Panel tells Obama to
curb NSA spy program
WASHINGTON -- A group appointed by President Barack Obama to review U.S.
surveillance tactics is recommending widespread changes to the controversial
National Security Agency spy programs, including ending the NSA’s dragnet
collection of millions of Americans’ telephone records.
The report by the
Review Group on Intelligence and Communications Technologies doesn’t call for
the elimination of the spying program but proposes nearly 50 fixes,
acknowledging that privacy and civil liberties “can be and at times have been
eroded by excessive intelligence collection.”
Obama, who met
Wednesday at the White House with members of the panel, is reviewing the
recommendations with his national security staff and will announce in January
which recommendations the administration will adopt.
The White House said
it wouldn’t comment on the group’s recommendations while its internal review is
underway. It said Obama told the group that he expects the U.S. to use its
intelligence capabilities “in a way that optimally protects our national security
while supporting our foreign policy, respecting privacy and civil liberties,
maintaining the public trust, and reducing the risk of unauthorized
disclosure.”
Obama announced the
group in August amid rising public concern over the scope of surveillance
following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Documents obtained by former
NSA contractor Edward Snowden showed the NSA was collecting the telephone
records of tens of millions of Verizon customers as well as emails through nine
companies including tech giants Microsoft, Yahoo, Google and Facebook.
The authors of the
report said the changes – some of which require congressional approval _ would
protect privacy and civil liberties without undermining national security
“We’re not saying that
the struggle against terrorism is over or that is has declined to such an
extent that we can dismantle the mechanisms that we have put in place to
safeguard the country,” said Richard Clarke, who served as a counterterrorism
and security adviser in the administrations of Presidents George H.W. Bush,
Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. “What we are saying is those mechanisms can be
more transparent, and that they can have more independent outside oversight and
judicial oversight.”
Clarke said the fixes
would give the public “a sense of trust that goes beyond what it has today.”
Of the panel’s 46
recommendations, it most notably calls for an end to the NSA’s storage of
Americans’ telephone records. Despite NSA officials’ assurances that the
metadata is simply unimportant, impersonal digits, board members said it should
not be in the hands of the government. Instead, the recommendations call for
the data to be kept by phone companies or another third party, available for
the government with a specific court order akin to a warrant.
“A fundamental
recommendation is that the government should not hold on to this data,” said
panel member Michael Morell, the former deputy director of the CIA. “And we
leave it an open question who should.”
But the concept of
taking the records out of the government’s hands may be a tough sell with the
NSA, which says the dragnet allows it to have the complete “haystack” of
possible terror connections. By letting phone companies keep the records, NSA
director Gen. Keith Alexander has said, the NSA is unable to see all of the
possible connections.
“If you only go to one
company, you’ll see what that phone company has. But you may not see what the
other phone company has or the other,” Alexander recently told CBS’ “60
Minutes.” “So by putting those together, we can see all of that essentially at
one time.”
In addition to
allowing phone companies to hold the data, the panel also calls for each query
to have its own specific court order. A bulk court order _ which the agency is
currently using _ would no longer be permissible.
The board also urges
more stringent handling of Americans’ data that is collected incidentally
through targeting foreigners, or as NSA critics have called it, the “backdoor
loophole.”
The revelations that
the U.S. was spying on foreign allies sparked outrage abroad. The panel defines
concrete standards for targeting the communications of foreign leaders and
calls for Obama to create a new process that requires the “highest-level approval”
of all such surveillance.
The panel also
addressed the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which has long
been pegged by NSA critics as a rubber stamp for the nation’s intelligence
community. A public interest advocate to represent Americans’ interest in the
government’s dealings with the court is necessary, the panel says, and more of
the court’s decisions should be declassified.
It also recommends
providing privacy act protections to both U.S. and non-U.S. citizens, and that
the next NSA director be a civilian and be subject to Senate confirmation.
The release comes just
days after a federal judge found that the program that collects massive amounts
of telephone data “likely” violates the Constitution. Though that ruling is
stayed pending the government’s appeal, the legal argument is expected to end
up before the U.S. Supreme Court.
In his decision, U.S.
District Judge Richard Leon of Washington took note of what he called the
“almost Orwellian technology that enables the government to store and analyze
the phone metadata of every telephone user in the United States.”
Some civil liberties
groups had expressed worries that that the panel’s members were too close to
the Obama administration to provide a conclusive fix, but the American Civil Liberties
Union said Wednesday that the report includes many ACLU positions, and it
encouraged Obama to adopt them.
The Open Technology
Institute hailed some of the findings but called on Obama to end the bulk
collection program entirely. The group’s policy director, Kevin Bankston, said
Obama should “consider the positive reforms contained in the review group
report as the floor, not the ceiling, when it comes to reining in the NSA’s
massive surveillance programs and enacting meaningful reforms.”
Obama would be “well
served to take the advice of the board and restructure the program as soon as
possible,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., a member of the House intelligence
committee. Citing the recent court ruling and congressional interest in
overhauling the NSA, Schiff added, “It would be better to have this undertaken
in an orderly and expeditious fashion than to wait for it to be compelled by
the Congress or the courts.”
The spy program began
during George W. Bush’s administration and has been continued through Obama’s
presidency. The program operates by having FBI agents obtain orders from the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, directing telecommunications companies
to turn over the information on an ongoing, daily basis.
No comments:
Post a Comment