The Intercept Briefing

“Terrorist”: How ICE Weaponized 9/11’s Scarlet Letter

Feb 6, 2026
Spencer Ackerman, Pulitzer Prize–winning national security reporter and author of Reign of Terror, explores how post‑9/11 law and institutions reshaped U.S. power. He traces ICE’s rise, the politicized use of “terrorist” rhetoric, militarization of policing, surveillance expansion, and what dismantling that infrastructure might require. Short, sharp takes on how counterterror frames moved from abroad to American streets.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

War On Terror Reshaped U.S. Governance

  • The post‑9/11 “War on Terror” normalized broad surveillance and reduced civil liberties through laws like the Patriot Act.
  • Spencer Ackerman argues those changes reoriented agencies and culture toward counterterrorism priorities that persist today.
INSIGHT

Immigration Enforcement Became Militarized

  • 9/11 shifted immigration enforcement from targeted criminal cases to a broad interior deportation apparatus under DHS and ICE.
  • Ackerman warns that this transformation created institutional DNA that now operates with expanded budget, reach, and lethality.
INSIGHT

Counterterrorism Politics Deterrence Effect

  • Counterterrorism politics successfully silenced dissent and became a model politicians reuse for coercion and marginalization.
  • Ackerman links that dynamic to present‑day labeling of critics and immigrants as terrorists to intimidate opposition.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app