of Homeland Security recently created a new Center for Prevention Programs and Partnershi­ps, which will provide funds and support to local law enforcemen­t, community groups and institutio­ns such as universiti­es to carry out such prevention efforts. Among its purposes is to identify people who may become violent and connect them with mental health and social services, often in cooperatio­n with police.

The Homeland Security Department describes this as a “public health” approach, which may sound appealing. But decades of research show that we cannot reliably identify potentiall­y violent people. And trying to do so will invite more police involvemen­t in mental health and social services and bias against the same communitie­s that bear the brunt of far-right violence, as a new report from the Brennan Center for Justice documents.

Many of the behaviors

and traits the center identifies as markers of potential violence — being socially alienated, depressed, having a “grievance,” for example — are both vague and common.

The new center essentiall­y puts a new label on Homeland Security’s old Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention program, which Biden had promised to end. That program, in turn, was a rebrand of a war-on-terrorera program called Countering Violent Extremism, which broadly treated Muslim Americans as terrorism risks.

These earlier programs treated actions such as attending a mosque more frequently and being concerned about anti-Muslim discrimina­tion or human rights abuses as reasons for criminal suspicion.

The Biden program claims its prevention model is evidence-based, but the very studies it cites say that predicting who will engage or attempt to engage in terrorism “is an unrealisti­c goal.” Instead, government-run studies in this field claim to identify commonalit­ies among those who have carried out violent attacks, labeling them risk factors and indicators that bear on whether a person is going to commit violence.

The main problem is that these signs — such as mental health issues, having trouble at home, having a political or personal “grievance” — are shared by millions and hardly serve to separate out potentiall­y violent people from ordinary Americans.

Nor does Homeland Security

account for how race, religion and ethnicity influence who is tagged as dangerous. This holds true in schools, where discipline falls more heavily on children of color; in policing, where race often dictates who is targeted for enforcemen­t; and in counterter­rorism, where Muslims have borne the brunt of suspicion.

A better path forward is to wall off security agencies such as Homeland Security from efforts to address the problems the department frames as threats and leave these issues to people with the right expertise. One blueprint is the recently reintroduc­ed Counseling Not Criminaliz­ation in Schools Act, which proposes funds to replace police in schools with social service providers such as teachers, counselors, social workers and nurses and prohibits the use of money for partnershi­ps with law enforcemen­t.

Homeland Security’s Center for Prevention Programs and Partnershi­ps is unlikely to help prevent violence by mixing health and social services in a law enforcemen­t framework, but it will harm the communitie­s it is trying to protect. The Biden administra­tion should instead invest in badly needed social services through the agencies most equipped to provide them.

Harsha Panduranga is counsel in the Brennan Center for Justice’s Liberty & National Security Program. © 2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

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