The federal government, in the name of fighting a war on terrorism, has acquired comprehensive and wide-ranging new surveillance and law enforcement powers. While many of the new measures reflect legitimate concerns and the elusive nature of the terrorist threat, Stephen J. Schulhofer argues that many of these measures needlessly sacrifice important freedoms and might end up hampering, rather than advancing, the government's antiterrorist efforts. He points out that many of these new powers are not limited to terrorism cases, that many are not relevant to international terrorism cases at all, and that many do not require suspicion of any kind that the person being investigated is involved in criminal activity. And often, he notes, the executive branch can exercise these new powers unilaterally, without the supervisory control and judicial oversight that were taken for granted until September 11.
I thought the book was well balanced and thought out. It was worth the time to read.
The Enemy Within: Intelligence Gathering, Law Enforcement, a
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
It was enlightening. I love books that push you to think and analyze, even after you put it on your book shelf. The Enemy... did just that. I suggest any analytical minded person to read it.
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