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Wiretap at WillCongressional Democrats redefine spinelessness with the new FISA law.


In an editorial last year, the New York Times likened the Bush administration's efforts to retroactively make its warrantless wiretapping program legal, to a person caught speeding who persuades the legislature to raise the speed limit. The new surveillance bill President Bush signed into law Sunday takes this analogy to its logical extreme: Where government surveillance is concerned, the new law eliminated speed limits altogether. The infrastructure this nation established following Watergate to govern domestic spying has died many little deaths in the years since 9/11. But Sunday was the last sequel in a tired series. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is now dead, and it's never coming back.

The secrecy and complexity of government wiretapping make it an especially difficult issue for the average American to grasp, and—for the same reasons—an especially easy issue for politicians to manipulate. The finer points of the FISA are complicated: Debates about the 1978 law have a tendency to degenerate into impenetrable legalese. The technology itself is tough to grasp, as well; talk of data packets and data mining can be a bit forbidding, and it's all so secret that whatever the public does learn from the occasional leak seldom amounts to a comprehensive picture anyhow.

To further complicate matters, politicians keep insisting that even when we cannot understand all this patchy techno-legal babble surrounding eavesdropping, the public should nevertheless recognize that it's really, really important, and that fixes to the existing programs are so urgently needed, that there's not even time to comprehend what's being changed. In prevailing upon congressional Democrats to pass the new surveillance bill before leaving for the August recess, Trent Lott suggested that if they didn't, the capital might well be attacked, advising his fellow Washingtonians "to leave town in August."



The law the Congress ended up passing, which—I kid you not—is called the Protect America Act, was designed to remedy a fairly specific problem. But taking advantage of this potent combination of complexity, secrecy, and urgency, the White House and the Republican minority managed not only to fix the problem but to simultaneously do away with the most fundamental judicial controls on surveillance altogether.

To be fair, there were compelling grounds for changing FISA. As originally drafted, the law required spies who wanted to eavesdrop inside the United States to obtain a warrant. When it came to intercepting purely foreign communications, they could do what they liked—FISA didn't apply. During the Cold War, the NSA relied on a global network of "listening stations" outside the United States to hoover up phone calls and faxes in Central America or the Eastern bloc. But as telecommunications—and especially the Internet—evolved, a communication between, say, Paris and Karachi, might actually be routed through the United States and thus become off-limits to government agents without a warrant. This was the so-called "surveillance gap," and the White House—not unreasonably—wanted to close it.

One way to do that was to create a warrantless wiretapping program that didn't answer to FISA at all, and that worked fairly well, until the Times revealed its existence in 2005. A year later, officials opted to bring the wiretapping program within the scope of FISA. But in a secret ruling, the FISA court held that in order to intercept foreign e-mail or phone calls as they transited the United States, the agency needed a warrant. As a consequence, the court was reportedly flooded with applications. Last May, National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell told Congress America's spies were "missing a significant portion of what we should be getting."

Closing the surveillance gap should have been fairly simple. All you needed was an amendment to FISA that redefined "electronic surveillance" in such a way that it would permit U.S. intelligence to access foreign communications as they transited through this country. The Democrats were happy to do that—in fact, it was a major feature of their own bill. This proposal would have authorized spies to tap communications passing through the United States when they "reasonably believed" the targets to be outside the country. Recognizing that this would massively expand the capabilities of the NSA, the Democrats also introduced oversight mechanisms: maintaining some measure of FISA court review; providing for a periodic audit by the Justice Department's inspector general of how many Americans had been caught up in the surveillance unwittingly; and including explicit provisions against purely domestic surveillance.

But having lobbied for "modernization" of FISA, the White House also wanted more. As Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., put it, "The White House didn't want to take 'yes' for an answer." Instead, Bush petulantly announced that he didn't like the Democrats' bill and threatened to hold Congress hostage, preventing them from adjourning for August, until he got "a bill I can sign." And what he had in mind was a bill with all of the new surveillance powers, but none of the oversight mechanisms to check it.

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Patrick Radden Keefe, a fellow at the Century Foundation, is the author of Chatter, which is out in paperback.
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Remarks from the Fray:

With the substantial majority vote on the legislation in the House as well as the Senate, I am puzzled by the motivations of the members of Congress. Unlike a lot of people, I don't regard our elected officials as craven, spineless, fools. Indeed, Democrats and Republicans are for the most part very hard working, and easily as smart as the rest of us, if not more so. And I don't regard the past election as much of a "mandate" as the author appears to believe. The Senate is 49-49, and the House is separated by a few dozen votes. It seems like something else is going on here - perhaps the Congressmen know more than the author about the specific threats facing our country and honestly believe that this legislation would be helpful. It also may be that the critics of this program, such as the author, have been so shrill in spreading hysteria about the erosion of civil liberties, that it has become hard to believe that the program is fundamentally sound - and made more so by the legislation just passed and signed by the President. I have seen this sort of rhetoric over and over - about the "spinelessness of the political class" - always from folks who set themselves up as critics and who bear little responsibility for their views, unlike a member of Congress.

--dgorton

(To reply, click here.)

This article, like many blog comments, contains a fundamental distortion. It complains of wimpish Democrats who are ignoring the mandate of the last election. The problem with that is that the Democrats who are enabling the administration were not elected by constituencies who support the progressive agenda, with a couple of notable exceptions like Diane Feinstein in the Senate. They are largely the blue dog Democrats. This is a split in the Democratic Party that preexisted the last election and survives it. The leadership of the party is powerless to do much of anything about that.

--JackD

(To reply, click here.)

Both the Democratic and Republican parties are banking on something they both believe is inevitable -- a future terrorist attack on the United States. Believing that one or more will happen, they are mainly concerned with being able to deflect any criticism from themselves and towards the other party when it does happen. Realism, effective methods, and balancing security against freedom ---- none of these things matter as much as being able to deflect criticism when the next attack comes. No one wants to take even the most minimal risk that some future demagogue can "pin the blame" on a major terrorist attack on their party. Both parties are racing to "get ahead of history" that hasn't happened yet. They are setting up a situation where any future terrorist action might have the 'practical' effect of a pin-prick, but our nation will be so wound up it will explode politically like a massive IED.

Sadly, neither party is likely to stand up and be reasonable.

Refusal to panick along with the herd might be taken as evidence of disloyalty. So they stamped, and we get carried along....

--fozzy

(To reply, click here.)

I understand the government would not give out names of people eavesdropped on, but why should the programs be classified? So the terrorists don't know the NSA is trying to eavesdrop on them?

Would any al Qaeda member really think their bank accounts, emails and phone calls were safe? No. The only reason I can imagine is to keep the American people in the dark. Oh, and to escape judicial oversight, as the recent ACLU v NSA case showed. If you can't prove the program exists, you can't fight it.

--TheDuke

(To reply, click here.)

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