December 9, 2007:
In southwestern Afghanistan, a
smart bomb recently killed a Taliban commander. That wasn't entirely clear at
first, as all that was left was body parts. But the U.S. maintains a growing
DNA database on terrorists, and terrorist suspects. Thus, even body parts can
be useful. In this case, one of the dead was identified as Mullah Ikhalas, the
leader of a group that kidnapped an Italian journalist last year. This led to a
major scandal, when the Afghan government caved to pressure from the Italian
government, and released five Taliban terrorists, in order to get the
journalist released. But in the course of attempts to free the Italian, names
were taken, and the Taliban group, suspected of the kidnapping, was identified.
This has been basic procedure for the last five years.
Early on in the war on terror, the Department of
Defense adopted many practices that major police departments have long taken
for granted. One of the more useful techniques is biometrics. That is, every
time the troops encounter a "person of interest", they don't just take their
name and address, they also use portable electronic tools to take fingerprints,
a retinal scan and photos. All this is stored in a database, which now contains
hundreds of thousands of records for Iraqis, Afghans, and other "persons of
interest". The fingerprints are particularly useful, because when they are
stored electronically, you can search and find out immediately if the print you
have just lifted from somewhere else, like the fragment of a car bomb, is in
there or not. The digital photos, from several angles, are also useful, because
these pictures are run through software that creates a numeric ID that can be
used by security cameras to look for some one specific, or for finding someone
from a witness description. Other nations are digitizing their mug shots, and
this enables these people to be quickly checked against those in the American
database.
For decades, the U.S. military has regularly
collected huge amounts of information from accidents, or even combat
encounters. So now, it's no surprise that forensics teams examine each bombing
(car or roadside), to see if they can get fingerprints. Often bomb makers are
found this way, because raids frequently encounter suspicious characters, but
no evidence to justify arresting them. It only takes about two minutes per
subject to take the biometric data, so any suspicious characters are added to
the database. Now, after several years of this, raiding parties know to grab
any guy who seems to panic at the sight of the biometrics equipment coming out.
The terrorists know that biometrics is bad news for them, and they fear it.
Many combat troops now get training on how to use
the biometrics gear, and everyone now accepts that this stuff is a powerful
weapon in the war against terrorists.