jonks
Lifer
- Feb 7, 2005
- 13,918
- 20
- 81
MR. GREGORY: Well, isn't there a profile of who we think the terrorists are?
GEN. HAYDEN: Of, of, of, of, of course there is.
MR. GREGORY: Right.
GEN. HAYDEN: But it's based more on behavior. I mean, for example, the individual in question here, Abdulmutallab. I mean, he would not have automatically fit a profile if you were standing next to him in the visa line at Dulles, for example. So it's the behavior that we're attempting to profile. And it's the behavior, these little bits and pieces of information that were in the databases, that we didn't quite stitch together at this point in time. But it wasn't question of ethnicity or, or religion. Those, those are contributing factors. But it's what people do that we should be paying attention to.
MR. GREGORY: Well, but I, but I want to press Secretary Chertoff on this point whether--because I've spoken to counterterror officials who'll say it's more than a contributing factor. We know who 90 percent of these terrorists are. There may be other examples of women being used and the what--and whatnot. But Islamic males between the age of 20 and 30 make up roughly 90 percent of that profile. Is that an inappropriate or appropriate way for law enforcement to be targeting individuals?
MR. CHERTOFF: I think relying on, on preconceptions of stereotypes is, is actually kind of misleading and arguably dangerous. Obviously, you want to...
MR. GREGORY: So that's wrong? That profile's wrong?
MR. CHERTOFF: Correct.
MR. GREGORY: OK.
MR. CHERTOFF: While I--now, what I would say is you want to look at things like where has a person traveled to, where have they spent time, what has their behavior been. But recognize, one of the things al-Qaeda's done is deliberately tried to recruit people who don't fit the stereotype, who are Western in background or appearance. Look at a--like a guy like an Adam Gadahn, who grew up in California, who's one of the senior level al-Qaeda operatives but does not fit the normal prejudice about what a--an extremist looks like.
GEN. HAYDEN: Of, of, of, of, of course there is.
MR. GREGORY: Right.
GEN. HAYDEN: But it's based more on behavior. I mean, for example, the individual in question here, Abdulmutallab. I mean, he would not have automatically fit a profile if you were standing next to him in the visa line at Dulles, for example. So it's the behavior that we're attempting to profile. And it's the behavior, these little bits and pieces of information that were in the databases, that we didn't quite stitch together at this point in time. But it wasn't question of ethnicity or, or religion. Those, those are contributing factors. But it's what people do that we should be paying attention to.
MR. GREGORY: Well, but I, but I want to press Secretary Chertoff on this point whether--because I've spoken to counterterror officials who'll say it's more than a contributing factor. We know who 90 percent of these terrorists are. There may be other examples of women being used and the what--and whatnot. But Islamic males between the age of 20 and 30 make up roughly 90 percent of that profile. Is that an inappropriate or appropriate way for law enforcement to be targeting individuals?
MR. CHERTOFF: I think relying on, on preconceptions of stereotypes is, is actually kind of misleading and arguably dangerous. Obviously, you want to...
MR. GREGORY: So that's wrong? That profile's wrong?
MR. CHERTOFF: Correct.
MR. GREGORY: OK.
MR. CHERTOFF: While I--now, what I would say is you want to look at things like where has a person traveled to, where have they spent time, what has their behavior been. But recognize, one of the things al-Qaeda's done is deliberately tried to recruit people who don't fit the stereotype, who are Western in background or appearance. Look at a--like a guy like an Adam Gadahn, who grew up in California, who's one of the senior level al-Qaeda operatives but does not fit the normal prejudice about what a--an extremist looks like.