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2006-01-22 Home Front: WoT
Terrorists on Tap
Do Al Gore and other Democrats really want to keep the government from finding al Qaeda agents in the U.S.?
In a speech last week, Al Gore took another swing at the National Security Agency's electronic surveillance program, which monitors international communications when one party is affiliated with terrorists. Specifically, Mr. Gore argued that George Bush "has been breaking the law repeatedly and persistently," and that such actions might constitute an impeachable offense. The question he raises is whether the president illegally bypassed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). But the real issue is national security: FISA is as adept at detecting--and, thus, preventing--a terrorist attack as a horse-and-buggy is at getting us from New York to Paris.

I have extensive experience with the consequences of government bungling due to overstrict interpretations of FISA. As chief counsel for the Senate Intelligence Committee from 1981 to 1984, I participated in oversight of FISA in the first years after its passage. When I subsequently became deputy assistant attorney general in the Reagan administration, one of my responsibilities was the terrorism portfolio, which included working with FISA.

In 1985, I experienced the pain of terminating a FISA wiretap when to do so defied common sense and thwarted the possibility of gaining information about American hostages. During the TWA 847 hijacking, American serviceman Robert Stethem was murdered and the remaining American male passengers taken hostage. We had a previously placed tap in the U.S. and thought there was a possibility we could learn the hostages' location. But Justice Department career lawyers told me that the FISA statute defined its "primary purpose" as foreign intelligence gathering. Because crimes were taking place, the FBI had to shut down the wire.

FISA's "primary purpose" became the basis for the "wall" in 1995, when the Clinton-Gore Justice Department prohibited those on the intelligence side from even communicating with those doing law enforcement. The Patriot Act corrected this problem and the FISA appeals court upheld the constitutionality of that amendment, characterizing the rigid interpretation as "puzzling." The court cited an FBI agent's testimony that efforts to investigate two of the Sept. 11 hijackers were blocked by senior FBI officials, concerned about the FISA rule requiring separation.

Today, FISA remains ill-equipped to deal with ever-changing terrorist threats. It was never envisioned to be a speedy collector of information to prevent an imminent attack on our soil. And the reasons the president might decide to bypass FISA courts are readily understandable, as it is easy to conjure up scenarios like the TWA hijacking, in which strict adherence to FISA would jeopardize American lives.
The overarching problem is that FISA, written in 1978, is technologically antediluvian. It was drafted by legislators who had no concept of how terrorists could communicate in the 21st century or the technology that would be invented to intercept those communications. The rules regulating the acquisition of foreign intelligence communications were drafted when the targets to be monitored had one telephone number per residence and all the phones were plugged into the wall. Critics like Al Gore and especially critics in Congress, rather than carp, should address the gaps created by a law that governs peacetime communications-monitoring but does not address computers, cell phones or fiber optics in the midst of war.

The NSA undoubtedly has identified many foreign phone numbers associated with al Qaeda. If these numbers are monitored only from outside the U.S., as consistent with FISA requirements, the agency cannot determine with certainty the location of the persons who are calling them, including whether they are in the U.S. New technology enables the president, via NSA, to establish an early-warning system to alert us immediately when any person located in the U.S. places a call to, or receives a call from, one of the al Qaeda numbers. Do Mr. Gore and congressional critics want the NSA to be unable to locate a secret al Qaeda operative in the U.S.?

If we had used this ability before 9/11, as the vice president has noted, we could have detected the presence of Khalid al-Mihdhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi in San Diego, more than a year before they crashed American Airlines Flight 77 into the Pentagon.

And to correct an oft-cited misconception, there are no five-minute "emergency" taps. FISA still requires extensive time-consuming procedures. To prepare the two- to three-inch thick applications for nonemergency warrants takes months. The so-called emergency procedure cannot be done in a few hours, let alone minutes. The attorney general is not going to approve even an emergency FISA intercept based on a breathless call from NSA.

For example, al Qaeda Agent X, having a phone under FISA foreign surveillance, travels from Pakistan to New York. The FBI checks airline records and determines he is returning to Pakistan in three hours. Background information must be prepared and the document delivered to the attorney general. By that time, Agent X has done his business and is back on the plane to Pakistan, where NSA can resume its warrantless foreign surveillance. Because of the antiquated requirements of FISA, the surveillance of Agent X has to cease only during the critical hours he is on U.S. soil, presumably planning the next attack.

Even if time were not an issue, any emergency FISA application must still establish the required probable cause within 72 hours of placing the tap. So al Qaeda Agent A is captured in Afghanistan and has Agent B's number in his cell phone, which is monitored by NSA overseas. Agent B makes two or three calls every day to Agent C, who flies to New York. That chain of facts, without further evidence, does not establish probable cause for a court to believe that C is an agent of a foreign power with information about terrorism. Yet, post 9/11, do the critics want NSA to cease monitoring Agent C just because he landed on U.S. soil?

Why did the president not ask Congress in 2001 to amend FISA to address these problems? My experience is instructive. After the TWA incident, I suggested asking the Hill to change the law. A career Justice Department official responded, "Congress will make it a political issue and we may come away with less ability to monitor." The political posturing by Democrats who suddenly found problems with the NSA program after four years of supporting it during classified briefings only confirms that concern.

It took 9/11 for Congress to pass the amendment breaking down the "wall," which had been on the Justice Department's wish list for 16 years. And that was just the simple tweak of changing two words. The issues are vastly more complicated now, requiring an entirely new technical paradigm, which could itself become obsolete with the next communications innovation.

There are other valid reasons for the president not to ask Congress for a legislative fix. To have public debate informs terrorists how we monitor them, harming our intelligence-gathering to an even greater extent than the New York Times revelation about the NSA program. Asking Congress for legislation would also weaken the legal argument, cited by every administration since 1978, that the president has constitutional authority beyond FISA to conduct warrantless wiretaps to acquire foreign intelligence information.

The courts may ultimately decide the legality of the NSA program. Meanwhile, the public should decide whether it wants NSA to monitor terrorists, or wait while congressional critics and Al Gore fiddle.
Posted by .com 2006-01-22 02:23|| || Front Page|| [10 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 Ironically, while such programs are very important in capable and honest hands, they would be horrific in the hands of those who are dishonest, dishonorable, treacherous, and seek only political advantage. Such as democrats.

This is why I am all in favor of what Al Gore is doing. I hope he is successful in convincing as much of the left as possible that such tools are wrong, evil, and must be outlawed. In fact I hope he expands on his idea to encompass a very liberal view of all civil liberties.

I hope he expands on this idea to include the abolition of the RICO statutes along with the confiscation of assets without trial and giving a 10% "cut" of seizures to local law enforcement--corrupting them too.

He should get democrats ranting against all forms of espionage and secret courts against US citizens. He should demand congressional oversight of all intelligence operations.

He should call for the creation of a Public Accountability Office to investigate abuse of power claims against appointed government officials.

He should start the ball rolling for a Constitutional Supremacy Amendment to the constitution, that says the constitution is superior to any foreign treaty.

Elimination of all federal laws redundant with, and usurping State laws, and not specifically authorized in the constitution.

Prohibition of public identity checks without due cause. Prohibition of a national identity card. Prohibition of sharing medical records between a health care provider, insurance companies, government agencies, or other outside companies without a court order.

Restoration of the "whistleblower" acts, with special provision for extra-organizational review of classified information (so CIA does not investigate CIA, etc.)

And finally, creation of a National Personal Information Database Registration Act. All databases containing above a certain threshold of personal information about citizens must be registered with the government. Except for law enforcement, some information cannot be held by a private entity without the express, written permission of the person.

The bottom line is that, while it is unwise to have thieves guarding the bank, it can be very useful indeed to have thieves demanding that bank security be increased, and pointing out why.

That is why I am hoping that Al Gore convinces many democrats that civil liberties are far more important that using the law to oppress the civil liberties of others, as Wm J. Clinton did.
Posted by  Anonymoose 2006-01-22 09:44||   2006-01-22 09:44|| Front Page Top

#2 Do Mr. Gore and congressional critics want the NSA to be unable to locate a secret al Qaeda operative in the U.S.?

In a word: YES!

Gore and the Left don't care about Al-Qaeda operatives in the US, or the deaths of innocent american civilians as long as they can ride the coattails of the deaths into power.

The democrats find themselves in a position where America must be defeated so that they can claim power. And I think (by looking at the acts of Gore, Clinton (less so), Carter, Murtha, Kerry, and Kennedy) that they are knowing trying to tie our hands behind our back so we can get the sh*t kicked out of us (like, according to them, we deserve). They hate everything to do with America and anyone (especially Bush) who would defend her.
Posted by CrazyFool 2006-01-22 10:43||   2006-01-22 10:43|| Front Page Top

#3 Like business, marriage, parenting, etc. there is a certain amount of trust has to be put into succesful relationships them to make them work. The same is true with our government. If a leader is or becomes corrupt and abuses the system, it is the balance of powers that allows us to go through the purposely difficult process of ridding ourselves of the bum.

The terrorists are using the our strengths as our weaknesses and if they succeed (looking at France and Britain and Spain and The Netherlands and Australia, it's easy to see that they might) you won't have to worry about any of those rights that Al Gore claims he seeks to protect. I say seeks, because CF nailed it, Al is about power, not protection.

Pretending that we need to fear our leaders, even Hillary or Al Gore, more than we do terrorists wishing to create mass destruction and genocide within our borders is nothing short of insane. Al and Hillary are constrained by the checks and balances of our government - Ahmadinejad and bin Laden are not. We need to rid ourselves of this terrorist threat and we will need to give up some of our liberties to do it, or we won't have any liberties to protect.

Think of it like WalMart. Lower prices to run your competition out of business and then raise them back up when its gone.
Posted by 2b 2006-01-22 11:29||   2006-01-22 11:29|| Front Page Top

#4 he's got that Monica pose going, doesn't he?
Posted by Frank G">Frank G  2006-01-22 12:29||   2006-01-22 12:29|| Front Page Top

#5 As Stassen's replacement in the eternal prez run...
He will over print Stassen's old buttons

Student's For StassenGore for Peace

Stassen had so many that he could reuse the same buttons election after election. Now Gore will save the enviornment and the world by continuing their use.
Posted by 3dc 2006-01-23 00:01||   2006-01-23 00:01|| Front Page Top

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