Ilija Trojanow - International surveillance structures: the net is tightening
One of the most important and ominous aspects of the NSA
scandal is the secretive essence of the system, writes Ilija Trojanow:
transparency is clearly the biggest enemy of the alleged guardians of freedom.
It was 08:36 on Monday 30 September 2013 and I was
standing at the check-in counter of American Airlines in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil ,
due to catch flight AA 238 to Miami .
From there I was to get the connecting flight number AA 1391 to Denver,
Colorado, where I was taking part in a conference of North American scholars of
German literature. When the airline employee entered my name she paused for a
moment, got up and without explanation disappeared behind a door. Shortly
afterwards she returned with a person obviously of higher rank, who informed me
in rapid Portuguese and then equally quickly in English that, due to
"Border Crossing Security", they were obliged to notify the American
authorities immediately upon my arrival at the airport. She asked if she could
take my passport in that polite tone of voice that leaves one with no
alternative but to say yes, and withdrew.
After waiting for a few minutes I asked the employee at the
check-in counter whether all non-Brazilian nationals had to undergo this
special check. The woman answered in the negative. "Your case is
special", she said enigmatically. Twenty minutes later – by now I was the
sole passenger still at the counter – I asked how often these kinds of checks
had to be carried out. "Not often", said the woman bluntly,
"about once a month".
No reason, no comment
Shortly afterwards another employee appeared with my
passport in hand and told the woman at the counter to take my data. She asked
me for a valid ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization). I handed here
the print-out confirming my ESTA status ("Authorization approved")
and the payment of the fee. The woman typed in the application number and then
attempted to ascertain my nationality. For the first time I became aware that
German passports are only cosmopolitan in the small print on the back page:
"Germany ",
"Allemagne". Our authorities obviously assume that the word
"Deutschland" is recognized globally.
Forty-five minutes before departure the microphone crackled, the decision on my case was made known, and the woman told me abruptly and without emotion that my entry into theUnited States
had been denied. No reason given. I was told I should go to the embassy and
apply for a visa there. Like other employees of American Airlines, she was
poorly informed: there is no American Embassy in Salvador da Bahia and anyway,
a visa application like this takes weeks. This wasn't an option, then. Indeed,
the advice sounded almost like mockery.
One of the most important and ominous aspects of the NSA scandal is the secretive essence of the system. Transparency is clearly the biggest enemy of the alleged guardians of freedom. The previous year, the American consulate inMunich
had initially, during the personal interview, refused to grant a working visa
allowing me to take up a guest professorship at the University
of Washington . Only after protests
from the university and a significant delay was I eventually issued the visa,
by which time a good part of the term had been wasted. Then, too, no reasons
were provided, no comment, no explanation. Whenever I called, I was told it was
being checked, no one knew how long it would take. And no, no information could
be given about why I was showing up on the authorities' radar.
Forty-five minutes before departure the microphone crackled, the decision on my case was made known, and the woman told me abruptly and without emotion that my entry into the
One of the most important and ominous aspects of the NSA scandal is the secretive essence of the system. Transparency is clearly the biggest enemy of the alleged guardians of freedom. The previous year, the American consulate in
Revenge for my protest?
To be sure, my case is neither particularly exceptional nor
a one-off incident – I'm just a number in the workings of a gigantic state
apparatus with countless such cases to deal with. However that's precisely
what's revealing. Over the last few years I've published numerous articles and
essays about national and international surveillance structures, as well as a
book on the subject, co-authored with Juli Zeh, entitled "Freedom under
Attack" (Angriff auf die Freiheit, 2009). I was recently among the
initiators of an open letter to Angela Merkel (published in Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung on 26 July 2013);
on the 18 September, the 63,000 and more signatures to the letter – to which we
never received a reply, I might add – were ceremonially presented to the German
government in Berlin by several of the authors involved, drawing considerable
media attention. The number of signatures has since risen to 70,000... read more: