Hill
lawmakers battle over future of NSA spying, in wake of White House report
Capitol Hill lawmakers involved in national
intelligence concerns disagreed Sunday about whether to stop the NSA’s massive
mining of phone records, following the release of a White House report that
calls for the federal government to no longer store such information and
questions whether the program stops terror attacks.
“This is not the Holy Grail of reports,” Rep.
Mike Rogers, R-Mich., chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence, told ABC's "This Week.”
The Michigan lawmaker said he disagrees with
the argument the White House advisory panel report was a devastating blow to
the National Security Agency’s gathering of telephone metadata and with the
report recommendation that telecommunications companies or a third party store
the data.
“That’s less safe than what we have,” said the
hawkish Rogers.
He also argued the report, by a five-member
panel appointed by President Obama, found no abuse or criminal activity. But he
acknowledged the report opens the door for further debate on Capitol Hill when
lawmakers return from break.
In the face of strong public concern about
government overreach, the president suggested after the release of the report
that he might be open to changing the program, after arguing it is an
“important tool to disrupt terror plots.”
The report was released Wednesday, several
days after a District Court Judge in Washington, D.C., called the program
“nearly Orwellian” and ruled that asking a judge in a secret court for a
warrant to spy on millions of American cellphone users without evidence of
probable cause of criminal behavior is unconstitutional.
“That’s just one judge’s perspective,”
Rogers said.
Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., a member of the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, backed the report and its 46 recommendations,
suggesting they should be reviewed upon Congress’ return.
“The argument for the status quo fell apart
[last] week,” he told ABC. “The NSA has over-reached. … We have to rebuild
American’s trust … but we cannot do that by bulk-data collection.”
Rogers and Udall agreed that Edward Snowden,
the NSA contractor who sparked a national debate on such issues after leaking
details of the NSA’s domestic and international spying efforts, should return
to the United States to defend accusations he committed treason.
“I’ll pay for his plane ticket,” Rogers said.
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