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Snuffysmith
January 27, 2006
New Poll Finds Mixed Support for Wiretaps
By ADAM NAGOURNEY and JANET ELDER
Americans are willing to tolerate eavesdropping without warrants to fight terrorism, but are concerned that the aggressive antiterrorism programs championed by the Bush administration are encroaching on civil liberties, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll.

In a sign that public opinion about the trade-offs between national security and individual rights is nuanced and remains highly unresolved, responses to questions about the administration's eavesdropping program varied significantly depending on how the questions were worded, underlining the importance of the effort by the White House this week to define the issue on its terms.

The poll, conducted as President Bush defended his surveillance program in the face of criticism from Democrats and some Republicans that it is illegal, found that Americans were willing to give the administration some latitude for its surveillance program if they believed it was intended to protect them. Fifty-three percent of the respondents said they supported eavesdropping without warrants "in order to reduce the threat of terrorism."

The results suggest that Americans' view of the program depends in large part on whether they perceive it as a bulwark in the fight against terrorism, as Mr. Bush has sought to cast it, or as an unnecessary and unwarranted infringement on civil liberties, as critics have said.

In one striking finding, respondents overwhelmingly supported e-mail and telephone monitoring directed at "Americans that the government is suspicious of;" they overwhelmingly opposed the same kind of surveillance if it was aimed at "ordinary Americans."

Mr. Bush, at a White House press conference yesterday, twice used the phrase "terrorist surveillance program" to describe an operation in which the administration has eavesdropped on telephone calls and other communications like e-mail that it says could involve operatives of Al Qaeda overseas talking to Americans. Critics say the administration could conduct such surveillance while still getting prior court approval, as spelled out in a 1978 law intended to guard against governmental abuses.

The findings came in a poll conducted as Mr. Bush prepares to deliver his fifth State of the Union address on Tuesday. It found that Mr. Bush will face a nation that has grown sour on Washington and skeptical that he will be able to achieve significant progress in health care, the economy, the Iraq war and the cost of prescription drugs for older patients before he leaves office in three years.

The poll also signaled concern for Republicans as they prepare to defend their control of the House and the Senate in midterm elections this November. Investigations into Congressional corruption are taking a toll as the elections approach: 61 percent of Americans now hold an unfavorable view of Congress, the highest in 10 years.

This finding holds particular peril for Republicans as the party that has been in charge. More than half of the respondents said they believed that most members of Congress would exchange votes for money or favors.

Republicans were seen as more likely to be unduly influenced by lobbyists. And the Republican Party is now viewed unfavorably by 51 percent of the nation, its worst rating since Mr. Bush took office. By contrast, 53 percent said they held a favorable view of Democrats.

The telephone poll was conducted with 1,229 adults, starting Friday and ending Wednesday. Its margin of sampling error was plus or minus three percentage points.

The poll found that Americans were to a large extent perplexed as they weighed conflicting forces: the need presented by Mr. Bush to take extraordinary action to fight terrorism, and a historical aversion to an overly intrusive government.

The poll found that 53 percent of Americans approved of Mr. Bush's authorizing eavesdropping without prior court approval "in order to reduce the threat of terrorism"; 46 percent disapproved. When the question was asked stripped of any mention of terrorism, 46 percent of those respondents approved, and 50 percent said they disapproved.

At the same time, 64 percent said they were very or somewhat concerned about losing civil liberties as a result of antiterrorism measures put in place by Mr. Bush since the attacks of Sept. 11. And respondents were more likely to be concerned that the government would enact strong antiterrorism laws that excessively restrict civil liberties than they were that the government would fail to enact antiterrorism laws.

The poll was conducted just as the White House commenced an elaborate campaign to defend the surveillance program, and thus may have been too early to offer a full measure of that campaign's effectiveness. There were no measurable changes in the poll findings from one day to the next.

The findings, and follow-up interviews with some participants, clearly suggest that Mr. Bush has an opportunity to make the dispute over the program play to his political advantage. He has been pointing to the threat of another terrorist attack to justify the eavesdropping program and is trying, for the third election in a row, to suggest that he and his party are more aggressive about protecting the nation than are Democrats.

"Say they're targeting someone in Al Qaeda outside the country, and that person then calls someone in the United States about a plot or something really bad: I don't have a problem with that phone being monitored," Debbie Viebranz, 51, a Republican from Ohio, said in a follow-up interview. "But I don't think they should do it for no reason."

Donnis Wells, 69, a Republican from Florence, Miss., said: "I don't think civil liberties are the more important thing we need to handle right now. I think we need to protect our people."

Still, interviews reflected clear apprehension about the program. "If there is a warrant and done by the courts, I would agree," said Robert Ray, 54, an independent from Kentucky. "But they're trying to do it without using the courts. I just don't trust them."

In the poll, 70 percent of respondents said they would not be willing to support governmental monitoring of the communications of "ordinary Americans"; 68 percent said they would be willing to support such monitoring of "Americans the government is suspicious of."

Beyond surveillance, the poll found that Americans hold unfavorable views of the president and the Republican-controlled Congress as Mr. Bush prepares to give his State of the Union speech. Americans, while declaring themselves generally optimistic about the next three years under Mr. Bush, do not expect him to accomplish very much in that time.

When Mr. Bush leaves office, respondents said, the deficit will be larger than it is today, the elderly will be being paying more for prescription drugs, and the economy and the health care system will be the same as today, or worse.

Mr. Bush is viewed favorably by 42 percent of the respondents, statistically the same as in the last Times/CBS News poll, in early December, a lackluster rating that could hamper his ability to rally public opinion behind his agenda and push legislation through a divided Congress. Beyond that, nearly two-thirds of the country thinks the nation is on the wrong track, a level that has historically proved to be a matter of concern for a party in power.

A majority said they were dissatisfied with the way Mr. Bush was managing the economy and the war in Iraq. Public approval for his handling of the campaign against terrorism, once one of his greatest political strengths, has rebounded somewhat from last fall, but remains well below where it was for the first two years after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Most strikingly, the poll found abundant evidence of public unhappiness with Congress. While it is risky to draw conclusions about Congressional elections from national measurements of discontent — for example, more than half of all Americans said they were satisfied with the job their member of Congress was doing — the findings underscored the tough electoral environment that has led some analysts to predict significant Republican losses this fall.

The corruption investigations appear to account for a lot of the dissatisfaction. Nearly 80 percent of respondents said that the kind of influence-peddling revelations that have emerged in the investigation of the lobbyist Jack Abramoff reflected the "way things work in Congress" and were not isolated incidents. More than 50 percent said most members of Congress "accept bribes or gifts that affect their votes."

"It seems like the integrity of Congress members in the last few years has just gone to pot," said Donald Pertuis, 54, an independent voter from Hot Springs, Ark. Mr. Pertuis added: "In the last 20 years, greed has accelerated. People expect more, I suppose, and want to work less."

Marjorie Connelly, Marina Stefan and Megan Thee contributed reporting for this article.



Copyright 2006The New
Snuffysmith
January 27, 2006
Bush Sees No Need for Law to Approve Eavesdropping
By ELISABETH BUMILLER
WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 — President Bush declared again on Thursday that his administration's program for eavesdropping without warrants was well within existing law, and said that efforts in Congress to write legislation expressly giving him authority for such a program were unnecessary and dangerous.

"My concern has always been that in an attempt to try to pass a law on something that's already legal, we'll show the enemy what we're doing," Mr. Bush said in a wide-ranging morning news conference in the White House press briefing room. The president added that if the effort to write a new law "is likely to expose the nature of the program, I'll resist it."

Mr. Bush's 46-minute news conference, announced less than an hour and a half ahead of time, was an effort by the White House to frame the debate on an array of foreign and domestic issues only five days before his State of the Union address. The topics included the Hamas landslide in the Palestinian elections; photographs of Mr. Bush with Jack Abramoff, the disgraced Republican lobbyist; and the Congressional investigation into the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina.

Mr. Bush appeared relaxed in the briefing room, which his aides say he prefers for news conferences instead of the more formal East Room. He appeared apprehensive at first, but loosened up when he saw a camera dangling precariously from a cord in the ceiling, threatening to crash down on the heads of reporters. "Are you wearing your helmets?" Mr. Bush asked.

He said he welcomed traveling for the 2006 midterm elections in November. "I've got one more off-year campaign in me as a sitting president, and I'm looking forward to it," he said. "As you know, I like to get out and tell people what's on my mind."

The eavesdropping program dominated the domestic policy questions at the news conference, which Mr. Bush used as another volley in his weeklong campaign to push back against both Democrats and Republicans who question the program's legality. Senate Judiciary Committee hearings into the program are to begin next month.

"There's no doubt in my mind it is legal," Mr. Bush said.

He reiterated that the program, which intercepts international phone calls and e-mail messages of people in the United States suspected by the government of having links to Al Qaeda, was crucial to national security, and declared that he had the constitutional authority in wartime to order it. He said that after the Sept. 11 attacks he had asked people like Lt. Gen. Michael V. Hayden, then the director of the National Security Agency and now the principal deputy director of national intelligence, to come up with plans to protect against terrorist attacks.

"And so he came forward with this program," Mr. Bush said. "In other words, it wasn't designed in the White House; it was designed where you expect it to be designed, in the N.S.A."

Mr. Bush took issue with a questioner who asked why he felt the need to circumvent the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which requires court warrants for wiretaps.

"Wait a minute," Mr. Bush said. "That's a — there's something — it's like saying, you know, 'You're breaking the law.' I'm not." He said that the surveillance act "was written in 1978" and that now "it's a different world."

Mr. Bush sidestepped a question on whether the eavesdropping program was part of an effort by the White House to reassert executive power.

"I would say that there has been a historical debate between the executive branch and the legislative branch as to who's got what power," he said. "And I don't view it as a contest with the legislative branch. Maybe they view it as a contest with the executive. I just don't."



Copyright 2006The New York Times
Snuffysmith
Varied Rationales Muddle Issue of NSA Eavesdropping

By Dan Eggen and Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, January 27, 2006; A05



President Bush said yesterday that he didn't seek congressional approval for a warrantless domestic eavesdropping program for one simple reason: He didn't need it.

"We believe there's a constitutional power granted to presidents as well as, this case, a statutory power," Bush said. "And I'm intending to use that power."

It is one of several explanations on the topic from Bush and his aides, who have provided at least two separate rationales for why they did not ask for statutory authority for the program. Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales said the administration had considered seeking legislation but determined it would be impossible to get, adding later in the same news conference that authorities did not want to expose the program's existence. White House spokesman Scott McClellan has echoed the latter point, saying the administration feared that details of the classified program would be exposed publicly.

The subject is one of several elements in the NSA spying debate that have been clouded by apparent contradictions and mixed messages from the government since the program was revealed last month. The confusion has cleared up little in recent days, as the White House has embarked on a multi-pronged campaign to defend the legality of the controversial program.

Gonzales and other officials, for example, have repeatedly said that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which governs secret surveillance in the United States, is too cumbersome to be applied to the NSA eavesdropping program. Yet the Justice Department raised concerns about a 2002 bill to loosen FISA requirements.

Before the program's existence was revealed, several administration officials also emphasized in testimony and public statements that the NSA was prohibited from engaging in domestic surveillance -- even as the agency was clearly doing so under the authority of Bush's secret order that established the program.

Many Democratic lawmakers and legal experts have seized on these and other issues in recent days to argue that the Bush administration has been misleading in its explanations of the NSA program.

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) said that the "after-the-fact spin we're hearing now is worthless." Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) issued a statement yesterday criticizing the administration for claiming that Congress had been fully briefed on the NSA program and for opposing the 2002 measure to loosen FISA standards.

The latter issue attracted particular criticism yesterday, as lawmakers and national security experts opposed to the program cast doubts on the administration's current legal rationale.

An amendment to FISA proposed by Sen. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) would have lowered the standard to be met for authorizing surveillance of non-U.S. citizens, from "probable cause" to "reasonable suspicion" that the target was an agent of a terrorist group. The Justice Department did not offer support for DeWine's amendment because of "significant legal and practical issues," according to department statements.

Confusion over the issue deepened further yesterday after officials discovered two versions of a Justice statement on the legislation. One, which was posted on the Federation of American Scientists Web site and quoted in media reports, noted possible constitutional concerns. The other, held by the Senate intelligence committee, did not include that issue. Officials could not explain the disparity.

A Justice spokeswoman said this week that the previous opinion did not conflict with current legal justifications for the NSA spying because "probable cause" required under FISA is "essentially the same" as the standard used in the NSA program: "a reasonable basis to believe" that a target is linked to al Qaeda or an affiliate.

But Timothy H. Edgar, a national security lawyer at the American Civil Liberties Union, also said the NSA program clearly operates under a lower legal standard allowed only in limited circumstances, such as when police to frisk suspicious people on the street.

"That's never been considered acceptable for searching someone or listening to their telephone," Edgar said.

Bush and his top aides have repeatedly stressed that "Congress" had been briefed on the program over the past four years, but have often neglected to mention that the briefings were limited to the "Gang of Eight": the speaker and minority leader of the House; the majority and minority leaders of the Senate; and the chairmen and ranking Democrats on the two intelligence committees. And they were barred from taking notes or discussing what they heard with other lawmakers or their staffs.

Sen. John D. "Jay" Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.), who as vice chairman of the Senate intelligence panel was briefed in 2003, took the unusual step of sending Vice President Cheney a classified letter voicing his concerns about the program and the lack of oversight on how it was being carried out. Several other prominent Democrats have also questioned the program's legality since it was made public, including Reid, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Rep. Jane Harman (D-Calif.), ranking minority member of the House intelligence committee.

Yet Dan Bartlett, counselor to Bush and White House communications director, said Monday that the lawmakers who had been briefed "believed we are doing the right thing" and that Democratic leaders "briefed on these programs would be screaming from the mountaintops" if they thought the program was illegally eavesdropping on Americans.

Some critics, including a group of relatives of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, have also focused on previous statements by Gen. Michael V. Hayden -- the deputy intelligence director who formerly headed the NSA -- that now appear to be, at best, incomplete.

For example, Hayden and other NSA staff members told the House-Senate inquiry into the attacks that "they do not want to be perceived as focusing NSA capabilities against U.S. persons in the United States," said the panel's report. "The Director and his staff were unanimous that lessons NSA learned as a result of Congressional investigations during the 1970's should not be forgotten."

Hayden suggested similar limitations in an appearance before the House intelligence committee in October 2002, telling Porter J. Goss, then the committee chairman, that the NSA "would have no authorities" to pursue Osama bin Laden if he entered the United States. The NSA program was at least a year old by that time, and Goss -- now the CIA director -- was one of the few members of Congress briefed on it. Experts also say Hayden was wrong to suggest that bin Laden would enjoy the same legal protections as U.S. citizens or residents.

Staff writers Carol D. Leonnig and Dafna Linzer and researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.

© 2006 The Washington Post Company
Snuffysmith
Most Americans Want Wiretapping Investigation






latest news and polls


(Angus Reid Global Scan) – The opinions of Americans on their federal administration’s decision to monitor specific conversations are changing, according to a poll by Gallup released by CNN and USA Today. 51 per cent of respondents believe the government was wrong to wiretap telephone conversations between U.S. citizens and suspected terrorists without getting a court order, up five points since early January.

On Dec. 19, U.S. president George W. Bush defended a secret domestic electronic surveillance program that includes the wiretapping of the telephone calls and e-mails of Americans suspected of having terrorist ties. The president’s remarks came in response to media reports that, since 2002, Bush has authorized the National Security Agency (NSA) to operate this program without any judicial oversight.

In a Jan. 25 visit to the NSA in Maryland, Bush defended the program, saying, "We know that two of the hijackers who struck the Pentagon were inside the United States communicating with al-Qaeda operatives overseas. But we didn’t realize they were here plotting the attack until it was too late. (...) My predecessors have used the same constitutional authority on numerous occasions." 58 per cent of respondents believe a special prosecutor should be appointed to investigate this matter.

Polling Data

As you may know, the Bush administration has been wiretapping telephone conversations between U.S. citizens living in the United States and suspected terrorists living in other countries without getting a court order allowing it to do so. Do you think the Bush administration was right or wrong in wiretapping these conversations without obtaining a court order?

Jan. 22
Jan. 8

Right
46%
50%

Wrong
51%
46%

No opinion
3%
4%



Do you think a special prosecutor should or should not be appointed to investigate this matter?

Yes, should
58%

No, should not
39%

No opinion
2%



Source: Gallup / CNN / USA Today
Methodology: Telephone interviews with 506 American adults (First Question) and 500 American adults (Second Question), conducted from Jan. 20 to Jan. 22, 2006. Margin of error is 5 per cent.
Snuffysmith
White House Vigorously Defends Controversial Spying Program
By Gary Thomas
Washington
26 January 2006

The Bush administration launched a vigorous defense of its controversial electronic eavesdropping program this week. Senior legal and intelligence officials stepped forward to explain the rationale for the program, and President Bush made a rare visit to the super-secret National Security Agency, which is responsible for the electronic surveillance.


George W. Bush

The special program, authorized by President Bush after the September 2001 terrorist attacks, allows electronic eavesdropping on communications such as phone calls and e-mails of people inside the United States who are believed to be in touch with the al-Qaida terror network. It is controversial because the program bypasses a legal requirement to get a warrant from a special court to conduct such spying.

President Bush capped a week of defenses of the electronic eavesdropping with a talk to employees of the National Security Agency, which carries out the program. What he said to them is not known since, in keeping with the agency's nature, the talk was secret. But after touring the agency's facility at Fort Meade, Maryland, outside Washington, the president repeated his belief that the eavesdropping was legal and said it would continue.

"I have the authority, both from the Constitution and the Congress, to undertake this vital program," he said. "The American people expect me to protect their lives and their civil liberties, and that's exactly what we're doing with this program. I'll continue to reauthorize this program for so long as our country faces a continuing threat from al-Qaida and related groups."

The country's second-ranking intelligence officer also made detailed legal and operational defenses of the electronic eavesdropping program. Deputy Director of National Intelligence Michael Hayden, who headed the NSA when the program was first authorized, reiterated the administration's contention that if the program had been in place at the time, the 2001 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington might have been foiled.

"Had this program been in effect prior to 9/11, it is my professional judgment that we would have detected some of the 9/11 al-Qaida operatives in the United States, and we would have identified them as such," he said.


Alberto Gonzales
Speaking at another forum in Washington, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales also said asking the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, or FISA court, for a warrant takes up too much time.

"The optimal way to achieve the necessary speed and agility is to leave the decisions about particular intercepts to the judgment of professional intelligence officers, based on the best available intelligence information," he said. "They can make that call quickly. If, however, those same intelligence officers had to navigate through the FISA process for each of these intercepts, that would necessarily introduce a significant factor of delay, and there would be critical holes in our early warning system."

But James Bamford, author of two leading books on the NSA, told VOA the administration cannot ignore the warrant requirement simply because the FISA procedure is "inconvenient." Mr. Bamford, who has now joined a lawsuit challenging the legality of the program, says such surveillance is too important to be left to intelligence bureaucrats.

"They were lowering the standard from what is required by law [for surveillance], which is 'probable cause' that somebody's involved with some terrorist group, to just a 'reasonable belief.' In other words, take it away from a judge who requires that there be probable cause and give it over to a shift supervisor at NSA," he said.

The Senate Judiciary Committee has scheduled hearings on the program for early next month. Democrats as well as some Republicans in Congress are clamoring for additional hearings. But most Republicans have shot back that the Democrats are trying to exploit the issue for partisan political advantage.
Snuffysmith
Justice Department: NSA Program to Detect and Prevent Terrorist Attacks: Myth v. Reality

1/27/2006 2:35:00 PM

WASHINGTON, Jan. 27 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The following was released today by U.S. Department of Justice:

THE NSA PROGRAM TO DETECT AND PREVENT TERRORIST ATTACKS

MYTH V. REALITY

Myth: The NSA program is illegal.

Reality: The President's authority to authorize the terrorist surveillance program is firmly based both in his constitutional authority as Commander-in-Chief, and in the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) passed by Congress after the September 11 attacks.

-- As Commander-in-Chief and Chief Executive, the President has legal authority under the Constitution to authorize the NSA terrorist surveillance program.

-- The Constitution makes protecting our Nation from foreign attack the President's most solemn duty and provides him with the legal authority to keep America safe.

-- It has long been recognized that the President has inherent authority to conduct warrantless surveillance to gather foreign intelligence even in peacetime. Every federal appellate court to rule on the question has concluded that the President has this authority and that it is consistent with the Constitution.

-- Since the Civil War, wiretaps aimed at collecting foreign intelligence have been authorized by Presidents, and the authority to conduct warrantless surveillance for foreign intelligence purposes has been consistently cited and used when necessary.

-- Congress confirmed and supplemented the President's constitutional authority to authorize this program when it passed the AUMF.

-- The AUMF authorized the President to use "all necessary and appropriate military force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided in the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001."

-- In its Hamdi decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the AUMF also authorizes the "fundamental incident(s) of waging war." The history of warfare makes clear that electronic surveillance of the enemy is a fundamental incident to the use of military force.

-- A crucial responsibility of the President-charged by the AUMF and the Constitution-is to identify enemies who attacked us, especially if they are in the United States ready to strike against our Nation.

-- We are at war, and al Qaeda is not a conventional enemy. Since the September 11 attacks, it has promised again and again to deliver another, even more devastating attack on America. In the meantime, it has killed hundreds of innocent people around the world through large-scale attacks in Indonesia, Madrid, and London.

-- Al Qaeda's plans include infiltrating our cities and communities and plotting with affiliates abroad to kill innocent Americans.

-- The United States must use every tool available, consistent with the Constitution, to prevent and deter another al Qaeda attack, and the President has indicated his intent to do just that.

---

Myth: The NSA program is a domestic eavesdropping program used to spy on innocent Americans.

Reality: The NSA program is narrowly focused, aimed only at international calls and targeted at al Qaeda and related groups. Safeguards are in place to protect the civil liberties of ordinary Americans.

-- The program only applies to communications where one party is located outside of the United States.

-- The NSA terrorist surveillance program described by the President is only focused on members of Al Qaeda and affiliated groups. Communications are only intercepted if there is a reasonable basis to believe that one party to the communication is a member of al Qaeda, affiliated with al Qaeda, or a member of an organization affiliated with al Qaeda.

-- The program is designed to target a key tactic of al Qaeda: infiltrating foreign agents into the United States and controlling their movements through electronic communications, just as it did leading up to the September 11 attacks.

-- The NSA activities are reviewed and reauthorized approximately every 45 days. In addition, the General Counsel and Inspector General of the NSA monitor the program to ensure that it is operating properly and that civil liberties are protected, and the intelligence agents involved receive extensive training.

---

Myth: The NSA activities violate the Fourth Amendment.

Reality: The NSA program is consistent with the Constitution's protections of civil liberties, including the protections of the Fourth Amendment.

-- The Supreme Court has long held that the Fourth Amendment allows warrantless searches where "special needs, beyond the normal need for law enforcement," exist. Foreign intelligence collection, especially in a time of war when catastrophic attacks have already been launched inside the United States, falls within the special needs context.

-- As the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review has observed, the nature of the "emergency" posed by al Qaeda "takes the matter out of the realm of ordinary crime control."

-- The program easily meets the Court's reasonableness test for whether a warrant is required. The NSA activities described by the President are narrow in scope and aim, and the government has an overwhelming interest in detecting and preventing further catastrophic attacks on American soil.

---

Myth: The NSA program violates the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).

Reality: The NSA activities described by the President are consistent with FISA.

-- FISA expressly envisions a need for the President to conduct electronic surveillance outside of its provisions when a later statute authorizes that surveillance. The AUMF is such a statute.

-- The NSA activities come from the very center of the Commander-in-Chief power, and it would raise serious constitutional issues if FISA were read to allow Congress to interfere with the President's well-recognized, inherent constitutional authority. FISA can and should be read to avoid this.

---

Myth: The Administration could have used FISA but simply chose not to.

Reality: In the war on terrorism, it is sometimes imperative to detect -- reliably, immediately, and without delay -- whether an al Qaeda member or affiliate is in contact with someone in the United States. FISA is an extremely valuable tool in the war on terrorism, but it was passed in 1978 and there have been tremendous advances in technology since then.

-- The NSA program is an "early warning system" with only one purpose: to detect and prevent the next attack on the United States from foreign agents hiding in our midst. It is a program with a military nature that requires speed and agility.

-- The FISA process, by design, moves more slowly. It requires numerous lawyers, the preparation of legal briefs, approval from a Cabinet-level officer, certification from the National Security Advisor or another Senate-confirmed officer, and finally, the approval of an Article III judge. This is a good process for traditional domestic foreign intelligence monitoring, but when even 24 hours can make the difference between success and failure in preventing a terrorist attack, a faster process is needed.

---

Myth: FISA has "emergency authorizations" to allow 72-hour surveillance without a court order that the Administration could easily utilize.

Reality: There is a serious misconception about so-called "emergency authorizations" under FISA, which allow 72 hours of surveillance without a court order. FISA requires the Attorney General to determine in advance that a FISA application for that particular intercept will be fully supported and will be approved by the court before an emergency authorization can be granted, and the review process itself can and does take precious time.

-- The Justice Department does not approve emergency authorizations without knowing it will receive court approval within 72 hours.

-- To initiate surveillance under a FISA emergency authorization, it is not enough to rely on the best judgment of our intelligence officers alone. Those intelligence officers would have to get the sign-off of lawyers at the NSA that all provisions of FISA have been satisfied, then lawyers in the Department of Justice would have to be similarly satisfied, and finally, the Attorney General would have to be satisfied that the search meets the requirements of FISA. The government would have to be prepared to follow up with a full FISA application within 72 hours.

-- A typical FISA application involves a substantial process in its own right: The work of several lawyers; the preparation of a legal brief and supporting declarations; the approval of a Cabinet-level officer; a certification from the National Security Advisor, the Director of the FBI, or another designated Senate- confirmed officer; and, finally the approval of an Article III judge.

-- The FISA process makes perfect sense in almost all cases of foreign-intelligence monitoring in the United States. Although technology has changed dramatically since FISA was enacted, FISA remains a vital tool in the war on terrorism -- one that we are using to its fullest and will continue to use against al Qaeda and other foreign threats.

-- But the terrorist surveillance program operated by the NSA requires maximum speed and agility to achieve early warning, and even a very brief delay may make the difference between success and failure in detecting and preventing the next attack.

Throughout this document, "the terrorist surveillance program" and "the NSA program" refer to the NSA activities described by the President.

http://www.usnewswire.com/
Snuffysmith
As a contribution to the ongoing discussion of this issue, I posted the
following on the rense.com website last night.

Terry Arnold

Rebranding Domestic Spying
Terrell E. Arnold

1/25/06

Last Monday President Bush journeyed to Manhattan, Kansas to justify his
Executive Branch use of warrantless spying on American citizens. Saying
that the program--apparently in effect for the past four years--should
be called the "terrorist surveillance program", Bush said he had
consulted "all kinds of lawyers" on the matter. He then took an
un-lawyer-like leap by arguing that a Congressional resolution
authorizing his use of military force in the war against terrorism
provided the legal authority he needed to ignore the statutory
requirements of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) of
1978. That act created a special court and a procedure for authorizing
such surveillance. It was enacted principally to prevent future
executive excesses of the same type as practiced by the Nixon
administration.

Bush revealed in this speech, as was already apparent, that he is no
lawyer or student of the law. The Congressional Authorization for Use
of Force (Public Law 107-40) specifically granted authority to use
military forces against "nations, organizations or persons" that may
have taken part in or aided the 9/11 attacks or to prevent "any further
acts" thereby. But the clear problem is that the resolution never
directly or indirectly mentioned the subject of domestic spying or
intelligence surveillance. In fact, the Congress took action in 2003 to
stop so-called "suspicionless" searches of Americans by the Pentagon and
other agencies. Virtually on top of that Congressional action, Bush
authorized the domestic spying program, while the Congress appears to
have intended that domestic searches, if any, would remain subject to
FISA rules.

The President and others speaking on the side of warrantless spying all
seem convinced that the law of the land is made by iteration: If enough
senior officials assert that domestic spying is legal, that is the law.
Former National Security Agency (NSA) Director Michael Hayden went even
further; he asserted that the practice established "a lower legal
standard" for eavesdropping on suspected terrorists, but the practice
was still "within the law". Hayden also appears to have argued that the
Fourth Amendment does not require probable cause to justify any searches.

The Hayden concept of a law that sets one standard for some people but a
lesser standard for other people seems a warped notion for any country
that lives by the rule of law. It may be that some laws are not applied
uniformly, no matter how carefully drafted. However, any assurance of
legal fairness is truly jeopardized by the Hayden argument. Moreover,
the argument Bush makes, that he was "briefing Congress" appears to mean
only that he confided in a few close buddies on the Hill. That normally
would not comprise congressional consultations.

Attorney General Gonzales, who should know better, made the same
arguments, asserting that the Congressional resolution on the use of
force (PL 107-40) "removes any possible tension" between the
requirements of FISA and the President's actions on this matter.
Gonzales either inadvertently or deliberately suggests that
Congressional authority to use military force provides legal carte
blanch to do anything else the President might think useful, regardless
of existing law. Gonzales also mentions the President's powers under
Article II of the Constitution. But those powers are not defined, and
there is no chain of constitutional interpretation saying that domestic
spying or other violations of civil liberties are among those powers.

The sum of the Bush, Hayden and Gonzales opinions on how US law works
suggests that our system is in danger of auto destructing. In a tossup
between established law and perceived necessity, the law is cast aside?
In times of uncertainty, the people sensibly seek strong leadership,
but in the process may not see the decay of checks and balances.
Congress willfully helped that process by conceding war-making powers to
the President that constitutionally are reserved to the Congress.

This is all being done in a security environment that consists mainly of
advertised threats. Osama bin Laden, if he is still alive, and al Qaida
certainly should be inspired by what they see. Much of our undoing is
being achieved with inexpensive videos and cassette tape recordings, not
the force of arms. They simply threaten us and watch for results, while
we spend ourselves into deepening debt in pursuit of a chimerical
enemy--terrorism, and we disassemble our democracy in mounting the
chase. The first signs of decay are how we treat our own people.

The simplest interpretation of the Bush, Gonzales and Hayden argument is
that they have defined two classes of Americans. As Bush put it in
Manhattan, Kansas, allowing NSA to monitor the international calls of
Americans who have "suspected ties" to terrorists is not really
"domestic spying." That is truly disingenuous, because he suggests that
there is a sub-class of citizens, those who are suspected of terrorism
connections, who are not entitled to legal protections normally afforded
Americans; therefore, spying on them is not "domestic". They
automatically forfeit their rights, without benefit of reclama or the
constitutional right to confront their accuser. They seem ipso facto to
fall into the class of "enemy combatants".

An even larger difficulty with the Bush policy is that the factual
rationale for warrantless searches/surveillance is flimsy. By saying
that they are spying only on individuals who are "suspected" of overseas
terrorism connections, they are implying that US officials have some
prior knowledge of a known or suspected overseas terrorist connection.
Such prior knowledge should provide a basis for presenting the matter to
a FISA court as the 1978 law requires, especially since that law sets a
procedure to permit action in time of the essence cases. The
administration complaint that legal procedures take too long is simply
not demonstrable. Since they don't ask, how would they know?

What is demonstrable is that the administration exhibits a morbid fear
of transparency. In his Manhattan, Kansas speech Bush expressed concern
about Iran being "a non-transparent society", but the Bush
administration has become non-transparent to a degree that threatens the
proper functioning of a democratic government. The Bush/Gonzales
defenses of domestic spying are actually arguments for exclusive and
unquestionable powers of the President, rather than justifications for
correct action under a system of laws. In fact, if Bush actually had, as
he says, "all kinds of lawyers review the process", the arguments he has
made suggest there were legal prostitutes among his consultants.

By arguing its case in the superficial or legally spurious manner so far
exhibited, the administration actually demonstrates a practice of
continuing executive deception. The way to shed the odor of "domestic
spying" and executive deceit is to bring administration practices within
established law. Nothing argued by Bush, Gonzales, Hayden, or others
makes a case to do otherwise. If the United States cannot survive
terrorism without destroying its values and system of laws, we are
wasting our time. Rebranding "domestic spying" really should mean:
Enforce FISA, and provide proper oversight!



**********

The writer is the author of the recently published work, _A World Less
Safe_, now available on Amazon, and he is a regular columnist on
rense.com. He is a retired Senior Foreign Service Officer of the US
Department of State whose immediate pre-retirement positions were as
Deputy Director of the State Office of Counterterrorism, and as Chairman
of the Department of International Studies of the National War College.
He will welcome comment at wecanstopit@charter.net.
Snuffysmith
Gonzales Is Challenged on Wiretaps
Feingold Says Attorney General Misled Senators in Hearings

By Carol D. Leonnig
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, January 31, 2006; A07



Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.) charged yesterday that Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales misled the Senate during his confirmation hearing a year ago when he appeared to try to avoid answering a question about whether the president could authorize warrantless wiretapping of U.S. citizens.

In a letter to the attorney general yesterday, Feingold demanded to know why Gonzales dismissed the senator's question about warrantless eavesdropping as a "hypothetical situation" during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in January 2005. At the hearing, Feingold asked Gonzales where the president's authority ends and whether Gonzales believed the president could, for example, act in contravention of existing criminal laws and spy on U.S. citizens without a warrant.

Gonzales said that it was impossible to answer such a hypothetical question but that it was "not the policy or the agenda of this president" to authorize actions that conflict with existing law. He added that he would hope to alert Congress if the president ever chose to authorize warrantless surveillance, according to a transcript of the hearing.

In fact, the president did secretly authorize the National Security Agency to begin warrantless monitoring of calls and e-mails between the United States and other nations soon after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The program, publicly revealed in media reports last month, was unknown to Feingold and his staff at the time Feingold questioned Gonzales, according to a staff member. Feingold's aides developed the 2005 questions based on privacy advocates' concerns about broad interpretations of executive power.

Gonzales was White House counsel at the time the program began and has since acknowledged his role in affirming the president's authority to launch the surveillance effort. Gonzales is scheduled to testify Monday before the Senate Judiciary Committee on the program's legal rationale.

"It now appears that the Attorney General was not being straight with the Judiciary Committee and he has some explaining to do," Feingold said in a statement yesterday.

A Justice Department spokesman said yesterday the department had not yet reviewed the Feingold letter and could not comment.

© 2006 The Washington Post Company
Snuffysmith
http://www.counterpunch.org/smith01292006.html

Uncle Same Wants (to Know About) You

Spying and Lying by the Pentagon
By Col. DAN SMITH

"Most people just don't understand how pervasive government surveillance is. If you place an international phone call, the odds that the [U.S.] National Security Agency are looking is very good. If it goes by oceanic fiber-optic cable, they are listening to it. If it goes by satellite, they are listening to it. If it is a radio broadcast or a cell phone conversation, in principle, they could listen to it. Frankly, they can get what they want."

John Pike (U.S. military analyst)

John Pike made that observation in late February 2002, a mere five months after nearly 3,000 individuals were killed by the explosive force of fuel-laden jets plowing into the World Trade Center and the subsequent collapse of the Twin Towers.

But more than buildings were brought down that September 11. Historical protections of speech, assembly, protest, and privacy enjoyed by U.S. citizens and legal residents ("U.S. persons"), also came under attack as a stampeded Congress, goaded by a panicked and paranoid administration, abdicated its constitutional role--rather, its constitutional duty--to prevent the undue concentration of power in the Chief Executive. The immediate result was the "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorists Act of 2001"--better known by its acronym, USA PATRIOT Act

This law, as has become more and more clear over the last three months, was but the initial move by the Bush administration in what has become an extended and coordinated attack on the civil liberties of U.S. persons in the name of national security and--ironically--in the name of bringing democracy and civil liberties to Iraq.

The extent of this frontal assault suggests the depth of the ideological aversion of many Bush advisors and confidents to the underlying principles on which the entire American democratic experiment rests. These include protecting the rights of all citizens, especially those of various minorities, against an overbearing majority; providing basic services and infrastructure on an equitable basis, and being responsive to the concerns and safety of the people. In short, it seems that key administration figures and confidants have difficulty with the proposition that "government of the people and for the people" refers to all the people.


A Bit of History

The very structure of government outlined in the Constitution reflects another principle that was quite real in the American colonies in the 1700s: skepticism of executive power, whether king or president, which the Founding Fathers distrusted. After 9/11, in part due to the uncertainty of possible additional attacks, skepticism among today's electorate all but disappeared--regrettably but understandably. But what should have been a short-term reaction--akin to what triggers the "fight or flight" instinct--was prolonged and so magnified by administration rhetoric and "alerts" that the public failed to reclaim its role as the ultimate arbiter of the balance between freedom and security which is at the heart of the social contract.

Instead, those occupying positions of power blithely claimed that only by invading and restricting traditional civil liberties would they be able to efficiently safeguard constitutional liberties from foreign foes. They remain fond of citing Lincoln's justification for suspending habeas corpus during the Civil War--that the suspension is necessary to provide for the public safety (what today we call "national security") --without going to Congress, which alone under the Constitution can suspend habeas corpus during rebellion or invasion, or to the courts. Administration advocates conveniently ignore Chief Justice Roger Taney's Ex parte Merryman (1861) which notes previous Supreme Court opinions that only Congress has the power to suspend habeas corpus for reasons of "public safety" (Chief Justice John Marshall) and this power includes the exclusive "right to judge whether the exigency had arisen" (Justice Joseph Story). Advocates also failed to reveal the extent to which they would go themselves to undercut the safeguards provided in the Constitution and in law.

The apparent disdain in which at least some advisors appear to hold individual rights and an active civil society may stem from the inefficiencies these concepts introduce into the art and practice of truly effective government. Look at the background of key administration figures. Most have extensive experience in business where efficiency can be the difference between success and failure. (Pundits not infrequently compare the Bush style of political governance to corporate governance.) Some have extensive connections to the military, not as high-ranking career officers but as Pentagon civilians at or near the top of the ladder where responsiveness to their preferences and direction is rapid if not automatic--and invariably "gung-ho."

Unfortunately for civil liberties and democracy, efficient government is more characteristic of unchecked (or minimally checked) power. At the extremes, such power becomes tyranny, whose trademark activities include spying on citizens because the tyrant dare not trust anyone. Indeed, tyranny thrives on the fear and distrust created when ostensible external threats to national survival (e.g., al Qaeda) are declared to have an unknowable number of tentacles deep within society, waiting to strike at an opportune time.

(Ironically, in mid-18th century colonial America, resentment over the suppression of the civil rights of the colonists as British citizens was initially directed at Parliament, not the crown--witness "no taxation without representation." And Benjamin Franklin, as late as June 1775, well after blood ran at Lexington from "the shot heard 'round the world," seems to have had more regard for and trust in the British monarchy than in the British Parliament.)


The Patriot Act

The U.S. is still far from the extreme of tyranny. Nonetheless, many observers find highly problematical the administration's drive to permanently extend (unless some future Congress countermands the pending legislation) the curtailment of civil liberties by the USA PATRIOT Act. What this all-out effort suggests is that government now sees threats everywhere and, in so doing, has lost its footing in the real world. Having painted itself into a psychological corner, unsure of its information and its ability to collect information and interpret what is collected, the Bush administration pounded Congress throughout December with rhetorical imperatives ("Congress must") and apocalyptic predictions of disaster should the U.S. go unprotected by the Act for even one day. In the end, Congress extended the Act by five weeks (until February 3, 2006) and the president, who had adamantly declared he would never approve a short-term extension, signed the legislation.

Publicly, the USA PATRIOT Act remained the focus and justification for government's intrusion into daily activities of citizens and others who are in the U.S. legally. What most in Congress, let alone the public, didn't know until the last few weeks is the extent to which the administration stretched its new powers through self-serving and secret administrative rulings, advisory memos and opinions from the Attorney General's office, and legal interpretations of statutes from the White House Counsel. Not satisfied with these "justifications," the White House decided to reorganize--and in the process expand--domestic intelligence and counter-intelligence activities wherever possible by as many agencies as possible within the "spook" world.

The public face of this expansion is the "Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004" (PL 108-458). Among other provisions, the law increases the number of individuals engaged in collecting and analyzing information--what is known as Human Intelligence or HUMINT. (One estimate is that 4,000 agents were added just to the military programs.) This was an almost inevitable response to the virtually unanimous conclusion of all post- 9/11 enquiries that HUMINT capabilities had severely atrophied. Structural changes were also made, chief among which was the creation of a new "intelligence czar"--the Director of National Intelligence. In terms of process, the bureaucratic "wall" purposefully erected in the 1970s after the last bout of illegal spying to separate domestic criminal investigations and foreign intelligence collection was also eliminated as joint counter-terror analysis centers staffed by FBI, CIA, and military analysts were created.

Given the revelations about widespread abuse of detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan, the rolling litany of justifications for invading and occupying Iraq, and the practice of "rendition" (transporting a suspect to a third country where prisoners have been known to be tortured), that the White House and its allies maintained such a supercharged "anti-terror" atmosphere for more than three years should have been a red flag for Congress that something was amiss.


Army Spying

With barely a ripple of congressional "oversight," those newly empowered must have thought almost any practice would be permitted. After all, the president and most other officials insisted that in the much-changed post-9/11 world the old rules and the old legal signposts were completely outdated and had to be rewritten.

The problem? The White House and the Pentagon didn't want to wait for the rules to be changed. In fact, as chronicled by the New York Times (December 11), NBC Nightly News (December 13), and the Los Angeles Times, U.S. Army counter-intelligence agents undertook a nation-wide program to infiltrate organizations the military deemed potential "threats" to military personnel and bases.

Of course, this is not the first time the military has engaged in domestic spying. Successive U.S. administrations in the 1960s and 1970s exhibited profound distrust, even disdain, for those who challenged government by exercising the civil and political rights provided in the Constitution. Impassioned Vietnam War protestors and civil rights advocates believed they could force changes in government policy and practice if they but persisted in mass civil disobedience. Fearing the same outcomes, officials secretly tasked intelligence agencies normally focused on external enemies--the Pentagon and the CIA--to gather, record, and exchange information with U.S. law enforcement agencies about "U.S. persons" (citizens and legal residents) participating in anti-Washington events anywhere in the country. By the time the illegal Army snooping ended in 1971, it had records on more than 100,000 civilians.

Although Christopher Pyle of the New York Times broke the story of the secret spying in 1970, official enquiries did not begin until 1974. The first, "The President's Commission on CIA Activities Within the United States" (also known as the Rockefeller Commission after its chairperson, Vice-President Nelson Rockefeller), looked at the role of the CIA in domestic spying and other secret domestic programs (e.g., the MKUltra Project involving psychological experiments on humans). Many observers at the time regarded the 1975 report as a whitewash of the CIA's directorate of operations. The next year, Senator Frank Church led a new and much broader enquiry into the activities of the CIA and the Pentagon and their interactions, including the sharing of information with local law enforcement agents. Reforms were put in place that barred the CIA and the Pentagon from spying on and maintaining records on U.S. persons residing in the U.S.

The Army's current activities appear to be less extensive, but that may be simply because the media obtained evidence much more quickly. This came in the form of a 400-page dossier of 1,519 "suspicious" organizations or activities the Army labeled "threats." To date, NBC television News, which has a copy of the report, has released only eight pages. However, included in the gatherings "penetrated" by Army counter-intelligence agents was a November 2004 planning session of locally known, non-confrontational, part-time counter-recruiting activists who openly gathered in the Quaker Meeting House in Lake Worth, Florida.

Reports from the Army's field agents are sent to a central Counter-Intelligence Fusion Unit (CIFU) established outside Washington, DC in 2004. Its size and budget are not known. Information from field agents arrive as "TALON" (Threat And Local Observation Notice) reports usually classified "secret" no matter what "information" they might have. Generally, what is "classified" is the fact that the military is spying on citizens who are doing nothing more than exercising First and Fourth Amendment rights. Two days after the story broke, the Pentagon promised to "review" the TALON database.

Lest we forget, TALON is not the first post-9/11 attempt to expand human intelligence collection inside the U.S. In 2002, Attorney-General John Ashcroft's Justice Department tried to initiate a "Terrorism Information and Prevention System" (Operation TIPS). This program would have used civilians such as electric and gas meter readers and postal employees to report "unusual" activities in a neighborhood. Attacked for its similarities to communist "neighborhood block" watch groups like Cuba's Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDRs), which the State Department criticizes in its annual human rights reports, the scheme collapsed when the postal service refused to participate.

Undeterred, the Pentagon announced in 2002 the launch of its Total Information Awareness (TIA) data mining project to "recreate" the lives of every terrorist in order to preempt future attacks. As criticism of this new assault on privacy and civil liberties mounted, the Pentagon re-titled the project "Terrorism Information Awareness." Either way, since anyone theoretically might be a terrorist, TIA potentially applied to everything done by everyone alive.

Nor has the administration been at all reticent about supplementing human agents with electronic collection programs. Shortly after 9/11, the government began monitoring Muslim business, family, and even religious sites for "excessive radiation emissions" in at least six major U.S. cities. The problem was--and remains--that the FBI neither obtained court approval nor had probable cause for invading the privacy of offices and homes.

Some in Congress are calling for expanding the use of military assets in domestic spying. As recorded in the Congressional Record (May 21, 2002), Congressman Curt Weldon proposed creating a National Operations and Analysis Hub (NOAH) within the Army's Intelligence and Security Command. Linking 28 federal agencies, NOAH would be a national-level intelligence "fusion" center that would develop and offer alternative courses of action for policy-makers to consider. Left unstated are what controls would be imposed and who would decide what options to forward to decision-makers.

NSA Eavesdropping

As invasive as these practices have been, the spying program that has caused such uproar in legal and judicial circles is the presidentially-directed warrantless interception by the National Security Agency (NSA) of electronic communications involving "people with known links to al Qaeda and related terrorist organizations." Citing still secret internal--and therefore undoubtedly highly biased--administration legal opinions, Bush declared he was empowered by the Constitution, statute, and legal precedent to order the surveillance without seeking warrants from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Although few outside the administration agree, Bush has remained defiant--which makes one wonder what super-secret unknown exists behind the NSA program.

Like the CIA, the NSA and its predecessor military service communications intercept organizations have a history of violating laws. For example, although the Communications Act of 1934 prohibits anyone from intercepting and revealing private radio transmissions, the Army Security Agency did just that in the 1960s--and continued to do so even when it was told by the Federal Communication Commission that its activity was illegal. According to Frank Bamberg, who has written about the NSA from the "insider's" perspective, Cold War programs such as "Shamrock" and "Minaret" produced copies of telegrams sent from or to the U.S. and tracked "persons of interest."

More recently many governments, especially in Europe, have become concerned about "Echelon," a worldwide electronic intercept network which includes NSA and its equivalents in the U.K., Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Using computers programmed to spot pre-determined words, phrases, names, and locations, these agencies are able to examine mountains of data and find possible high-value messages. And the fact that five nations are involved also enables the NSA to "plausibly deny" it is eavesdropping illegally on conversations because a request to another country to conduct the intercept allows the NSA technically to remain within the law.

While the domestic collection of information by the Army had come under close scrutiny by the Church Committee, its final report omitted consideration of "the monitoring of international communications by the National Security Agency." A Justice Department investigation of NSA practices, although not returning indictments, impelled Congress in 1978 to pass the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) which specifies when warrantless intercepts of electronic conversations or data transfers are permitted. The Act created the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which approves requests for eavesdropping for national security reasons, and a Foreign Intelligence Appeals Court. The latter has never heard a case, while the former has approved more than 18,745 applications. More telling about the use of the FISA Court by the Bush White House is the report that, since 2001, the Court has felt obliged to modify 179 of 5,645 warrant applications and defer or reject six more. By comparison, only two applications were modified between 1978-2000 and none were turned down.

Under FISA, following a declaration of war by Congress, the president may initiate warrantless electronic surveillance for 15 days. In other cases, warrantless national security electronic surveillance can be maintained for 72 hours. Under all other circumstances or at the end of these time periods, authorities must have in hand a FISA court warrant. But since early 2002, these timelines and requirements have not been followed by virtue of a presidential directive. Once again, Bush asserted that a president possesses in wartime "inherent powers" under the Constitution to circumvent traditional, "slow-moving" legal processes. He also claims that the "Authorization for the Use of Military Force" (AUMF) resolution, passed by Congress right after the attacks of 9/11, gave him wide latitude for action as it authorized him "to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons" implicated in the attacks.

Many if not most legal experts outside the administration reject this presidential interpretation as stretching congressional intent. The constitutional "inherent power" has generally been interpreted as limited to the president's commander in chief function which is germane to military forces and battlefield situations outside the homeland. Nonetheless, Bush has allowed eavesdropping on conversations beginning and ending in the U.S. as well as electronic intercepts of communications originating, passing through, or terminating in the U.S., far from any "battlefield" as that term is normally understood. Moreover, the FISA statute itself specifies that the Act is "the exclusive means by which electronic surveillancemay be conducted" and makes no exceptions.

When asked why the administration chose to rely on presidential dictat rather than seek legislative remedies, Attorney-General Alberto Gonzales, who at the time was White House Counsel, replied: "We were advised that that [obtaining a legislated change to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act] would be difficult, if not impossible."

FISA is not the only law the Bush administration has flouted. In the 2003 UN debate prior to Security Council consideration of a resolution authorizing the use of force against Saddam Hussein, the U.S. and UK intercepted communications from other Council members. UN officials have long assumed that their offices are bugged and their communications routinely intercepted by the U.S., but in this instance it was quite evident that the U.S. was violating treaty provisions (and hence U.S. law) against spying on UN officials and UN delegations.

Media reports that have not been challenged by the NSA indicate other "irregularities" if not full-blown violations of law. As a high-level State Department official in the first Bush term, John Bolton, now serving as U.S. ambassador to the UN, received "raw" (unanalyzed) intercepts of conversations of U.S. government officials and private citizens opposed to going to war with Iraq. To hide the intercepts, the collection effort was reportedly run as an exercise. In accordance with the law, NSA destroyed its records when the "exercise" ended, but this was after copies had been provided to Bolton and other key pro-war supporters.

Other reports describe a NSA practice of attaching persistent "cookies" to enquiries by those who log on to the agency's unclassified website. Attaching "cookies" is not a problem as long as they are temporary. Permanent ones would allow the NSA to follow any subsequent web surfing by a person who had visited NSA on the web--a clear case of invading privacy. An Agency spokesperson called the practice a "mistake."

Lying

As pervasive as is the government's disregard of the Constitution, laws and treaties, and the expressed intent of Congress with respect to civil rights, the administration has also engaged in manipulating and even creating news under cover of "information warfare."

One of the first indications of what was to come was the uproar over the Pentagon's Office of Strategic Influence. Created in February 2002 to bolster the U.S. image abroad, the Office suffered a fatal image blow itself when word leaked that it would provide false news items to foreign media. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld closed the operation quickly, all the while protesting that there were no plans to manipulate news stories.

Meanwhile, the White House was trumpeting the explosion of independent media outlets in Afghanistan and Iraq. At the same time, as outlined in an October 30, 2003 Defense Department directive entitled "Information Operations Roadmap," the U.S. Army's 4th Psychological Operations Group located at Fort Bragg, North Carolina were busy churning out positive "news" stories (i.e., propaganda) about coalition activities that were sent to non-U.S. media outlets worldwide--but without revealing the source. At the same time, the Pentagon hired U.S. public relations firms to "help" foreign governments relay U.S.-friendly messages, help which not infrequently included paying newspapers $40 to $2,000 to run the stories or foreign journalists to write stories from information given them. Separately, the U.S. Agency for International Development has been funding the operation of 30 radio stations in Afghanistan. And all this was in addition to the officially acknowledged radio and television stations run by U.S. and other coalition authorities in Iraq and Afghanistan.

On the battlefield, deception and propaganda are tools available to commanders to confuse the enemy, perhaps induce surrender, and warn or reassure civilian noncombatants. And while it is legal to disseminate propaganda abroad, it is illegal to do so at home. The Pentagon insists that it has strict guidelines in play that will prevent any false reports it sends to foreign media from being subsequently picked up by U.S. outlets. (Of course, U.S. allies might not be pleased to learn news has been manipulated, especially if the "news" is false.)

Such assurances give little comfort, especially following revelations that Bush administration officials sent videos to U.S. television outlets extolling domestic policies without making clear that the videos' source was the government. According to the Government Accountability Office, omitting attribution to the source changes the message from one of fact to propaganda, which by law cannot be distributed inside the U.S.

Other instances of misrepresentations by various administration representatives are not hard to find. Criticism of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq would undercut troop morale, according to Bush. Yet a 2005 year-end survey by the Military Times found that "four years of combat have done little to dent the morale of the professional military." The president also has repeatedly asserted that Congress sees the same intelligence he gets. The bi-partisan Congressional Research Service states that "the President, and a small number ofCabinet-level officialsin contrast to Members of Congress, have access to a far greater overall volume of intelligence and to more sensitive intelligence information."

Conclusion

Just as the constitutionality of the 1970s War Powers Act has never been tested, it seems unlikely that the president's expansive claim that the congressional AUMF resolution empowered him to redefine the boundaries of executive action vis-à-vis the two other branches of government will be challenged. Congress did err in leaving to the president the right to determine who around the globe was in any way a participant in 9/11 and bring them to justice. However, neither the AUMF nor other resolutions circumscribe the 1978 FISA statute which Congress clearly intended to remain in force during conflicts. Similarly, the president's declaration in the signing statement, issued when he signed legislation containing the McCain anti-torture amendment, that he would view the requirements within the context of his powers as commander in chief tries to end-run the prohibitions against torture or degrading and inhumane treatment of detainees regardless of their "war" status.

To its credit, the judiciary is now acting as a brake on administration actions justified as within the "inherent powers" of the commander in chief function. One member of the FISA panel resigned from the secret court to protest administration actions. Moreover, at least with regard to the anti-torture legislation and FISA, since the Supreme Court ruled in 1952 that presidential power to act unilaterally is, in the words of Justice Robert Jackson, "at its lowest ebb" in light of "the expressed or implied will of Congress"--new revelations that either statute has been ignored willfully just might drive the "war powers" issue to the Supreme Court. As Justice Jackson wrote in the 1952 decision, "There are indications that the Constitution did not contemplate that the title Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy will constitute him also Commander in Chief of the country, its industries, and its inhabitants."

In 1975, the Rockefeller Commission Report stated: "The individual liberties of American citizens depend on government observance of the lawthe mere invocation of the "national security" does not grant unlimited power to the government." Just over thirty years later, in January 2006, responding to question at his confirmation hearings for a position on the Supreme Court, Judge Samuel Alito strongly affirmed that no one, president or Supreme Court justice, is above or outside the law. Freedom rests on the principle of the rule of law and equality before the law. So when government, fearing the citizenry in the exercise of their constitutional rights, ignores its duty to safeguard those rights and even undercuts them, despotism looms in the future and democracy becomes an endangered species.

Col. Daniel Smith, a West Point graduate and Vietnam veteran, is Senior Fellow on Military Affairs at the Friends Committee on National Legislation, a Quaker lobby in the public interest. He can be reached at: dan@fcnl.org
Snuffysmith
Draft Legislation Undercuts Bush Domestic Spying Rationale

By Sandy Bergo

WASHINGTON, January 31, 2006 — A Justice Department memo written in 2003 may call into question the legal rationale the Bush administration has offered to justify electronic surveillance of Americans without court review.



The draft of the Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003 (Adobe Acrobat format, Microsoft Word format)
Some critics of the ongoing National Security Agency (NSA) wiretapping program believe the 2003 memo undermines the position President Bush is taking today. The memo describes legislation drafted by Justice Department staff to expand surveillance powers under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).

Critics say it is hard to understand why Justice Department attorneys felt this change was needed, if, as the administration now claims, it had even broader authority and could avoid judicial review. In recent days, the administration has said the inherent constitutional powers of the president and the congressional authorization of military force against al Qaeda gave President Bush the authority he needed to circumvent the court.

The memo and proposed Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003, dubbed "Patriot II," were first obtained and posted on the Center for Public Integrity website in February 2003.

A public firestorm
Once made public, the proposal raised a firestorm of criticism among civil liberties advocates. They were concerned about attempts to broaden the government's powers over domestic intelligence gathering, and to decrease judicial review and public access to information.

Following its disclosure, the executive branch dropped consideration of "Patriot II," and never presented it to Congress. However, pieces were later considered and passed.

One "Patriot II" provision, which never passed, would have sought expanded wartime powers for the Attorney General. Under the heading, "Section 103. Strengthening Wartime Authorities Under FISA," the memo explains that current law authorizes surveillance for 15 days without court approval, once Congress has declared war.

But as formally declared wars are rare, the most recent being World War II, the Justice Department memo concludes, "this wartime exception is unnecessarily narrow." The proposed law sought to broaden powers "by allowing the wartime exception to be invoked after Congress authorizes the use of military force, or after the United States has suffered an attack creating a national emergency."

"After-the-fact rationalization..."
Georgetown law professor David Cole, a critic of the NSA surveillance program, says this 2003 draft is evidence that the government's current argument "is in fact an after-the-fact rationalization, and not one that the administration held when the president secretly authorized the NSA warrantless wiretapping now at issue."

The Republican staff director and chief counsel for the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, William Duhnke, disagrees. He says proposed legislation such as "Patriot II" cannot be read as a concession that the president lacks certain powers.

"Just because the administration seeks legislation doesn't mean you are acknowledging you don't have certain inherent authority," he says. "People may say, 'now see, they were asking for it, so they know they didn't have it.' But that's not true."


"People may say, 'now see, they were asking for it, so they know they didn't have it.' But that's not true." William Duhnke, Republican staff director and chief counsel, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.
But he says the law may have been drafted in an effort to strengthen powers, in line with a Supreme Court ruling that says a president's authority is at its zenith when he acts in concert with congressional approval.

The "Patriot II" proposals would also have made it easier for the government to obtain lists of phone numbers dialed by Americans.

In addition, it would have granted a broad defense for federal agents acting on directives from the president or attorney general but lacking court authorization.

"This proposal would have provided immunity for those people," says Brittany Benowitz, an attorney for the Center for National Security Studies, and "is therefore indicative of the danger inherent in relying on arguments of constitutional authority."

A University of Virginia law professor who defends the legality of the NSA program believes as a practical matter, the passage of "Patriot II" might have smoothed the way.

"If Congress were to accept these changes, the risk that the administration would be distracted by ACLU lawsuits or nasty editorials would be reduced - presumably a good thing during wartime," says Professor Robert F. Turner, an expert in national security law.

A spokesman for the administration says the significance of "Patriot II" is "a hypothetical" because the draft was never presented to Congress.

"The department as it develops policy often comes up with a number of different drafts and in this case it was merely a draft document that was not put forth for any consideration," says Department of Justice spokesman Brian Roehrkasse.

"Control Sheet" shows memo directed to Cheney

"This has gone on for four years. (The administration had decided) if the law doesn't suit our needs, we won't follow it." Jim Dempsey, policy director of the Center for Democracy and Technology.
However, in 2003, Center for Public Integrity executive director Roberta Baskin, then a reporter for PBS, obtained this Office of Legislative Affairs "control sheet," which appears to demonstrate the legislative proposal was delivered to Vice President Dick Cheney and Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert.

"Attached for your review and comment is a draft legislative proposal entitled the 'Domestic Security Enhancement Act of 2003,' reads the memo from "OLP," the Office of Legal Policy. At the time this was disclosed, Barbara Comstock, then spokesman for Justice Department, denied that these documents were ever sent to Cheney or Hastert.

The law known as FISA was passed by Congress in 1978 to prevent a repeat of the abuses under the Nixon administration, which had spied on antiwar protesters and other political dissidents. The law established the FISA court as a safeguard, creating a level of review of surveillance on Americans.

The New York Times has reported that leads developed through NSA spying on phone calls and emails have proved, upon further scrutiny by the FBI, to be dead ends or the communications of innocent Americans.

The powers the Bush administration now claims to have are far more sweeping than what was sought in "Patriot II" in 2003. That proposal would have maintained a requirement for court approval, even in wartime, with an exception for the first 15 days after military action is authorized.

In recent days, President Bush and members of his administration have told the public they do not need court approval, at any time, for the surveillance program as long as the war against al Qaeda continues.

"This has gone on for four years," says Jim Dempsey, policy director of the Center for Democracy and Technology. The administration had decided, he says "if the law doesn't suit our needs, we won't follow it. The president was invoking the legislative process, but at the same time ignoring the legislative process."
Snuffysmith
http://news.com.com/2100-1028_3-6033501.ht...33501&subj=news

AT&T sued over NSA spy program
By Declan McCullagh
Staff Writer, CNET News.com

Published: January 31, 2006, 1:11 PM PST
TalkBack E-mail Print
AT&T has been named a defendant in a class action lawsuit that claims the telecommunications company illegally cooperated with the National Security Agency's secret eavesdropping program.

The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in San Francisco's federal district court, charges that AT&T has opened its telecommunications facilities up to the NSA and continues to "to assist the government in its secret surveillance of millions of ordinary Americans."

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which filed the suit, says AT&T's alleged cooperation violates free speech and privacy rights found in the U.S. Constitution and also contravenes federal wiretapping law, which prohibits electronic surveillance "except as authorized by statute."

Kevin Bankston, an EFF staff attorney, said he anticipates that the Bush administration will intervene in the case on behalf of AT&T. "We are definitely going to have a fight with the government and AT&T," he said.

AT&T said Tuesday that it needed to review the complaint before it could respond. But AT&T spokesman Dave Pacholczyk told CNET News.com last week in response to a query about NSA cooperation: "We don't comment on matters of national security."

A Los Angeles Times article dated Dec. 26 quoted an unnamed source as saying the NSA has a "direct hookup" into an AT&T database that stores information about all domestic phone calls, including how long they lasted.

If the Bush administration does intervene, EFF could have a formidable hurdle to overcome: the so-called "state secrets" doctrine.

The state secrets privilege, outlined by the Supreme Court in a 1953 case, permits the government to derail a lawsuit that might otherwise lead to the disclosure of military secrets.

In other news:
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In 1998, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals elaborated on the state secret privilege in a case where former workers at the Air Force's classified Groom Lake, Nev., facility alleged hazardous waste violations. When requested by the workers' lawyers to turn over information, the Air Force refused.

The 9th Circuit upheld a summary judgment on behalf of the Air Force, saying that once the state secrets "privilege is properly invoked and the court is satisfied as to the danger of divulging state secrets, the privilege is absolute" and the case will generally be dismissed.

The Bush administration also is defending a related lawsuit filed earlier this month by the American Civil Liberties Union, that says the surveillance was unconstitutional and illegal.

AT&T has 30 days to file a response, which could include a request that the case be dismissed or a motion for summary judgment.

CNET News.com's Anne Broache contributed to this report
Snuffysmith
http://cqpolitics.com/cq.com/www.cq.com/pu...1_homeland.html

Official: Army Has Authority to Spy on Americans
By Jeff Stein, CQ Staff
“Contrary to popular belief, there is no absolute ban on [military] intelligence components collecting U.S. person information,” the U.S.Army’s top intelligence officer said in a 2001 memo that surfaced Tuesday.

Not only that, military intelligence agencies are permitted to “receive” domestic intelligence information, even though they cannot legally “collect” it,” according to the Nov. 5, 2001, memo issued by Lt. Gen. Robert W. Noonan Jr., the deputy chief of staff for intelligence.

“MI [military intelligence] may receive information from anyone, anytime,” Noonan wrote in the memo, obtained by Secrecy News, a newsletter from the non-profit Federation of American Scientists in Washington.

Defense Department and Army regulations “allow collection about U.S. persons reasonably believed to be engaged, or about to engage, in international terrorist activities,” Noonan continued.

“Remember, merely receiving information does not constitute ‘collection’ under AR [Army Regulation] 381-10; collection entails receiving ‘for use,’ ” he added. (Army Regulation 381-10, “U.S. Army Intelligence Activities,” was reissued on Nov. 22, 2005, but had not previously been disclosed publicly.) “Army intelligence may always receive information, if only to determine its intelligence value and whether it can be collected, retained, or disseminated in accordance with governing policy,”

The distinction between “receiving” and “collecting” seems “to offer considerable leeway for domestic surveillance activities under the existing legal framework,” wrote editor Steven Aftergood in Tuesday’s edition of Secrecy News.

“This in turn makes it harder to understand why the NSA domestic surveillance program departed from previous practice.”

Aftergood was alerted to the existence of the memo by another security expert, John Pike of GlobalSecurity.org, who thought that “there is enough ambiguity in the language that with a bit of creativity in managing the U.S. persons files there would have been not too much trouble” applying existing rules to the warrantless eavesdropping by the National Security Agency.

TALON Reports
The Pentagon’s Counterintelligence Field Activity (CIFA) was launched in 2002 with the mission of “gathering information and conducting activities to protect DoD and the nation against espionage, other intelligence activities, sabotage, assassinations, and terrorist activities,” according to a CIFA brochure. Its TALON program has amassed files on antiwar protesters, according to a Pentagon official.

“More than 5,000 TALON reports” were “received and shared throughout the government” in the program’s first year of operation,” Carol A. Haave, deputy undersecretary of Defense for counterintelligence and security, told the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence in May 2004.

“At that rate, about 12,500 Talon reports would have been filed during the approximately 2½ years the program has existed,” The Washington Post concluded Tuesday.

• Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence: “Collecting Information on U.S. Persons” (pdf)

• Edition of AR 381-10 dated July 1, 1984 (in effect until Dec. 22, 2005) (pdf)

Jeff Stein can be reached at jstein@cq.com.

Source: CQ Homeland Security
© 2006 Congressional Quarterly Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Snuffysmith
February 2, 2006
Senate Panel Rebuffed on Documents on U.S. Spying
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 — The Bush administration is rebuffing requests from members of the Senate Judiciary Committee for its classified legal opinions on President Bush's domestic spying program, setting up a confrontation in advance of a hearing scheduled for next week, administration and Congressional officials said Wednesday.

The Justice Department is balking at the request so far, administration officials said, arguing that the legal opinions would add little to the public debate because the administration has already laid out its legal defense at length in several public settings.

But the legality of the program is known to have produced serious concerns within the Justice Department in 2004, at a time when one of the legal opinions was drafted. Democrats say they want to review the internal opinions to assess how legal thinking on the program evolved and whether lawyers in the department saw any concrete limits to the president's powers in fighting terrorism.

With the committee scheduled to hold the first public hearing on the eavesdropping program on Monday, the Justice Department's stance could provoke another clash between Congress and the executive branch over access to classified internal documents. The administration has already drawn fire from Democrats in the last week for refusing to release internal documents on Hurricane Katrina as well as material related to the lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

Several Democrats and at least one Republican have pressed the Justice Department in recent days to give them access, even in a closed setting, to the internal documents that formed the legal foundation of the surveillance program. But when asked whether the classified legal opinions would be made available to Congress, a senior Justice Department official said Wednesday, "I don't think they're coming out."

The official said the administration's legal arguments had already been aired, most prominently in a 42-page "white paper" issued last month. "Everything that's in those memos was in the white paper," said the official, who, like other administration and Congressional officials, was granted anonymity because classified material was involved.

While the administration has spent much of the last two weeks defending the legality and necessity of the surveillance program, the Judiciary Committee session will be the first Congressional hearing on it. Senator Arlen Specter, the Pennsylvania Republican who leads the panel, said Wednesday that he had "a lot of questions" the administration had not yet adequately answered about the program's legal rationale.

Mr. Specter would not address the committee's request for the classified legal opinions, except to say, "that's not a closed matter — we're still working on that."

Several Democrats on the panel have made formal requests for the legal opinions, including Senator Dianne Feinstein of California.

In the interview, Mr. Specter said that he wanted a fuller explanation as to how the Justice Department asserts that the eavesdropping operation does not conflict with the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which set strict and "exclusive" guidelines for intelligence wiretaps.

The operation was approved by President Bush, to allow the National Security Agency to conduct wiretaps on Americans' international communications without a court warrant. Mr. Specter said his view was that the operation "violates FISA — there's no doubt about that."

He also questioned why the administration did not go to Congress or the intelligence court to seek changes in the process before moving ahead on its own with the classified program after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Representative Jane Harman, the California Democrat who was one of the few members of the Congress briefed on the operation, echoed that same theme in a letter sent Wednesday to President Bush.

She said in the letter that with changes made to the foreign intelligence law after the Sept. 11 attacks, the eavesdropping operations of the N.S.A. "can and should" be covered by court-approved warrants, "without circumventing" the process.

Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales will be the lone witness at next week's hearing, and his aides said he was entering it with confidence about the program's legal footing, based on both the president's inherent constitutional authority and a Congressional authorization after the Sept. 11 attacks to use military force against terrorists. But both Republicans and Democrats said Wednesday that they planned to question Mr. Gonzales about those assertions.

While the administration has laid out its legal defense repeatedly in the last two weeks, the formal legal opinions developed at the Justice Department to justify the program remain classified. The administration has refused even to publicly acknowledge the existence of the memorandums, but The New York Times has reported that two sets of legal opinions by the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel asserted the president's broad power to order wiretaps without warrants in protecting national security.

The first Justice Department opinion is thought to have been written in late 2001 or early 2002 by John Yoo, a strong proponent of expanded presidential powers in wartime. The second opinion, officials said, was drafted by Jack Goldsmith, another senior department official who later left to teach at Harvard. It came in 2004 at a time some senior officials at the Justice Department were voicing concerns about the program's legal foundation and refusing to sign off on its reauthorization.

Those concerns led in part to the suspension of the surveillance program for several months and also appear to have led Mr. Goldsmith and other Justice Department lawyers to revisit the question of its legal underpinnings in order to satisfy those concerns.

Members of the Judiciary Committee have sought access to the memorandums, officials said. Some Democrats speculate that the classified memos may contain far-reaching and potentially explosive legal theories similar to those advocated by Mr. Yoo and others, and later disavowed by the Justice Department, regarding policies on torture.

In a letter sent Wednesday to Mr. Gonzales, Mrs. Feinstein said the legal opinions and other internal documents were needed for Congress to assess whether the president "has the inherent authority to authorize this surveillance."

With two additional hearings scheduled on the program after Mr. Gonzales's appearance, Mr. Specter said he was also considering seeking testimony from former Justice Department officials, and perhaps even input from the FISA court itself.

But Senator Charles E. Schumer, a New York Democrat who also serves on the Judiciary Committee, said the panel should consider issuing subpoenas if the administration is not more forthcoming in providing documents and witnesses.

"Without the Justice Department memos and without more witnesses, it's hard to se how anything other than a rehashing of the administration line is going to happen," Mr. Schumer said Wednesday. "I am worried that these hearings could end up telling us very little when the American people are thirsty to find out what happened here."



Copyright 2006The New York Times
rox63
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washingt...ty_of_wiretaps/

QUOTE
Specialists doubt legality of wiretaps
Many rebut assertion of presidential powers


By Charlie Savage, Globe Staff  |  February 2, 2006

WASHINGTON -- Legal specialists yesterday questioned the accuracy of President Bush's sweeping contentions about the legality of his domestic spying program, particularly his assertion in his State of the Union speech on Tuesday that ''previous presidents have used the same constitutional authority I have."

Shortly after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Bush authorized the National Security Agency to intercept overseas calls from the United States without first seeking a warrant, asserting he had the right to do so under his wartime powers. On Tuesday night, he defended his program by saying past presidents have exerted the same powers.

But legal specialists said yesterday that wiretaps ordered by previous presidents were put in place before warrants were required for investigations involving national security. Since Congress passed the law requiring warrants in 1978, no president but Bush has defied it, specialists said.

Bush's contention that past presidents did the same thing as he has done ''is either intentionally misleading or downright false," said David Cole, a Georgetown University law professor. Only Bush has made the assertion that his wartime powers should supersede an act of Congress, Cole said.

Bush repeated his assertions about the legality of his spying program at a speech yesterday in Nashville. The president has been seeking to build public support for the program in advance of Senate hearings into the matter next week.

But Bush's comments in the State of the Union, which highlighted a week of election-style campaigning to defend the program, were almost entirely disputed yesterday by legal specialists across the ideological spectrum.

For example, Bush strongly implied that if his program had been in place before the terrorist attacks, the government would have identified two of the hijackers who were placing international calls from inside the United States.

But the 9/11 Commission found that the government had already grown suspicious about both of the hijackers in question before the attacks took place. Bureaucratic failures to share information about the hijackers, not ignorance of their existence, was the problem, the commission said.

Moreover, Bush said in his address that ''appropriate members of Congress have been kept informed" about the program. But Senator Arlen Specter, a Pennsylvania Republican and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, has said that under law Bush was required to brief all members of the intelligence committees -- not just their leaders, as he did.

Bush's assertion that his program was legal prompted a group of 14 prominent law professors, including both liberals and conservatives, to pen a joint letter objecting to his arguments. An expanded version of their letter rebutting Bush's assertions will be released today, the professors said.

Richard Epstein, a University of Chicago law professor and a member of the group, said he believes the Supreme Court would reject Bush's assertions that his wartime powers authorized him to override the law.

''I find every bit of this legal argument disingenuous," Epstein said. ''The president's position is essentially that [Congress] is not doing the right thing, so I'm going to act on my own."

The White House referred all questions about the spying section of Bush's speech to the Justice Department, where spokeswoman Tasia Scolinos acknowledged yesterday that all of the surveillance programs approved by past presidents pre-dated the warrant requirement.

But, she said, no court has said the 1978 the law changes the president's inherent constitutional power to conduct surveillance for national security purposes. And she said a 2002 opinion by a secret federal court acknowledged that the president had sweeping surveillance powers.

But Cole, the Georgetown professor, said the Bush administration is misstating the ruling in the 2002 case, including its requirement that the Justice Department seek warrants in national security cases. Cole said the case supported the notion that Congress could regulate the president's use of his surveillance powers.

Scolinos said Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who is scheduled to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee about the program on Monday, would offer a more detailed defense of the administration's legal theories.

Yesterday, some of Bush's defenders pointed out on conservative websites that the Clinton administration had authorized a search of the home of Aldrich Ames, a suspected Soviet spy, without a warrant in 1993.

But legal specialists said the Ames case is irrelevant because it involved a physical search of Ames's home, and the 1978 law did not require warrants for physical searches. The year after the Ames search, 1994, the law was amended to require warrants for physical searches and wiretaps.

Philip Heymann, a Harvard law professor who was then the deputy US attorney general and helped oversee the Ames investigation, said the Clinton administration began seeking warrants for physical searches as soon as the new law went into effect.

''The bottom line is, I know of no electronic surveillance for intelligence purposes since [the 1978 warrant law] was passed that was not done under the . . . statute," Heymann said.
rox63
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/02/opinion/02thu2.html

QUOTE
Editorial

The March of the Straw Soldiers

Published: February 2, 2006

President Bush is not giving up the battle over domestic spying. He's fighting it with an army of straw men and a fleet of red herrings.

In his State of the Union address and in a follow-up speech in Nashville yesterday, Mr. Bush threw out a dizzying array of misleading analogies, propaganda slogans and false choices: Congress authorized the president to spy on Americans and knew all about it ... 9/11 could have been prevented by warrantless spying ... you can't fight terrorism and also obey the law ... and Democrats are not just soft on national defense, they actually don't want to beat Al Qaeda.

"Let me put it to you in Texan," Mr. Bush drawled at the Grand Ole Opry House yesterday. "If Al Qaeda is calling into the United States, we want to know."

Yes, and so does every American. But that has nothing to do with Mr. Bush's decision to toss out the Constitution and judicial process by authorizing the National Security Agency to eavesdrop without a warrant. Let's be clear: the president and his team had the ability to monitor calls by Qaeda operatives into and out of the United States before 9/11 and got even more authority to do it after the attacks. They never needed to resort to extralegal and probably unconstitutional methods.

Mr. Bush said the warrantless spying was vetted by lawyers in the Justice Department, which is cold comfort. They also endorsed the abuse of prisoners and the indefinite detention of "unlawful enemy combatants" without charges or trials.

The president also said the spying is reviewed by N.S.A. lawyers. That's nice, but the law was written specifically to bring that agency, and the president, under control. And there already is a branch of government assigned to decide what's legal. It's called the judiciary. The law itself is clear: spying on Americans without a warrant is illegal.

One of the oddest moments in Mr. Bush's defense of domestic spying came when he told his audience in Nashville, "If I was trying to pull a fast one on the American people, why did I brief Congress?" He did not mention that some lawmakers protested the spying at the briefings, or that they found them inadequate. The audience members who laughed and applauded Mr. Bush's version of the truth may have forgot that he said he briefed Congress fully on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. We know how that turned out.
Snuffysmith
February 3, 2006
Senate Intel Chair Backs Domestic Spying
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 2:15 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts on Friday strongly backed President Bush's right to conduct warrantless electronic surveillance in the U.S., while Vice President Dick Cheney said disclosure of the program has done ''enormous damage to our national security.''

Presidents from George Washington to George W. Bush have intercepted communications to ascertain enemy threats to national security, Roberts, R-Kan., said in a letter to the chairman and senior Democrat of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

''Despite legal analysis by some critics, I am confident that the president retains the constitutional authority to conduct'' such spying when the primary purpose is the collection of foreign intelligence information regarding foreign powers, Roberts wrote in his 19-page letter to Sens. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.

Leahy is among Democrats who have questioned Bush's authority to conduct the domestic spying program.

Cheney, interviewed by conservative radio talk show host Laura Ingraham, said recent leaks in the news media of intelligence activities in the war on terrorism, including the once-secret surveillance program by the National Security Agency, have been ''egregious.''

''It, obviously, reveals techniques and sources and methods that are important to try to protect. It gives information to our enemies about how we go about collecting intelligence against them. It also raises questions in the minds of other intelligence services about whether or not they can work with the United States intelligence service, with our CIA, for example, if we can't keep a secret,'' Cheney said.

''Those leaks do enormous damage to our national security,'' he said.

Cheney said he agreed with CIA Director Porter Goss, who told a Senate hearing on Thursday that such leaks are undercutting U.S. intelligence efforts. ''I thought Director Goss was rather restrained in his comments, but he was absolutely correct,'' said Cheney.



Copyright 2006 The Associated Press Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact Us Work for Us Site Map Back to Top
Snuffysmith
Bush’s 'Probably Not a Terrorist Surveillance Program'
by Thomas R. Eddlem
by Tom R. Eddlem



President George Bush and senior members of his administration call it their "Terrorist Surveillance Program," but the NSA warrantless wiretapping program on American citizens is more accurately titled the "Probably Not a Terrorist Surveillance Program."

Senior Bush Administration officials have spent the past couple of weeks defending the National Security Agency’s program of spying on the private telephone calls of American citizens without seeking the constitutionally-required court warrant using talking points such as Bush uttered during his "State of the Union" address: "If there are people inside our country who are talking with al Qaeda, we want to know about it."

I’ve got no problem with tapping the calls of people who are al Qaeda, and Congress authorized the President to do this under the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). All that Bush has to do is follow the same Constitution he swore an oath to "preserve, protect and defend" by seeking a warrant. There’s even an emergency provision in FISA that lets the President tap a phone call before getting a warrant, which is similar to the common law doctrine of "hot pursuit" with regard to warrants. If all the President has to do is get a warrant within 72 hours after conducting the phone tap, it doesn’t slow down the NSA one bit to get the warrant.

Unless, of course, the NSA request for a warrant would be denied by the courts. And that’s where it becomes interesting. The constitutional standard for issuing a search warrant is defined by the fourth amendment, which states:

"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

The constitutional standard for issuing a warrant for a particular search involves "probable cause, supported by an oath or affirmation." If NSA searches don’t involve probable cause, then they would be denied a warrant. And if they are tapping American’s phone calls under this warrantless program, they are tapping the phones of people who, by definition, are probably not terrorists. Thus, the most appropriate name for the program is the "Probably Not a Terrorist Surveillance Program."

Note that the President no longer talks about warrants, though he told the American people many times that "Law enforcement officers need a federal judge's permission to wiretap a foreign terrorist's phone, or to track his calls, or to search his property." The word "warrant" is no longer in the administration’s vocabulary when discussing the NSA program.

Bush claims the constitutional power to conduct warrantless searches flows from his "commander-in-chief" powers under Article Two of the U.S. constitution. But even if Article Two gave him that power, the Fourth Amendment (which amended the Constitution) has taken any claim of legitimacy from that power.

Interestingly, Bush has campaigned vigorously for a renewal of the Patriot Act, which his own website claims requires a warrant for a wiretap. If he already possesses the "constitutional power" to conduct warrantless wiretaps, as he claims, why would he need Congress to give him the power to obtain wiretaps through a warrant?

Again, I am reduced to concluding that Bush’s warrantless program would not meet the Constitutional threshold for obtaining a search warrant: "probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation." And I am led to conclude that he is tapping the phones of Americans, every one of whom are – by definition – probably law-abiding citizens.

The "Probably Not a Terrorist Surveillance Program" is the cornerstone of what is wrong with Bush’s so-called "War on Terrorism." The fact that we are spending extraordinary resources on an unconstitutional spying program that by definition is looking for people who are probably not terrorists speaks for itself. But it is consistent with Bush’s past statements that he doesn’t intend to focus upon the actual people who brought the 9/11 terror to the United States, such as Osama bin Ladin. In a March 13, 2002 press conference, Bush explained that

"… the idea of focusing on one person is – really indicates to me people don't understand the scope of the mission. Terror is bigger than one person. And he's just – he's a person who's now been marginalized. His network, his host government has been destroyed. He's the ultimate parasite who found weakness, exploited it, and met his match. He is – as I mentioned in my speech, I do mention the fact that this is a fellow who is willing to commit youngsters to their death and he, himself, tries to hide – if, in fact, he's hiding at all. So I don't know where he is. You know, I just don't spend that much time on him, Kelly, to be honest with you."

Bush is no longer interested in actually bringing the real killers in 9/11 to justice. Osama bin Ladin, the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, remains a free man four and a half years after the event. But Osama remains a side issue to Bush’s larger "war," where we occupy Iraq, bomb Pakistan and threaten Iran. And this is a war that Bush and his aides concede will last a generation.

Bush’s so-called "War on Terrorism" is a phony war, and not just because Congress – the only body authorized by the U.S. constitution to declare war – didn’t declare it. Presidents are always declaring "war" when they want to appear to be making progress on a public concern without actually doing anything. This explains the phony wars on drugs, crime, and poverty. Whenever a politician starts talking about wars, look out for your disappearing freedoms.


American’s should inform their congressman that Bush’s "War on Terror" is not really a war on terror and his "Terrorist Surveillance program is more accurately called the "Probably Not a Terrorist Surveillance Program."

February 3, 2006

Thomas R. Eddlem [send him mail] is a native of the Boston area of Massachusetts and a graduate of Stonehill College. He is a radio talk show host in Southeastern Massachusetts and is a frequent contributor to The New American magazine.

Copyright © 2006 LewRockwell.com
rox63
http://rawstory.com/news/2005/AP_Cheney_Ru...mpose_0203.html

QUOTE
AP: Cheney, Rumsfeld fought to impose wiretaps for foreign intelligence thirty years ago

02/03/2006 @ 6:55 pm
Filed by RAW STORY

An intense debate erupted during the Ford administration over the president's powers to eavesdrop without warrants for foreign intelligence purposes, according to government documents obtained by The Associated Press, RAW STORY has learned.

The AP exclusive, "White House, Congress wrangled over spying three decades ago," is slotted to move to the wires soon.

"George H.W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney are cited in the papers, which reflect a remarkably similar dispute between the White House and Congress fully three decades before President Bush's acknowledgment that he authorized wiretaps of some Americans without warrants in terrorism investigations," writes AP reporter Margaret Ebrahim.

This occurred before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which restricted domestic spying.

Background on FISA from Facts on File:

"President Carter signed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act into law Oct. 25, 1978. It was the first major legislation to restrict national security wiretapping.

"The bill required the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Central Intelligence Agency and other federal agencies to obtain court approval before conducting most electronic surveillance in foreign intelligence cases.

"The exception was for certain National Security Agency operations, such as the interception of communications between a foreign embassy and its government. Unless evidence of criminal activity could be presented to a court, the "bugging" of Americans was banned.

"All of the U.S. intelligence agencies were on record in favor of the final bill. The American Civil Liberties Union also supported the legislation but objected to the NSA warrant exemption."

DEVELOPING...
Snuffysmith
February 4, 2006
How Do They Know Who Is a Terrorist?

by Charley Reese
Both law-enforcement and intelligence agencies fundamentally depend on informants. Informants in foreign intelligence are at best traitors to their respective countries. Informants in domestic crime issues are often paid, either in cash or in deals cut on crimes they have committed. Altogether, they are a sleazy lot.

One point many people often don't understand is that CIA officers are not spies. They are "case officers." Their job is to recruit spies (informants) and funnel the information back to the analysts.

Naturally, every country tries to depict its spies as noble people opposed to tyranny rather than people trapped and blackmailed, soreheads and neurotics or simply greedy opportunists. Often, informants working for money in domestic criminal cases will actually entrap some innocent person. That's how the sorry episode of Randy Weaver began, which ended with the deaths of his wife, his son and a deputy U.S. marshal in 1992.

A paid informant badgered Weaver, who was hard up for money to feed his family, into illegally sawing off a shotgun, s