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Details emerge of vast scope of US domestic spying law
By Joe Kay
20 August 2007
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New reports underscore the extraordinary scope of a law passed
earlier this month expanding government powers to spy on the population
in the US and internationally. The Protect America Act of
2007, passed by the Democratic-controlled Congress, effectively
overrides the ban on unreasonable searches and seizures
laid down by the Fourth Amendment of the US Constitution.
The new legislation amends the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA), the main law governing surveillance of domestic communications.
The law had required a warrantissued by a special FISA courtfor
electronic surveillance of domestic communications by agencies
such as the National Security Agency (NSA) and the CIA.
In January 2006, the Bush administration acknowledged the existence
of a NSA program, authorized after the attacks of September 11,
that it said involved electronic surveillance of communications
in which at least one end was outside the United States. From
the beginning, it was clear that this was only one aspect of new
spying operations of much greater scope. However, even the program
acknowledged by Bush was a clear violation of FISA.
The main provision of the new law passed this month would allow
warrantless wiretapping of electronic communications so long as
one end of the communications is reasonably believed to
be located outside the United States. The government could
carry out warrantless wiretapping of such communications for up
to a year, after certification from the attorney general and the
director of national intelligence (DNI).
The language of the law is vague enough to allow the government
broad discretion to monitor, without a warrant, the electronic
communications of US citizens. The new law would also allow monitoring
of entirely foreign communications that pass through the United
States.
By itself, these portions of the bill constitute a massive
and unconstitutional expansion of spying powers. However, the
bill grants the government even greater powers to spy on Americans.
A New York Times article published on Sunday (Concerns
Raised on Wider Spying Under New Law, by James Risen and
Eric Lichtblau) notes that the language of the bill indirectly
gives the government the power to use intelligence collection
methods far beyond wiretapping that previously required court
approval if conducted inside the United States.
At issue is language in the bill that authorizes warrantless
domestic spying not limited to wiretaps and other forms of electronic
surveillance. The new law says that the DNI and attorney general
can authorize, without court oversight, warrantless spying of
US citizens so long as the information sought concerns
someone who is reasonably believed to be outside the
US.
What is encompassed under the term concerns is
left deliberately vague. According to some media reports, the
administration insisted on this language over more restrictive
terminology.
The Times notes some of the consequences of the modifications
of the FISA Act: For instance, the legislation
would allow the government, under certain circumstances, to demand
the business records of an American in Chicago without a warrant
if it asserts that the search concerns its surveillance of a person
who is in Paris, experts said.
The effect is to shred the Fourth Amendment protection against
warrantless searches. All the government would have to do to obtain
records without a warrant on antiwar organizations or political
opponents, for example, is assert that the search concerns
individuals outside the US.
The Times article also notes that, even with the vast
powers in the now-amended FISA Act, the Bush administration refuses
to state that it will act in accordance with the law. In the view
of the administration, the president retains his constitutional
authority to do whatever it takes to protect the country, regardless
of any action Congress takes, the newspaper reports.
The Times quotes Bruce Fein, an associate deputy attorney
general under President Reagan, who attended a recent Justice
Department briefing on the new law, as saying that, for the administration,
the legislation is just advisory. Fein said, They
have not changed their position that the presidents Article
II powers [including his designation as commander-in-chief
of the military] trump any ability by Congress to regulate the
collection of foreign intelligence.
One of the central aims of the new law is to preserve the close
ties the government has established with telecommunications companies
in the United States. Much of the worlds electronic communications
pass through the US. While it has not been publicly acknowledged
by the government, several large telecommunications companies
have essentially turned over all data flowing through their systems
to the National Security Agency, justifying this action on the
grounds that the data may include communications of foreign intelligence
targets.
A ruling by the FISA court earlier this year
reportedly questioned the governments rationale for accessing
this data, which includes entirely domestic communications. This
was one of the factors behind the administrations insistence
that the new law be passed which gives these activities a firmer
legislative foundation.
The administration has already cited the new law in arguing
for the dismissal of a court case against telecommunications giant
AT&T brought by privacy advocacy groups.
Complicity of the Democratic Party
The extraordinary breadth of the new law highlights the craven
and complicit role of the Democratic Party. The Democratic-controlled
Congress passed a bill before its August recess that adopted the
administrations position on almost all points.
A substantial section of the Democratic Party voted for the
bill, which passed 60-28 in the Senate (16 Democrats voting in
favor) and 227-183 in the House (41 Democrats in favor). The Democratic
Party leadership could easily have leveraged its powers as the
majority party to block the bill if it had any interest in doing
so.
Discussion on a revision of the FISA Act has been on going
for months. Democratic Party leaders from the start said they
supported a new bill modifying FISA so as to increase government
spying powers, but sought to put in place certain limitations.
A New York Times article from August 10 noted that after
a briefing by the director of national intelligence, Admiral Michael
McConnell, Senator John D. Rockefeller IV, Democrat of West
Virginia and chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, contacted
the White House to discuss repairing any difficulties that
the administration was having in conducting surveillance. Other
leading Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, emphasized their willingness to reach
a compromise with the White House to amend FISA.
This led to a series of negotiations between the Democrats
and the White House. An August 12 article in the Washington
Post describes the discussions between administration officials
and Democratic Party leaders in the run-up to the bills
passage.
One Democratic proposal, according to the Post, would
limit warrantless surveillance of foreigners communications
with Americans to instances in which one party was a terrorism
suspect. Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi advanced
the alternative proposal that such surveillance be limited to
threats to national security.
McConnell refused this compromise, however. According to the
Post, McConnell insisted, All foreign intelligence
targets in touch with Americans... should be
fair game for US spying.
To pressure the Democrats to fall in line, administration officials
seized on recent reports of a supposedly resurgent Al Qaeda threat.
The Post quotes one senior administration official as saying,
We had a forcing function in the form of these reports.
The administration also began raising warnings that there was
a gap in intelligence gathering capacities, and that
an immediate change in the law was necessary.
The Democrats advanced a number of other timid restrictions.
A Democratic bill, the Post reports, would
have authorized warrantless surveillance directed
at individuals reasonably believed to be outside the United States.
But the administrations draftand the one passed into
lawpermitted collecting data concerning people
reasonably believed to be outside the country.
At one point, the Democrats sought a quid pro quo, which would
have allowed passage of the bill in return for an administration
agreement to turn over some of the documents describing the wiretapping
programs.
McConnell, in constant touch with the Bush administration,
rejected all these proposals. The Post notes, [I]n
the end, it was the Republican bill, a near-copy of [McConnells]
proposal, that passed both chambers of Congress.
The only concession that the Democrats won was a sunset provision
that requires the law be reconsidered in six months. This concession
is itself weakened by the fact that any spying authorized prior
to the sunset can remain in effect for a full year. In effect,
this allows the expanded spying authority to last for 18 monthsor
just through the end of the Bush administrations term.
Media commentators have sought to explain the Democrats
abject capitulation on all fronts by referring to electoral considerationsthat
the Democrats fear they will be punished at the polls if they
are painted as weak in the war on terror.
This rationale is absurd. The Bush administration is widely
hated by the population. A Zogby poll as far back as January 2006
indicated that a majority of the population (52 percent) felt
Congress should consider impeachment proceedings if the Bush administration
engaged in warrantless wiretapping of Americans.
The concern of the Democrats has much more to do with sending
the proper signals to the media, the military, and the corporate-financial
elitethat they are no less prepared than the Republicans
to deal ruthlessly with obstacles to US imperialist interests
both abroad and at home.
At the same time, they are no less concerned than the Republicans
over growing popular opposition to the policies of the ruling
elite. The new spying powers passed by Congress are ultimately
targeted at this opposition.
See Also:
Congress authorizes vast expansion of
domestic spying
[6 August 2007]
US officials tell New York
Times: Vast data mining programs behind 2004 dispute within
Bush administration over domestic spying
[30 July 2007]
Standoff between White House
and Congress over US attorney purge, domestic spying intensifies
[28 July 2007]
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