Iraqis fear the U.S sharing their Biometric Data in the Next Phase of the Occupation

September 5, 2010 by Brian D. Hill  
Filed under Big Brother

Author: Andrew Steele

Source: America 20xy

Date: Saturday, September 4, 2010

As the U.S. government moves its military into the next phase of Iraq’s occupation by claiming the war is over to pacify the American people (while merely renaming combat troops and surging mercenaries into the country), its plan to transfer biometric info to the Iraqi government is raising fears among Iraqis that it will be misused to carry out vendettas.

The U.S. military has been collecting biometric info on Iraqis over the past seven years since the war started and taken fingerprints and DNA from 80,000 Iraqi detainees.  It also computerized Saddam Hussein’s fingerprint files, feeling the need to the include the enemies of the dictator it overthrew in the database.

This was outlined in a Boston Globe story by Farah Stockman on August 31st:

“After the military’s incursion into Fallujah in 2004, US soldiers collected fingerprints and iris scans of every resident as they passed through checkpoints to return.”

Iraqis who assist the United States are afraid that allowing the Iraqi government to access this information will result in them being identified as traitors and targeted for revenge by subversive enemies within the Iraqi police.

By delivering “shock and awe” to Iraq and upturning Iraqi society, the United States can practice the policies that it is implementing at home, using the people of a conquered nation as test subjects. While the media brainwashes U.S. citizens to believe that the notion of privacy and rights are relics of the past, the government’s experience in Iraq helps it to quicker solidify the control grid once each new police state measure is introduced and hesitantly accepted by the public as “neccessary to its security”.

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The blood of American babies is already being collected and kept it in state databases, and police have also started to check people’s DNA at traffic stops.

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Comments

One Comment on "Iraqis fear the U.S sharing their Biometric Data in the Next Phase of the Occupation"

  1. Tech Podcast: The 'Optigan' returns | PRI's The World on Tue, 14th Sep 2010 10:35 am 

    [...] In this episode, we also examine the the biometric data collected in Iraq. Since 2003, the US military has been recording digital fingerprints and iris scans of millions of Iraqis. Some have been inmates and detainees. But ordinary civilians have been scanned as well. For example, any Iraqi working on a US base, or for the US military, had to have their biometric data taken as well. Now that US combat troops are leaving the country, that data will be handed over to Iraqi authorities. Not everyone thinks that’s a great idea. Some Iraqis think the information might be used against them. [...]

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