Bush’s Secret Surveillance State
by
Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory
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 Fourth Amendment
“[B]y
the way, any time you hear the United States government talking
about wiretap, it requires a wiretap requires a
court order. Nothing has changed, by the way. When we're talking
about chasing down terrorists, we're talking about getting a court
order before we do so. It's important for our fellow citizens
to understand, when you think Patriot Act, constitutional guarantees
are in place when it comes to doing what is necessary to protect
our homeland, because we value the Constitution.”
~
President George W. Bush, April 20, 2004
The Bush administration
appears to consider public knowledge of its illegal surveillance
of American citizens to be more dangerous than the surveillance
itself.
On December 16,
2005, the New York Times reported that President Bush has been secretly ordering the National Security Agency
to spy on American citizens within the United States without first
getting judicially issued warrants. Asked repeatedly about the controversy
during an interview with Jim Lehrer on the day the story broke, Bush evaded
the questions. He responded, We dont talk about sources
and methods. Dont talk about ongoing intelligence operations.
I know theres speculation. But its important for the
American people to understand that we will do or I will use
my powers to protect us, and I will do so under the law, and thats
important for our citizens to understand.
The same day,
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also defended Bushs vague and secret powers to protect us,
insisting that Bush has always said that he will do everything
that he can to protect the American people from the kind of attack
that we experienced on September 11, but within the law and
with due regard to the civil liberties of Americans.
On December 17 Bush conceded that he had in fact ordered the
secret spying, saying that it made it more likely that killers
like these 9/11 hijackers will be identified and located in time.
He described the program as critical to saving American lives.
By December 19,
the administration appeared visibly emboldened on the issue. Attorney
General Alberto Gonzales went so far as to say that the president
had the inherent authority to perform such secret, warrantless wiretaps
of people in the United States. The president, on
the same day, vowed that the program would resume for
so long as the nation faces the continuing threat of an enemy that
wants to kill American citizens. Even more remarkably, he
called the disclosure of the program a shameful act
and said, The fact that were discussing this program
is helping the enemy.
So in just
a few days, the administration had gone from refusing to discuss
the program to outright defending it, all the while suggesting that
the Constitution and Congresss authorization of power to the president immediately
following the 9/11 attacks together give the executive branch
any number of unchecked, secretive powers over the American people
and that all the president has to do is claim that his actions
are for national security and we should all shut up
about them lest we assist the terrorists.
Just this
last Saturday, December 24, the New York Times reported that the administration gathered much more information through
the NSA program than it had so far admitted, including a wide range
of data to perform pattern analysis, the profiling
for certain calling behaviors a process that reportedly exposed
the entire U.S. telecommunications system, including e-mail, to
surveillance and that the program monitored both domestic
and international calls. This news of domestic spying comes less
than a week after one of the administrations top intelligence officials said at
a White House briefing, I can assure you, by the physics of
the intercept, by how we actually conduct our activities, that one
end of these communications are always outside the United States.
The secrecy
and dishonesty surrounding this program are especially troubling.
What has the administration got to hide? For a full year, the New
York Times kept the story secret at the request of the administration. Bush
even invited the newspapers publisher and executive editor
into the Oval Office on December 6 in one last desperate attempt
to dissuade them from releasing the story, according to Newsweek.
Will the president
actually get away with such blatant disregard for the Bill of Rights,
the balance of powers, and the right of the American people to know
what their government is doing to them and in their behalf?
So far, the
main argument to sustain the secrecy of the surveillance state seems
rather circular. We can trust the government to do what is right
because it tells us it is doing what is right. On December 17,
the president himself defended the powers, claiming that while in
the United States, two of the 9/11 terrorists, Nawaf Alhazmi and
Khalid Almihdhar, had contacted suspected members of al-Qaeda, but
that U.S. intelligence, constrained by the traditional checks and
balances, didnt know they were here until it was too
late. However, according to a 2002 report by the House and Senate intelligence
committees, the problem was not a lack of power but rather bureaucratic
bumbling: NSA and the FBI did not fully coordinate their efforts,
and, as a result, the opportunity to determine Almihdhars
presence in the United States was lost. (Incidentally, it
was also bureaucratic incompetence, not a lack of power, that impeded the FBI
investigation of Zacarias Moussaoui; the feds relied foolishly
on the FISA process, when an old-fashioned search warrant would
probably have been attainable.)
The NSA spying
program is especially egregious, given that the administration circumvented
the already lower standards for surveillance set forth by FISA and
unleashed an arm of the military to spy on Americans communications.
But it is only the newest blunt tool of the secretive surveillance
state to come to light.
Since 9/11,
the FBIs powers to issue National Security Letters and to
coerce institutions to reveal customers’ personal and financial
information have been expanded, notably by the USA PATRIOT Act passed
in October 2001. Recipients of these letters must comply with them
without telling anyone, including the customers whose personal information
is being revealed. By late in 2005, the FBI was issuing about 30,000 of them annually.
In August
2005, the FBI admitted to secretly collecting thousands of files on nonviolent
activist and anti-war groups, including the ACLU. The newest released files include documents on the Catholic Worker
Movement, an anti-poverty organization which the documentation notes
has a semi-communistic ideology.
Just this
month, NBC News obtained a secret 400-page database maintained
by the Pentagon that contained information on anti-war gatherings
and demonstrations within the United States, including a meeting
of anti-war Quakers in Florida that the database describes as a
suspicious incident and a threat.
The real threat
to American liberty, the defense of which the administration still
insists is the purpose of the war on terror, is a federal government
without strict checks and limits on its power, whose executives
feel comfortable using the military to spy on peaceful Americans,
while telling the media not to report their secret and unconstitutional
surveillance activities. The use of a military intelligence agency
against the American people, with or without judicial oversight,
is far more a shameful act than reporting such activities
to the American people, who have a right to know.
A government
that spies on its own people must in turn be watched even more carefully
by those people. And a government that does not trust the people
to know about its spying cannot itself be trusted.
December
28, 2005
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California. He is
a research analyst at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information. This article originally appeared
on the Future of Freedom Foundation
website.
Copyright
© 2005 Future of Freedom Foundation
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