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US Congress prepares legal sanction for spying program
By Joe Kay
20 February 2006
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Negotiations are under way between the White House and congressional
leaders to pass legislation that will provide a pseudo-legal sanction
for the Bush administrations domestic spying program. Meanwhile,
the administration and Congress are working to ensure that whatever
investigations into the program are carried out, they will be
nothing more than whitewashes for what is a vast expansion of
the intelligence powers of the US government.
Among the various proposals that are being put forward in the
Senate and House, no major figure in either political party is
calling for an end to the National Security Agency program, the
existence of which was first revealed in December. Rather, the
discussion is over what mechanism would be best suited to give
it a greater legal sanction. The acceptance that the program is
necessary and must continue comes in spite of the fact that the
White House has refused to reveal any details about what exactly
the program is and what information is being collected.
The proposal that has won the favor of the administration has
been put forward by Republican Representative Mike DeWine and
would give a blank check to the NSA by explicitly exempting the
spying program from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
FISA prohibits the type of warrantless domestic spying that Bush
has secretly approved for the NSA.
Several Republican senators, however, are backing a move to
amend FISA so that the program will operate within its guidelines
and receive the sanction of the FISA courts. Senator Pat Roberts,
the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in an
interview with the New York Times published Friday that
the program should come before the FISA court, but
that FISA would have to be amended to make the program possible.
Roberts asserted that he thought the administration already had
authority to pursue the program, but that amending FISA would
be much more in concert with the Congress and everybody else and
the FISA court judges.
The agreement by the administration to support some form of
legislation comes in exchange for the decision by several Senate
Republicans to at least temporarily back off previous calls for
an investigation into the NSA program. After a closed-door intelligence
panel meeting with White House representatives on Thursday, Roberts
announced that the administrations decision to accept legislation
meant that an investigation was probably unnecessary. Such an
investigation would be detrimental to this highly classified
program and our efforts to reach some accommodation with the administration,
he said.
The Intelligence Committee decided by a straight party-line
vote not to take up a proposal from Democrat Jay Rockefeller to
begin an investigation, postponing this vote until March.
There have been some internal disputes within the White House
itself over whether or not to directly oppose any legislation
dealing with the NSA program, even a bill that would grant it
the authority to do what it is doing. The position of the White
House is that everything it has done is within the constitutional
powers of the president as commander-in-chief in the war
on terrorism, that it therefore needs no legal framework
and that any law that limits its spying powers in this war is
unconstitutional. It has sought to establish the principle that
the executive branch can operate outside the framework of either
the legislative or judiciary branches.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan reiterated this position
on Friday, saying that what the administration has been discussing
is codifying into law what [the presidents] authority
already is. In backing the DeWine proposal, McClellan indicated
that the Bush administration is now willing to accept a legal
codification, while making clear that it believes this legal codification
to be unnecessary.
The House Intelligence Committee has also proposed an investigation,
but this will remain confined to answering the question of whether
FISA needs to be amended to allow the program to continue. According
to an article in the New York Times on Friday, an
aide to Representative Peter Hoekstra, a Republican from Michigan
who leads the committee, said the inquiry would be much more limited
in scope, focusing on whether federal surveillance laws needed
to be changed and not on the eavesdropping program itself.
Whatever investigations go forward in Congress, they will be
conducted entirely as cover-ups of the NSA program, and will not
reveal anything to the American people about the exact nature
of the spying operation. Administration officials have refused
to discuss any of the operational details, on the
pretext that discussion of these details will jeopardize national
security. The White House has also said that it will not allow
former attorney general John Ashcroft and former deputy attorney
general James Comey to discuss confidential information
before the Senate.
There is currently no consensus within the Republican Party
over exactly what form the congressional approval should take,
and some senators, including Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist,
have said that no new legislation is necessary. It remains to
be seen what version of the legislation, if any, is passed once
Congress returns from its break next week.
In the end, the Bush administration will face no accountability
to Congress for its approval over a four-year period of a spying
program that directly violates existing statutes as well as constitutional
protections against unreasonable searches and seizures. In reaching
this position, the administration has relied heavily on the support
of the Democratic Party. Leading Democrats, including Senator
John Kerry and the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence
Committee, Jane Harman, led the way in calling for the type of
legislation that is now being proposed by some Republicans.
On CNNs Late Edition Sunday, Harman
repeated her belief that this is a capability we need,
saying only that it must strictly comply with the law and
with the Fourth Amendment. No Democrat has challenged the
basic framework of the war on terrorism, used by the
administration to justify the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, as
well as the unprecedented assault on democratic rights.
The congressional and White House maneuvering comes amidst
further revelations of the vast extent of US government spying.
On February 15, the Washington Post reported that the National
Counterterrorism Center has a database of 325,000 names of terrorist
suspects internationally, including in the United States.
The names have been compiled from various government intelligence
agencies, including the NSA. The list has grown to its present
size from 75,000 in 2003.
Given the vast expanse of the government database, there can
be little doubt that the list includes the names of individuals
who have nothing to do with Al Qaeda. It must be assumed that
the list includes large numbers of domestic political opponents
of the Bush administration.
Timothy Sparapani, legislative counsel for privacy rights at
the American Civil Liberties Union, noted to the Post,
If we have over 300,000 known terrorists who want to do
this country harm, weve got a much bigger problem than deciding
which names go on which list. But I highly doubt that is the case.
That is, many of the names likely have no connection to terrorism.
At the same time, Randall Tice, the former NSA official who
has acknowledged being one of the sources of the original New
York Times article exposing the spying program, repeated last
week that the surveillance in fact is far broader than anything
revealed so far. He has said that he has been prevented by the
NSA from disclosing any of the details of certain special
access programs, secretive government programs that are
carried out outside of any congressional review.
Without giving details, Tice has said these special access
programs are more intrusive than what has been disclosed in the
press. He has also said that the government has access to every
domestic and international phone call passing through certain
telecommunications switches, and that the number of Americans
who may be subject to NSA spying could be in the millions.
While aggressively asserting its right to continue the NSA
program, the Bush administration has also pressed for retribution
against those involved in providing information of its existence
to the American people. Administration officials have called for
journalists to be hauled into court to reveal their sources, and
legislation has been introduced to Congress that would strengthen
anti-leaking laws.
Senator Roberts warned last week, Whether its a
reporter or just any individual or somebody by the water cooler
whos upset or somebody who has just a very strong difference
of opinion knowingly reveals classified information, that would
be a felony.
See Also:
Bush details terror plot
to deflect NSA spying furor
[11 February 2006]
Senate wiretapping hearing: Democrats
bow to police state threat
[7 February 2006]
US Senate hearings set to cover up domestic
spying
[6 February 2006]
Bush defends NSA spying program
at White House press conference
[28 January 2006]
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