Friday, February 28, 2025

Semper Cop: Joseph Wambaugh, LA Cop Who Wrote 'The Onion Field' And Other Bestsellers, Dies At 88

I was sad to learn that Joseph Wambaugh, the former Marine, LAPD Detective Sergeant and bestselling author of classic novels such as The New Centurions and The Choirboys, and classic nonfiction books such as The Onion Field and Echoes in the Darkness, has died. He was 88.

I was privileged to not only interview Joe Wambaugh several times over the years, but I was also privileged to be able to engage in many telephone conversations and email exchanges with him for many years. He took the time to read my crime fiction and offered suggestions, encouragement, and even caught a few errors. 

He was not only a great writer, but he was also intelligent, funny, down-to-earth and generous with his time and knowledge. I shall miss him. My condolences to his family.

I'm going to reread his great novel The Choirboys over the weekend. 

Semper Cop, as he used to say.

You can read the AP obituary of Joseph Wambaugh via the link below: 

Joseph Wambaugh, LA cop who wrote 'The Onion Field' and other bestsellers, dies at 88


You can also read some of my pieces on him via the links below: 

Paul Davis On Crime: My Q&A With Former LAPD Detective Sergeant And Best-Selling Author Joseph Wambaugh

Paul Davis On Crime: My Washington Times On Crime Column: A Look Back At Joseph Wambaugh's 'The Onion Field'

Paul Davis On Crime: Do You Love Cops? Read Joseph Wambaugh. Do You Hate Cops? Read Joseph Wambaugh: My Philadelphia Weekly 'Crime Beat' Column On LAPD Detective Sergeant Turned Best-Selling Author Joseph Wambaugh

Paul Davis On Crime: A Look Back At Joseph Wambaugh's "Police Story' TV Series




Former Navy Sailor Pleads Guilty To Plotting To Attack Naval Station Great Lakes In North Chicago

The U.S. Justice Department released the below information:

A former Navy sailor has pleaded guilty in federal court in Chicago to plotting to attack Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago, Illinois, purportedly on behalf of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

Xuanyu Harry Pang, 38, of North Chicago, Illinois, pleaded guilty to conspiring to and attempting to willfully injure and destroy national defense material, national defense premises, and national defense utilities, with the intent to injure, interfere with, and obstruct the national defense of the United States. The guilty plea was entered on Nov. 5, 2024, in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and ordered unsealed today.

According to court records filed in the case, in the summer of 2021, Pang communicated with an individual in Colombia about potentially assisting with a plan involving Iranian actors to conduct an attack against the United States to avenge the death of Qasem Soleimani, a general of the IRGC Quds Force who was killed by the U.S. military in 2020. The Quds Force is a branch of the IRGC that conducts unconventional warfare and intelligence activities outside of Iran.

A covert FBI employee, posing as an affiliate of the Quds Force, subsequently communicated online with the individual in Colombia about conducting an attack. The individual in Colombia put the covert FBI employee in touch with Pang, who at the time was stationed and residing at Naval Station Great Lakes. The pair communicated online through an encrypted messaging application about possible targets for the attack, including Naval Station Great Lakes and other locations in the Chicago area. Pang and the individual in Colombia agreed to help the covert FBI employee and his purported associates with their operation to conduct the attack in the United States, court records state.

On three occasions in the fall of 2022, Pang personally met with another individual working with the FBI who was posing as an associate of the covert FBI employee. The first meeting took place outside of the Ogilvie Transportation Center in downtown Chicago, and the two other meetings were held at a train station in Lake Bluff, Illinois. During the meetings in Lake Bluff, as the plot coalesced into an attack on the Naval Station, Pang displayed photos and videos on his phone of multiple locations inside the Naval Station. He also provided two U.S. military uniforms – for operatives to wear inside the base during the attack – and a cell phone that could be used as a test for a detonator.

Pang is currently detained without bond and is scheduled to be sentenced at a later date. He faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

Sue Bai, head of the Justice Department’s National Security Division, Acting U.S. Attorney Morris Pasqual for the Northern District of Illinois, Assistant Director David J. Scott of the FBI's Counterterrorism Division, and Special Agent in Charge Douglas S. DePodesta of the FBI Chicago Field Office made the announcement.

The FBI Chicago Joint Terrorism Task Force – which is comprised of multiple federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies – is investigating the case, with valuable assistance provided by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Aaron Bond, Vikas Didwania, and Brandon Stone for the Northern District of Illinois and Trial Attorneys John Cella and Charles Kovats of the National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section are prosecuting the case.

Note: I attended Navy Boot Camp in early 1970 at the Great Lakes naval base.

Thursday, February 27, 2025

President Trump Nominates Retired Air Force General Dan 'Razin' Caine To Be Joint Chiefs Chairman

David Vergun at the DOD News offers a piece on the incoming Chairman of the Joint Chiefs:

President Donald J. Trump announced the nomination of Dan "Razin" Caine for the position of chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Feb. 21, 2025.  
 
The chairman is the nation's highest-ranking military officer and the principal military advisor to the president, defense secretary and National Security Council. Caine, a retired Air Force lieutenant general, will require Senate confirmation before taking on the role.   

"General Caine embodies the warfighter ethos and is exactly the leader we need to meet the moment. I look forward to working with him," said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in a Feb. 21, 2025, statement. 

"The outgoing chairman, Air Force Gen. Charles CQ Brown, Jr., has served with distinction in a career spanning four decades of honorable service. I have come to know him as a thoughtful advisor and salute him for his distinguished service to our country," Hegseth said. 

"Under President [Donald J.] Trump, we are putting in place new leadership that will focus our military on its core mission of deterring, fighting and winning wars," he said. 

Caine was commissioned in 1990 and served in a variety of assignments before retiring last year. His assignments included: 

·         Commander, Joint Special Operations Task Force – Air Directorate, Balad, Iraq, 2008. 

·         Assistant commanding general, Joint Special Operations Command, U.S. Special Operations Command, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, 2016-2018. 

·         Deputy commanding general, Special Operations Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve, Iraq, 2018-2019. 

·         Associate director for military affairs at the Central Intelligence Agency, 2021. 

From 2009-2016, Caine was a part-time member of the National Guard and a serial entrepreneur and investor. 

Caine has flown more than 100 combat hours in F-16 aircraft. His total flight hours are 2,800.

His awards and decorations include the Defense Superior Service Medal, Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze Star Medal with bronze oak leaf cluster and the Defense Meritorious Service Medal.

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Trump's DHS Says Criminals Are Not Welcome Here

Broad & Liberty ran my piece on President Trump’s DHS actions. You can read the piece via the below link or the below text:  

Paul Davis: Trump’s DHS says criminals are not welcome in the United States

No one, despite their view of President Trump, can call him “Sleepy Don,” considering how much he has done in his first month in office.

Although I was not an early supporter of Donald Trump, I’ve come to agree with most of his policies, especially those policies that deal with crime and terrorism.

But I take issue with Trump’s reliance on executive orders. Like President Biden, President Trump has issued numerous executive orders rather than push for Congressional legislation. The advantage of an executive order is that it is fast. The disadvantage is the very next president can write executive orders that cancel out the previous president’s executive orders, much like President Trump is now doing to former President Biden’s executive orders. 

Overturning congressional legislation is a much harder task, so I wish President Trump would send legislation to the Congress, especially since his party controls both houses of Congress.

But having said that, one can appreciate that President Trump is doing much of what he promised to do in the election.

As Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem noted, “President Trump said from the start: criminal illegals have no place in our homeland. He is keeping his promise.”

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued a “Snapshot of Trump’s First Month: Making America Safe Again” on February 20, 2025.

The DHS statement read, “In a single month, President Trump and Secretary Noem have made massive strides to address the crisis at the southern border and remove violent criminal aliens from American communities. This is just the beginning of the golden age of America. 

PROMISES MADE, PROMISES KEPT:   

·     On day one, President Trump declared a national emergency at the southern border and restarted construction of the border wall.   

 

·     President Trump instantly reinstated Remain in Mexico” and ended catch and release.   

 

·     The Trump administration has empowered our brave men and women in ICE, Border Patrol, and Coast Guard to use common sense to do their jobs effectively.   

 

·     DHS has repealed Biden Era rules that allowed criminal aliens to hide from law enforcement in places like schools and churches to avoid arrest.    

 

·     DHS returned to using the term “illegal alien” to use statutory language and stop political correctness from hindering law enforcement.   

 

·     ICE arrests of criminal aliens have doubled and arrests of fugitives at large has tripled.   

 

·     Daily border encounters have plunged 93% since President Trump took office.  

 

·     To fulfill President Trump’s promise to carry out mass deportations, the administration is detaining illegal aliens, including violent criminals, at Guantanamo Bay.    

 

·     President Trump designated international cartels and other criminal gangs, such as MS-13 and Tren de Aragua, as Foreign Terrorist Organizations.    

 

·     President Trump signed the Laken Riley Act which mandates the federal detention of illegal immigrants who are accused of theft, burglary, assaulting a law enforcement officer, and any crime that causes death or serious bodily injury.    

 

·     President Trump stopped the broad abuse of humanitarian parole and returned the program to a case-by-case basis.  

 

·     Secretary Noem ended the previous administration’s extension of Venezuelan Temporary Protected Status  

 

·     DHS froze all grants to non-profit organizations that facilitate illegal immigration.   

 

·     DHS deputized the Texas National Guard, Drug Enforcement Administration, Bureau of Prisons, U.S. Marshals, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, members of the State Department and the IRS to help with immigration operations.   

 

·     Secretary Noem clawed back $80 million that FEMA deep state activists unilaterally gave to put illegal aliens up in luxury New York City hotels. 

Bottom Line: Since President Trump was inaugurated, he’s made it clear there is a new sheriff in town. The President and Secretary Noem will continue fighting every day to secure our borders and keep American communities safe.”  

DHS announced earlier on February 17, 2025, that DHS has begun a nationwide and international ad campaign that warns illegal aliens to self-deport. 

“Today, Secretary Kristi Noem announced a nationwide and international multimillion-dollar ad campaign warning illegal aliens to leave our country now or face deportation with the inability to return to the United States. The international ads warn criminal illegal aliens not to come to America and break its laws or they will be hunted down and deported.  

This series of ads will run on radio, broadcast, and digital, in multiple countries and regions in various dialects. Ads will be hyper-targeted, including through social media, text message and digital to reach illegal immigrants in the interior of the United States, as well as internationally. 

“Thank you, President Donald J. Trump, for securing our border and putting America first. President Trump has a clear message: if you are here illegally, we will find you and deport you. You will never return. But if you leave now, you may have an opportunity to return and enjoy our freedom and live the American Dream,” said Secretary Kristi Noem“If you are a criminal alien considering entering America illegally: Don’t even think about it.  If you come here and break our laws, we will hunt you down. Criminals are not welcome in the United States.”  

As I wrote in a previous piece here, DHS in Philadelphia has caught and deported some very bad guys. They have committed murder, rape and child abuse. These illegal migrant criminals have committed heinous crimes in their own countries and then slivered into America and committed heinous crimes here as well.

One may agree or disagree with President Trump’s border policies, but as for me, I’m thankful that Trump’s DHS is rounding up the illegal immigrant criminals.

Paul Davis, a Philadelphia writer and frequent contributor to Broad + Liberty, also contributes to Counterterrorism magazine and writes the “On Crime” column for the Washington Times. He can be reached at pauldavisoncrime.com.  

Fourteen Members Of Extensive Alien Smuggling Organization Charged And Eight Arrested For Smuggling Hundreds Of Illegal Aliens Into the United States

 The U.S. Justice Department released the below information:

Fourteen alleged members of a prolific alien smuggling organization were charged for their roles smuggling aliens from South and Central America into the United States via the southern border.

A grand jury in Las Cruces, New Mexico, returned an indictment on Feb. 19 against 14 individuals for conspiracy to transport, harbor, and bring in illegal aliens to the United States. Eight of those charged were arrested on Feb. 20 and 21.

“Today’s indictment alleges that the defendants engaged in a sophisticated conspiracy to smuggle aliens into and throughout the United States at great danger to the aliens, resulting in the death of one person,” said Supervisory Official Antoinette T. Bacon of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “The Justice Department worked with our partners at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to dismantle an alien smuggling organization based in Mexico that has allegedly smuggled hundreds of illegal aliens, including unaccompanied children, through New Mexico and South Texas. We are committed to eliminating transnational alien smuggling organizations that exploit migrants purely for profit and undermine our national security.”

According to the indictment unsealed today, the defendants participated in a conspiracy to illegally bring undocumented aliens from Mexico into the United States via the U.S. southern border. The indictment alleges that the defendants were also responsible for transporting the aliens within the United States and concealing them in “stash houses” along the way. During some of the smuggling events, the defendants allegedly evaded law enforcement by travelling at high rates of speed on the road and instructing aliens how to flee U.S. Border Patrol and evade checkpoints. Additionally, the indictment alleges that one undocumented alien died from heat exposure during a smuggling event and was abandoned in the desert.

“Human smuggling organizations threaten our national security and exploit vulnerable individuals for profit, putting their lives at risk and undermining public safety,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Holland S. Kastrin for the District of New Mexico. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office in the District of New Mexico is committed to continuing to work with our federal, state and local partners to dismantle transnational human smuggling organizations, hold their leaders accountable, and seize the illicit proceeds generated by these exploitative enterprises.”

“We are appreciative of our brave law enforcement partners for their continued vigilance in investigating and apprehending members of transnational criminal organizations who conspire to undermine our nation’s immigration laws for their profit, with a callous and reckless disregard for the sanctity of life,” said U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations (ICE HSI) El Paso Special Agent in Charge Jason T. Stevens. “As this case sadly demonstrates, human smuggling is a crime that takes lives and puts the public at risk. ICE HSI is passionately devoted to using its abundant authority to identify, investigate, and arrest criminals who prey on the vulnerabilities of people they treat as human cargo.”

Michelle Martinez, 29, of El Paso, Texas; Jesus Calvillo, 44, of El Paso; Jorge Calvillo, 25, of El Paso; Abel Aguilar-Cano, 53, of Albuquerque, New Mexico; and Jose Palomino, 27, of El Paso, made their initial court appearances today in the District of New Mexico and remain in U.S. custody. Edna Valdez-China, 48, of El Paso; Leslie Nicole Calvillo, also known as Leslie Jaramillo, 24, of El Paso; and Melissa Vargas, 22, of El Paso, are in U.S. custody and will make their initial appearances on Feb. 25 in the District of New Mexico. Jorge Alberto De La Cruz-Dominguez, also known as Guero, 54, of Juarez, Mexico; Jorge Valdez China, also known as Lolo, 23, of El Paso; Jonathan Valdez-China, also known as China and Dior, 24, of Juarez; and Alma Guadalupe Valdez-China, 41, of Juarez, are also charged in the indictment.

Each defendant is charged with conspiracy to bring to, transport, and harbor illegal aliens in the United States. If convicted, they each face a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

ICE HSI El Paso and the U.S. Border Patrol investigated the case. U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s National Targeting Center, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), ICE HSI’s Human Smuggling Unit in Washington, D.C., and the Texas Department of Public Safety provided substantial assistance with the investigation.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Alyson R. Hehr for the District of New Mexico and Trial Attorney Jenna Reed of the Criminal Division’s Human Rights and Special Prosecutions Section (HRSP) are prosecuting the case.

These actions are the result of the coordinated efforts of Joint Task Force Alpha (JTFA). JTFA was established in June 2021 to marshal the investigative and prosecutorial resources of the Justice Department, in partnership with DHS, to combat the rise in prolific and dangerous alien smuggling and trafficking groups operating in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, and Colombia. JTFA comprises detailees from U.S. Attorneys’ Offices along the southwest border, including the Southern District of California, District of Arizona, District of New Mexico, and Western and Southern Districts of Texas. Dedicated support is provided by numerous components of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, led by HRSP and supported by the Office of Prosecutorial Development, Assistance and Training; Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section; Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section; Office of Enforcement Operations; Office of International Affairs; and Violent Crime and Racketeering Section. JTFA also relies on substantial law enforcement investment from DHS, FBI, DEA, and other partners. To date, JTFA’s work has resulted in more than 355 domestic and international arrests of leaders, organizers, and significant facilitators of alien smuggling; more than 300 U.S. convictions; more than 245 significant jail sentences imposed; and forfeitures of substantial assets.

An indictment is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. 

Saturday, February 22, 2025

My Q&A With James M. Scott, Co-Author With Jack Carr Of “Targeted Beirut: The 1983 Marine Barracks Bombing And The Untold Origin Story Of the War on Terror”

Counterterrorism magazine published my Q&A with James M. Scott (seen in the photo below), the co-author of Targeted Beirut.

You can read the magazine pages below or the text below:



 



The IACSP Q&A With James M. Scott, the Co-Author of

“Targeted Beirut: The 1983 Marine Barracks Bombing and the

Untold Origin Story of the War on Terror” 


Jack Carr and James M. Scott have written “Targeted Beirut: The 1983 Marine Barracks Bombing and the Untold Origin Story of the War on Terror,” the first in an in-depth nonfiction series examining the devastating terrorist attacks that changed the course of history.

 

In 1983 the United States Marine Corps experiences its greatest single-day loss of life since the Battle of Iwo Jima when a truck packed with explosives crashes into their headquarters and barracks in Beirut, Lebanon. This horrifying terrorist attack, which killed 241 servicemen, continues to influence US foreign policy and haunts the Marine Corps to this day.

 

Jack Carr is a former Navy SEAL who retired from active duty in 2016, and he is the author of The Terminal ListTrue BelieverSavage SonThe Devil’s HandIn the BloodOnly the DeadRed Sky Mourning. His debut novel, The Terminal List, was adapted into the #1 Prime Video series starring Chris Pratt.

A Pulitzer Prize finalist and former Nieman Fellow at Harvard, James M. Scott is the author of Target TokyoBlack SnowRampageThe War Below, and The Attack on the Liberty. In addition, Scott is a sought-after public speaker, who leads battlefield tours and lectures at institutions around the world. He lives with his wife and two children in Charleston, South Carolina, where he is the Scholar in Residence at The Citadel.

James M. Scott was interviewed by Paul Davis. 

IACSP: I read “Targeted Beirut,” and I really enjoyed it. I thought you covered well the lead up to the 1983 bombing, the attack itself, and the aftermath. I’m 72, so I remember following the story when it happened at the time, but your book provided a lot of details that I didn’t know, or don’t remember. What do you and your co-author call the 1983 Marine barracks bombing the “untold origin story of the war on terror?”    

Scott: I think you really look at this as the beginning of Hezbollah. The embassy bombing is the beginning of it, and the beginning of our book, and it builds up to the bombing of the Marine headquarters and barracks. Hezbollah is a proxy of Iran, just like Hamas and the Houthi rebels. You are really seeing in a post-Iranian Revolution era this warfare by proxy, and this is the first time for the United States that it comes home to roost. That is going to set the current for the next four decades. We are going to look back and say when did it all begin? And for the United States, it really begins in Beirut in 1982 and 1983. We are still dealing with it today. It is amazing how much similarities are in the news now to what it was like researching the 1983 bombing. 

IACSP: So you and your co-author Jack Carr plan on writing further non-fiction books about terrorism?   

Scott: We do, yes. This is the first in a series and we have another book that we haven’t announced yet. 

IACSP: What brought you and Jack Carr together to write this book and the series? 

Scott: I didn’t know Jack personally before this, but it was really serendipitous that he reached out to me to about that time that I was reading his books and watching “The Terminal List.” He was looking to begin a series of non-fiction books. He writes about these issues in his fiction, but he wanted to branch out to non-fiction, and he wanted to bring in someone with a background of doing archival research and interviews that go with traditional non-fiction. He read several of my books, and he approached his editor and said I’d like to work with this guy James Scott. He looked at one of the acknowledgments in my books, and said his editor is a guy by the name John Glusman. Jack’s editor said that John Glusman was her husband. Small world. Jack’s editor at Simon and Schuster is married to my editor at W.W. Norton. 

IACSP: Yes, a small world. 

Scott: At that point putting us together was pretty easy. Jack reached out to me and we had a long call and this is what I want to do and asked me what my thoughts were, and I was getting ready to go to a conference that weekend and one of the folks at the conference was a guy named Charlie B. Neimeyer, the retired director of Marine Corp History. I had dinner one night with Charlie and I’ve been approached about this project on Beirut and asked what kind of stuff they had in the archives, and he said they had tons of material on Beirut. We have the monthly command chronologies, the weekly situation reports, the message traffic, and the oral histories. He said that I really need to jump on this project. On my way back from that conference, I remembered a guy I went to grad school with who mentioned Beirut. I texted him and asked him to remind me about Beirut. He called me back right away and said he was one of the rescuers when the bomb went off. His name is Mark Singleton, and you’ll see his name a number of times in the book. Mark said he could put me in touch with plenty of the guys who were there. I called Jack and I told him I had found all these records that are available, and I had a buddy who was there. All we saw was green lights at this point and it was go, go, go. Jack said let’s do it. So we mapped out a rough idea of how the book would look like. The beauty of non-fiction is we were at the mercy of history, so you want to think about where you wanted to start the narrative and where you wanted to end it. I’m the archive guy. We did more than a hundred hours of interviews with survivors. We had a thousand pages of letters and diaries.                           

IACSP: I was an enlisted sailor in the Navy back in the 1970s, and I liked how you used the letters of the enlisted Marines to see their thoughts and views alongside those of the officers. One can tell the research for the book was extensive and the interviews were extensive as well. Can you tell us about the situation in Beirut before the Marines went ashore as peacemakers? Who were the factions fighting there?      

Scott: It was everybody against everybody. Beirut had been kind of a mess for a while because of this sort of sectarian in-fighting. It really traces all the way back to its origins as a modern state in the post-World War II area, in which the power structure was based on your faith. At that time, the Christians had a majority of the population, so they held the highest office. The Sunnis had the next popular majority, so they had the prime minister position, and then the Shia, who were the smaller group at the time, so they had the speaker of the house. So you had power roughly divided along these three religious lines, which were backed up by the demographics in the 1940s. In the four decades until the 80s, there were huge demographics shifts that took place. Christians, who were dominant, fall off, Shias, who were the least powerful, end up having a population growth, so what you see then is the demographics are being shifted and people saying, hey, we want a bigger slice of the power pie. That then sets the stage for all of this in-fighting that is going on and that erupts into a civil war in the 1970s, and that quells, but there is this huge amount of tension and animosity there. Into this chaos comes the PLO, the Palestine Liberation Organization. They are kicked out of Jordan in the 1970s and they set up shop in Beirut. They use Lebanon as a base to wage attacks against the Israelis and the Israelis of course retaliate, blowing things up in Lebanon. Syria at this point too is also looking at chunks of Lebanon, thinking, hey, we would like to have parts of this as well. You have internal and external factions that are creating this huge tug of war over who was going to control everything. Of course, the central government, which is still sort of lead by Christians, is a very small, weak element. What happens is in 1982 the United States comes in after the Israelis go pretty hard after the PLO and in order to bring about peace, the U.S. goes in with several other nations to sort of get the PLO out. One of the first steps in righting the ship is going to be getting these foreign elements out of Lebanon so the Lebanese can take control of their own destiny. We go in in 82 along with the British, the French and the Italians and we help get the PLO out. Soon thereafter, the president of Lebanon is assassinated. His assassination leads to huge retaliation against the Palestinians, and it becomes a mess again. The peacekeepers are pulled back in in late 1982 and that’s what sets the stage for the mission the Marines are on when things really go sideways in Lebanon.                            

IACSP: In your book, you did a good job of describing the internal Reagan administration’s senior cabinet people and their antagonism towards each other.  Who were they, what did they fight about, and what course did President Reagon finally follow? 

Scott:  You had a division among senior Reagan advisors about what to do in Lebanon. On one side you had Casper Weinberger, who was the Defense Secretary, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which were led by the Chairman, General John Vessey. They didn’t want the United States getting involved in Lebanon. They saw Lebanon as a side show from the larger Cold War. They saw no upside from Lebanon, only a downside. There was a lot of risk and very little reward. On the flip side of that you had George Schultz, the Secretary of State, and Bud McFarlane, the National Security Advisor. The two of them thought there was a lot to be gained there. They wanted to bring in a peaceful Lebanon that would be a peaceful neighbor for the Israelis. The men were sort of at loggerheads over this and Reagan, for all his strengths, one of his weaknesses was he did not like in-fighting among his people. Weinberger and Shultz would go at each other in these meetings and Reagan would respond by shutting down or looking for compromise. Often, compromise is not what you need, which can lead to stagnation. Things are getting more violent, beginning with the embassy bombing, followed by attacks on the Marines at the airport. As Marine Colonel Geraghty (the commander of the 24th Marine Amphibious Unit in Beirut) said, “The mission changed, but no one changed the mission.” The Marines were left on a peacekeeper mission that was no longer a peacekeeping environment.                        

IACSP:  As a teenage sailor who served on an aircraft carrier during the Vietnam War and a Defense Department journeyman civilian back in 1983, it was my view then, as it is today, that the Marines should have been stationed on the ships. And as I thought then, as well as now, the troops on the ground should have been UN peacekeepers. Most of the military people and DOD civilians of all Ranks and grades that I worked with at the time agreed on those two points, as I recall. 

Do you know why the Marines were stationed in a building rather than being stationed on the U.S. Navy amphibious warfare ships, where they could be helicoptered in for patrols, and then rotated back to the safety of the Navy ships? 

Scott: That’s what Weinberger wanted to do when the situation got worse. He wanted to pull the Marines back aboard ship. The initial idea was that sending the Marines in as a peacekeeping force would make it easier for them to be on land and go out and about. 

IACSP: But the ships had helicopters, the ships were helo carriers. The helos could have flown the Marines in and out, rotating the land patrols. Effectively making the Marines a moving target rather than the proverbial sitting duck.  

Scott: Exactly. It was almost like a mission creep kind of thing. They were there on the ground, they were flying in their food, then they brought in portable kitchens, and they brought in portable medicine, and they increasingly creeped up into a full-scale base at the airport. And Colonel Geraghty said if our mission is peacekeeping, then we need to be flying the flag and we can’t have our base look like a huge fortress. That was the op orders they were still operating off as no one changed their mission.    

IACSP: Bad calls in retrospect, but… 

Scott: June to October is such a pivotal time-period for the Marines. The embassy has been blown up in April, the new Marines arrived May 29th, and pretty soon the escalation against them really begins. That would have been the time to evaluate and change things. Whether we should have really been there to start with, that really got into the heart of that big debate in the Reagan administration.      

IACSP: I’m a huge admirer of President Ronald Reagan, but I think he erred in this. 

Scott: When we went in the first time to get the PLO out, we had a very actionable mission. Go in, get the PLO out and leave. We were in and out like in 17 days. When we went back in the second time, we don’t have a clear-cut mission and that’s the problem. We went back in largely because of guilt. Even General Vessey said, hey, we figured that we go back in, stay a few months, let our guilt kind of ease, and then we pull back out. The problem is, once we go back in there, we don’t have a clear-cut mission. You look at Reagan’s national security directives. You start seeing the mission change from stabilization and peacekeeping to nation-building. And that keeps us stuck there.   

IACSP: Why didn’t President Reagan order a retaliatory air attack after the bombing? He ordered a retaliatory air attack on Libya after the bombing of a club in West Germany. 

Scott: He didn’t because Casper Weinberger didn’t want to do it. He liked Weinberger a lot and they had a long history together. Weinberger did not want to escalate the situation.   

IACSP: I think Casper Weinberger’s rules for getting into combat should be more adhered to. After all these years, do we know who planned, ordered and mounted the Marine bombing attack? And if so, what happened to them? 

Scott: We do. This is the beginning of Hezbollah. While everyone else is coming into Lebanon, sort of exploiting the chaos and instability, so too did the Iranians. The Iranians come in in 1982 and they take advantage of this lawless wild west area up along the Lebanese Syrian border. They bring in about 800 Revolutionary Guardsmen and they built a terrorist training camp up there. Then they start tapping into that resentment that the improvised Shias community in southern Iran feels there. They start recruiting homegrown terrorists. There were some groups already floating around at that point, but the Iranians brought them all under their umbrella. They merged these terrorist groups together into what we know today as Hezbollah. Hezbollah and other proxy groups were getting their funding, their training and their marching orders straight from Iran. Iran was the puppet master. They were pulling the strings.   

IACSP:  As you note in your book, a Lebanese Shia named Imad Mughniyeh is suspected of planning the attack. As fate, or irony, would have it, he was killed by a car bomb in 2008. 

I especially liked the way you described President Reagan’s anguish over the bombing. 

Scott:  That was very real. Reagan had a huge heart. His son Michael, who Jack talked to in the course of researching the book, and we both met him at the Reagan Library a couple months ago, said his father these deaths haunted him for the rest of his life. He reached out to the families of the men, and he wrote letters.    

IACSP: After all these years, what are the lessons learned from the bombing? 

Scott: One of the big lessons is that terrorism works. For the very low price of a truck a bomb, and one life of a volunteer, you can totally impact American foreign policy. Iran was the biggest benefactor. Iran watched all of this unfold. They said, hey, not only can we do this, but America won’t retaliate. It set the stage for the next four decades. From the USS Cole attack to 9/11, you see that terrorism works. I also think an important lesson is one that Weinberger enunciates, which is you have to have a real clear plan.    

IACSP: Thank you for speaking to us.




Friday, February 21, 2025

The FBI Is Investigating The Terrorist Attack In New Orleans As The FBI’s Counterterrorism Division Turns 25

Counterterrorism magazine published my piece on the FBI investigating the New Orleans terrorist attack as the FBI celebrates the 25th anniversary of their Counterterrorism Bureau.

You can read the magazine pages below or the below text:




The FBI is Investigating the Terrorist Attack in New Orleans

As the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division Turns 25

By Paul Davis

On January 1, 2025, the FBI released a statement on the terrorist attack in New Orleans:

“Today, at approximately 3:15 a.m. CST, an individual drove a pickup truck into a crowd of people on Bourbon Street in New Orleans, killing at least 10 and injuring dozens of others. After hitting the crowd, he exited the vehicle and fired upon local law enforcement. Law enforcement returned fire, and the subject was pronounced deceased at the scene. Two law enforcement officers were injured and transported to a local hospital. 

“The subject has been identified as 42-year-old Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a U.S. citizen from Texas. He was driving a Ford pickup truck, which appears to have been rented, and we are working to confirm how the subject came into possession of the vehicle. An ISIS flag was located in the vehicle, and the FBI is working to determine the subject's potential associations and affiliations with terrorist organizations.” 

The FBI went on to state that weapons and a potential IED were located in the subject’s vehicle. Other potential IEDs were also located in the French Quarter. The FBI noted that special agent bomb technicians were working with other law enforcement partners to determine if any of the devices are viable, and they will work to render those devices safe. 

Stating that the FBI is the lead investigative agency regarding the attack, the FBI and their law enforcement partners are investigating this as an act of terrorism.

On January 2nd, the FBI identified the terrorist subject as 42-year-old Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a U.S. citizen from Texas. FBI Deputy Assistant Director Christopher Raia from the Counterterrorism Division (CTD) at FBI Headquarters addressed the press. He was joined by Assistant Special in Charge Alethea Duncan of the New Orleans FBI office.

“I am here to discuss not only the latest investigative information we have here in New Orleans, but also let you know about other investigative activities outside of the state,” Raia said. “I, first and most importantly, want to send our deepest condolences to the victims of this horrific attack and their loved ones. Fourteen innocent victims were killed in this senseless attack, and at least 35 are injured. We cannot ease the grief people in this community and across the nation are feeling at this time, but rest assured, we stand with you and in support of you. All the resources of the FBI are being focused on tracking down every piece of evidence in this case.

“Let us be very clear - what happened here in New Orleans was an act of terrorism. It was premeditated and an evil act.”

Raia went on to state that this was a critical incident, and that information and tips were pouring in from law enforcement, first responders, and the public. He also stated that there is no indication at that point that anyone else was involved in this attack other than Shamsud-Din Bahar Jabbar.

“The FBI is surging people and assets to this area from across the region and across the nation. Special agents in field offices across the country are assisting with potential aspects of this investigation and following up on leads. Additional teams of special agents, professional staff, and victim specialists continue to arrive to provide more investigative power and assistance to the victims and their families.”

The New Orleans terrorist attack occurred a short time after the 25th anniversary of the FBI Counterterrorism Division.

“I think the 25 years has given us a very strong base to be extremely proficient—both here at Headquarters in the Counterterrorism Division and the Joint Terrorism Task Forces in the field,” stated FBI Assistant Director David J. Scott on the 25th anniversary.

Scott was a special agent who spent most of his career working counterterrorism violations before being selected to lead the Counterterrorism Division in August 2024.

According to the FBI, an influx in terrorist activity around the world in the early 1980s inspired then-FBI Director William Webster to name counterterrorism as the Bureau’s fourth-highest priority. Terrorism continued during the 1990s with the World Trade Center bombing in 1993 and the Oklahoma City attack in 1995. 

In August 1998 two truck-bombs struck the United States embassies in Dar es Salaam in Tanzania and Nairobi, Kenya, and those attacks changed the FBI. 

“Those years leading up to the establishment of CTD witness the globalization of terrorism, and there was a willingness by both the domestic and international terrorists to use weapons of mass destruction to inflict large numbers of civilian casualties,” Scott said.

As Scott noted, on November 21, 1999, the Counterterrorism Division was formally created, consolidating many of the anti-terrorism efforts and capabilities for the first time in 20 years.

After the ISIS caliphate collapsed in the late 2010s, a perception arose that terrorist threats were on a decline. To some, the threat posed by foreign terrorist organizations had diminished to the point where counterterrorism didn’t need to be the Bureau’s top priority.

“And, I'll admit, I even had my own doubts,” Scott said. “I was a Joint Terrorism Task Force squad supervisor at the time and then assistant special agent in charge at a field office, and I could see that downward trend myself. And it was very obvious. And, of course, I consider that a good thing. If we had helped to diminish the terrorist threat, that's always a good thing.

“Even before the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel, the FBI had been very public in saying that the terrorism threat was already elevated across the board, with international threats, domestic terrorism threats, and the state-sponsored threat,” Scott said. “And, as I talk to my counterparts now across the interagency - and even with international partners - everybody is saying the same thing: They're seeing this across the globe. This is an issue that's not just facing the U.S., but it's facing everybody with these simultaneously elevated threats.” 

According to the FBI, the Bureau’s bandwidth for handling counterterrorism-related tips has also grown exponentially in the past 25 years, with the creation of our National Threat Operations Center to triage and route tips from the public to investigators in the field. The FBI’s use of partnerships to stem this threat has expanded in parallel fashion. 

The FBI New York Field Office pioneered the Joint Terrorism Task Force partnership model in 1980, which brings together experts from local, state, and federal government agencies to leverage their collective range of skillsets to investigate and prevent acts of terror. Since then, these task forces have expanded throughout the field. 

"Now, you've got 4,000 members from over 500 different state and local agencies, 50 federal agencies, all working nationwide on Joint Terrorism Task Forces (JTTF), and they're working to prevent any of these domestic attacks, any international terrorism attacks,” Scott said.

“The FBI has also established a Headquarters-level National Joint Terrorism Task Force, whose membership includes representatives from the Defense Department, the U.S. Intelligence Community, and other federal government agencies. The interagency corps coordinates field-level JTTF efforts and oversees personnel movement to ensure those squads have the proper mix of staffing from member agencies,” Scott explained.

Scott went on to state that the increasing sophistication of terrorists’ techniques and use of communications has also demanded innovation on the part of the Counterterrorism Division. Thes bad actors' use of encrypted mobile apps to plot attacks against Americans on U.S. soil and around the world inspired the Bureau to form specialized teams, known as Terrorist Use of the Internet squads, to determine how to disrupt such efforts. 

According to the FBI, guidelines from the attorney general dictate when the FBI can start a terrorism investigation and authorize the FBI to collect information accordingly. 

This information serves two purposes:

  • First, it helps us build a case against people or groups who break the law to help us arrest them and to assist the U.S. Department of Justice in prosecuting them. Our investigations focus on the unlawful activity of the group, not the ideological orientation or First Amendment-protected activity of its members.
  • Next, it builds an intelligence base that we can analyze to prevent terrorist activity. 

The FBI’s approach to counterterrorism investigations is based on the need both to prevent incidents where possible and to react effectively after incidents occur.

The FBI is empowered to investigate terrorism both at home and overseas. “That goes back to 1983, when Attorney General William French Smith modified the guidelines for conducting intelligence investigations,” Scott said. “And then, the next year, Congress authorized the Bureau to pursue criminals who attacked Americans beyond our shores.

“Now, we have counterterrorism assistant legal attachés––or ALATs––forward-deployed in U.S. embassies across the globe,” Scott said. “We've got the fly team that can deploy both domestically and overseas at a moment's notice. And then, we've got a significant portion of our division here at Headquarters that is dedicated to ensuring our U.S. citizens are protected overseas, just as they would be here within the borders of the U.S.” 

Scott said that human element is vital to the Bureau’s efforts to thwart terrorism at home and abroad—whether it’s human intelligence, tips from the public, situational awareness, or people recognizing the signs that someone they know might be mobilizing to violence or other criminal activity.

One notable FBI success occurred this past October.

The Justice Department then announced charges against an Afghanistan citizen residing in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for conspiring to conduct an Election Day terrorist attack in the United States on behalf of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), a designated foreign terrorist organization (FTO).

According to a criminal complaint, Nasir Ahmad Tawhedi, 27, conspired and attempted to provide material support to ISIS and obtained firearms and ammunition to conduct a violent attack on U.S. soil in the name of ISIS. As part of the plot, the defendant allegedly took steps to liquidate his family’s assets, resettle members of his family overseas, acquire AK-47 assault rifles and ammunition, and commit a terrorist attack in the United States.

“This defendant, motivated by ISIS, allegedly conspired to commit a violent attack, on Election Day, here on our homeland," said FBI Director Christopher Wray. "I am proud of the men and women of the FBI who uncovered and stopped the plot before anyone was harmed. Terrorism is still the FBI's number one priority, and we will use every resource to protect the American people."

Although the FBI did not prevent Shamsud-Din Jabber from committing an act of terrorism as they did Nasir Ahamad Tawhedi, the FBI Counterterrorism Division is tasked with gathering all of the facts regarding the attack, and applying the lessons learned from the attack for the future.   

Pauk Davis, who writes the online Threatcon column, is a long-time contributor to the Journal.