First on CNN: Top U.S. intel official: Europe not taking advantage of terror tracking tools
(CNN)A
top U.S. counterterrorism official in charge of ensuring terrorists do
not make it into the United States said European countries can do more
to screen terrorists because they don't take full advantage of tools the
U.S. has offered in the fight against terrorism.
"It's
concerning that our partners don't use all of our data," said Terrorist
Screening Center Director Christopher Piehota in an exclusive interview
with CNN. "We provide them with tools. We provide them with support,
and I would find it concerning that they don't use these tools to help
screen for their own aviation security, maritime security, border
screening, visas, things like that for travel."
Piehota
said the U.S. shares its watch lists with EU countries, but that EU
countries don't systematically utilize it to identify suspected
terrorists or screen migrants coming.
The
European Union does not utilize a central terror database; instead,
each country maintains its own terrorist watch list that comes with its
own unique set of standards for tracking terrorists. Further
complicating matters the 26 European countries that operate inside the
"Schengen zone" do not perform routine border checks.
Piehota
said all European countries cooperate with the United States to varying
degrees and information sharing has greatly improved in the wake of the
ISIS threat.
The
daunting task of guarding the United States from foreign terrorists, he
says, has become more challenging with the evolving ISIS threat in
Europe.
One chief concern is
foreign nationals from visa-waiver countries who do not appear on any
watch list could possibly slip into the U.S. to launch an attack. For
example, would-be terrorists can surreptitiously travel to and from
Syria from Europe and then travel to the U.S. without ever arousing the
suspicion of government officials on either continent.
"There are many that we do know about. And unfortunately there are some that we do not know about," Piehota said.
Counterterrorism
officials like Piehota also worry about the ISIS terrorists believed to
still be in Europe and possibly plotting future attacks. One such
person is the man in the hat seen in the Brussels airport surveillance
video who remains on the run.
"It's
highly concerning," he said. "We make sure that we know as much as we
can. And we take that information and we use it the best we can to
minimize threats to our communities. But we can't know everything all
the time."
European officials have acknowledged the gaps in coverage and communication in the weeks following the Brussels attacks.
"The
fragmented intelligence picture around this dispersed community of
suspected terrorists is very challenging for European authorities," said
Rob Wainwright, director of the European Police Agency known as
Europol.
The EU's Counter-Terrorism Chief Gilles de Kerchove told CNN that he was aware of problems in getting member states to act.
"I
do my best to put pressure, to confront them with blunt figures, and we
are making progress, but not quickly enough," he said.
The
European Union has been examining the sharing of passenger information
for at least six years, and the European Parliament is expected to
consider a measure related to that issue this month. Some members oppose
the idea on privacy grounds.
"That
will require difficult discussions with European Parliament, because
we're sensitive about balance between security and freedom," de Kerchove
said last month.
Piehota also
echoed the sentiment from FBI Director James Comey that there's risk
with the U.S. plan of allowing 100,000 refugees into the U.S. a year by
2017 partially because of the lack of intelligence on people in Syria.
"Nothing
we can guarantee is at a 100% level," Piehota said, adding he believes
the vetting process is rigorous with a layered approach of screening,
evaluation and assessment for the refugees who will be cross-referenced
with all the U.S. watch lists.
Piehota
also addressed what he called "incorrect perceptions" about the U.S.
watch lists, many that have been repeated by presidential candidates on
the campaign trail claiming a majority of people on the lists are
innocent Americans.
Although
declined to say how many people are on the watch list, he did say
Americans "comprise less than 0.5% of the total populations. Very small,
controlled population," adding that those on the list are consistently
re-evaulated with 1,500 changes to the list on average per day.
In
order to add an individual to a terror watch list, authorities must
have "reasonable suspicion" that the person has ties to terrorism. That
standard has been cause for criticism from civil liberties groups who
believe the bar should be higher to be put on the list.
"If
we make the standards too high, we're going to miss people,
potentially, who are suspected terrorists who may be in the planning or
plotting phases, we will miss them," Piehota said. "If we make it too
low, then we will impact the privacy and the civil liberties of the
public, so we use the reasonable suspicion standards as a compromise
between those two extremes to make sure that people are screened against
a standard, that we consider to be suitable for watch listing."
When
asked about whether anyone could be watch-listed based on being a
Muslim -- as Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has
proposed -- Piehota would only say, "No watch listing activity is
conducted based up on their race, religion or any other protected
right."
"There has to be a certain
level of derogatory information, particularized to that individual that
would warrant their watch-listing," he said.
First on CNN: Top U.S. intel official: Europe not taking advantage of terror tracking tools
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