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US Senate hearings set to cover up domestic spying
By Joe Kay
6 February 2006
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With hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee on the
Bush administrations domestic spying program set to begin
this week, the basic outlines are already clear. The White House
is repeating its lies in defense of an illegal and anti-democratic
spying operation carried out by the National Security Agency (NSA),
while Democrats are offering only the most muted and cowardly
criticism.
This combination will ensure that the Senate hearing will be
a complete farce, and will not address any of the fundamental
issues involved or lead to any check on the Bush administration.
The tenor of the hearings was set on Sunday by Senator Patrick
Leahy, the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, who appeared
on CBSs television program, Face the Nation.
Leahy suggested that Americans want to know that there is
a check and balance, while insisting that were
all against the terrorists. He said that all Democrats want
to make sure that the Bush administration succeeds in its supposed
task of defeating terrorism, and counseled both parties to stop
the polemics and make sure it is working right.
Leahy pointed out that in the past, when the Administration
has requested new authorizations such as the Patriot Act and the
revision of FISA in 2002, Democrats were quick to agreea
self-indictment of the entire role of the Democrats in facilitating
the attack on democratic rights throughout the Bush administration.
The Democrats, Leahy announced, are ready to perform the same
service once more.
In making these statements, Leahy again indicated that the
Democrats accept the entire rationale of the war on terrorism,
used by the Bush administration to justify everything from spying,
to war, to tax cuts for the wealthy. No leading Democrat has even
suggested that the spying should be halted. Rather, the call is
for a pseudo-legal basis for the administration to continue doing
what it has been doing.
On the other hand, the Republicans continue to press the offensive.
In spite of the public revelations of the program and its obvious
violation of existing legislation, the administrations position
is that it will continue the program, will refuse to hand over
documents relating to it, and will provide no concrete information
about what it is doing.
The sole official who will testify before the committee hearings
that begin on Monday is Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. During
his tenure as White House counsel in Bushs first term, Gonzales
played a key role in constructing the legal framework used by
the administration to defend spying and other attacks on democratic
rightsthat the president has virtually unconstrained powers
as commander-in-chief to override existing legislation. This is
an argument for what amounts to dictatorial powers for the President.
Over the weekend, the administration leaked Gonzaless
prepared responses to questions that will be posed by Judiciary
Committee Chairman Arlen Specter. Gonzales will present the same
arguments already advanced by the administration for expansive
presidential powers, and will continue to repeat the brazen lies
of the administration about the nature of the spying program.
The administration has argued that the President has the right
to ignore the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)which
prohibits warrantless spying on communications involving people
within the United Stateslargely on the grounds that the
so-called war on terrorism and the Authorization to Use Military
Force passed shortly after September 11, 2001, trump this law.
Gonzales will continue to insist, in the face of numerous media
reports to the contrary, that the program specifically targets
members of Al Qaeda. Contrary to the speculation reflected
in some media reporting, Gonzales will say, according to
testimony obtained by the Associated Press and Time magazine,
the terrorist surveillance program is not a dragnet that
sucks in all conversations and uses computer searches to pick
out calls of interest. He will claim that no communications
are intercepted unless first it is determined that one end of
the call is outside of the country and professional intelligence
experts have probable cause...that a party to the communication
is a member or agent of Al Qaeda or an affiliated terrorist organization.
He will insist that press reports documenting the extremely
broad scope of the program are in almost every case...misinformed,
confused, or wrong. However, he will refuse to back up these
assertions with any concrete details. I cannot and will
not address operations aspects of the program or other purported
activities described in press reports, the testimony reads.
He will also repeat the absurd argument that following FISA
regulations would significantly delay the administrations
capacity to spy on terrorist suspects. The law allows the NSA,
with the approval of the attorney general, to conduct warrantless
surveillance without court approval for up to 72 hours. And the
FISA court has almost never declined a request from the government
for a warrant that would be required after this period.
One of the principal reasons the administration has sought
to operate the NSA spying program outside of FISA is that the
program is in fact much more extensive, and includes the potential
or actual monitoring of broad sections of the American population.
This was confirmed again by a report by Barton Gellman, Dafna
Linzer and Carol Leonnig in the Washington Post on Sunday,
which directly contradicts Gonzaless testimony.
The article cited accounts from current and former government
officials as well as private-sector sources with knowledge
of the technologies in use. The latter are most likely individuals
working in telecommunications companies, which have reportedly
made their databases of communications available to the government.
The Post reported that thousands of Americans
have had their telephone conversations monitored and their e-mails
read, with one source placing the figure at 5,000. However, fewer
than 10 US citizens or residents a year, according to an authoritative
account, have aroused enough suspicion during warrantless eavesdropping
to justify interception of their domestic calls, as well.
In other words, the vast majority of communications intercepted
have nothing to do with terrorism, a fact that contradicts Gonzales
and the Bush administrations attempts to frame the spying
as a terrorist surveillance program. Warrants could
not be obtained to spy on these individuals because the government
could present no evidence to the FISA court documenting probable
cause of their connection to terrorism.
Moreover, the Post notes, the government has access
to far more communications than the thousands that have been directly
read or listened to. Computer-controlled systems collect
and sift basic information about hundreds of thousands of faxes,
e-mails and telephone calls into and out of the United States
before selecting the ones for scrutiny by human eyes and ears,
the newspaper reported. Again, this is in direct contradiction
to Gonzaless testimony and corroborates previous reports
that the government has access to telecommunications switches
that contain vast stores of communications, including purely domestic
calls and e-mails.
With access to this information, the NSA could easily be monitoring
and storing communications of individuals engaged in political
opposition to government policies, which is what FISA was originally
enacted to prevent. It is unclear what happens to all the data
that the government collects; however, the Post reports
that one lawyer, representing an individual who has been part
of the NSA program, said that participants are uncomfortable
with the mountain of data they have now begun to accumulate.
Spokesmen for the Bush administration declined to say whether
any [communications] are discarded, according to the Post.
In addition to refusing to give any details about the nature
of the spying program, the administration is also refusing to
hand over to the Senate legal opinions written by the Justice
Department in 2001 and 2004 that sought to defend it. One of these
memoranda was reportedly written by former Justice Department
lawyer John Yoo, who also wrote the infamous torture memo, which
argued that ordering torture is one of the Presidents commander-in-chief
powers. The other was written after concerns emerged within the
Justice Department itself over the legal basis of the NSA program.
The administrations position is that not only will it
continue to do what it is doing, it will seek retribution against
those who helped leak existence of the program to the American
people. In testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee,
both Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte and CIA
Chief Porter Goss denounced anyone challenging the legality of
the NSA program. Goss claimed that leaks about the spying program
had done very severe damage to national security and
expressed his hope that we will witness a grand jury investigation
with reporters present being asked to reveal who is leaking this
information.
Both Negroponte and Goss implied that any criticism of the
spying program was endangering national security and therefore
aiding terrorists.
The whole position of the administration is absolutely dependent
upon the prostration of the Democratic Party and its refusal to
take any stand against the attack on democratic rights. The administration
feels confident to so openly flout the law because it knows from
experience that it will find no serious resistance from the nominal
opposition.
In addition to Leahys comments, other Democrats continue
to defend the NSA program itself, only counseling that the administration
seek authorization from Congress first. Representative Jane Harman,
the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, wrote
in a letter to Bush last week that the activities of the
NSA program canand shouldbe accomplished within the
law, not by circumventing it. Harman was one of the eight
members of Congress to be briefed regularly about the spying program
since it was initiated in 2001.
The complicity of the Democrats in the attack on democratic
rights was most recently on display in the decision to make only
token resistance to the nomination of Supreme Court Justice Samuel
Alito. The administration is counting on Alito to rule in favor
of a broad interpretation of presidential powers, including on
such issues as domestic spying.
It should be recalled that among the articles of impeachment
drawn up against President Richard Nixon were the charges of abuse
of presidential powers and contempt of Congress. The former was
for the illegal spying organized by Nixon, and the latter for
a refusal to turn over documents. Both of these charges pertain
to the present situation. The open flouting of the law by the
Bush administration exceeds even the criminality of Nixon. However,
the question of impeachment is not even being suggested as a possibility
by the Democratic Party leadership, an indication of the complete
decay of any commitment to basic democratic principles within
the political establishment.
See Also:
Bush defends NSA spying program
at White House press conference
[28 January 2006]
Bush administration launches
campaign of lies in defense of government spying
[25 January 2006]
Bush administration report
defends spying, unconstrained executive powers
[23 January 2006]
Bush administration domestic
spying provokes lawsuits, calls for impeachment
[18 January 2006]
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