President Obama’s Dragnet
Within hours of the disclosure that the
federal authorities routinely collect data on phone calls Americans
make, regardless of whether they have any bearing on a counterterrorism
investigation, the Obama administration issued the same platitude it has
offered every time President Obama has been caught overreaching in the
use of his powers: Terrorists are a real menace and you should just
trust us to deal with them because we have internal mechanisms (that we
are not going to tell you about) to make sure we do not violate your
rights.
Those reassurances have never been persuasive —
whether on secret warrants to scoop up a news agency’s phone records or
secret orders to kill an American suspected of terrorism — especially
coming from a president who once promised transparency and
accountability.
The administration has now lost all
credibility on this issue. Mr. Obama is proving the truism that the
executive will use any power it is given and very likely abuse it. That
is one reason we have long argued that the Patriot Act, enacted in the
heat of fear after the 9/11 attacks by members of Congress who mostly
had not even read it, was reckless in its assignment of unnecessary and
overbroad surveillance powers.
Based on an article in The Guardian published Wednesday night,
we now know the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the National
Security Agency used the Patriot Act to obtain a secret warrant to
compel Verizon’s business services division to turn over data on every
single call that went through its system. We know that this particular
order was a routine extension of surveillance that has been going on for
years, and it seems very likely that it extends beyond Verizon’s
business division. There is every reason to believe the federal
government has been collecting every bit of information about every
American’s phone calls except the words actually exchanged in those
calls.
Articles in The Washington Post and The Guardian
described a process by which the N.S.A. is also able to capture
Internet communications directly from the servers of nine leading
American companies. The articles raised questions about whether the
N.S.A. separated foreign communications from domestic ones.
A senior administration official quoted in The
Times about the Verizon order offered the lame observation that the
information does not include the name of any caller, as though there
would be the slightest difficulty in matching numbers to names. He said
the information “has been a critical tool in protecting the nation from
terrorist threats,” because it allows the government “to discover
whether known or suspected terrorists have been in contact with other
persons who may be engaged in terrorist activities, particularly people
located inside the United States.”
That is a vital goal, but how is it served by
collecting everyone’s call data? The government can easily collect phone
records (including the actual content of those calls) on “known or
suspected terrorists” without logging every call made. In fact, the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act was expanded in 2008 for that very
purpose. Essentially, the administration is saying that without any
individual suspicion of wrongdoing, the government is allowed to know
who Americans are calling every time they make a phone call, for how
long they talk and from where.
This sort of tracking can reveal a lot of
personal and intimate information about an individual. To casually
permit this surveillance — with the American public having no idea that
the executive branch is now exercising this power — fundamentally shifts
power between the individual and the state, and repudiates
constitutional principles governing search, seizure and privacy.
The defense of this practice offered by
Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, who as chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee is supposed to be preventing this sort of
overreaching, was absurd. She said today that the authorities need this
information in case someone might become a terrorist in the future.
Senator Saxby Chambliss of Georgia, the vice chairman of the committee,
said the surveillance has “proved meritorious, because we have gathered
significant information on bad guys and only on bad guys over the
years.”
But what assurance do we have of that,
especially since Ms. Feinstein went on to say that she actually did not
know how the data being collected was used?
The senior administration official quoted in
The Times said the executive branch internally reviews surveillance
programs to ensure that they “comply with the Constitution and laws of
the United States and appropriately protect privacy and civil
liberties.”
That’s no longer good enough. Mr. Obama
clearly had no intention of revealing this eavesdropping, just as he
would not have acknowledged the killing of Anwar al-Awlaki, an American
citizen, had it not been reported in the press. Even then, it took him
more than a year and a half to acknowledge the killing, and he is still
keeping secret the protocol by which he makes such decisions.
We are not questioning the legality under the
Patriot Act of the court order disclosed by The Guardian. But we
strongly object to using that power in this manner. It is the very sort
of thing against which Mr. Obama once railed, when he said in 2007 that
the Bush administration’s surveillance policy “puts forward a false
choice between the liberties we cherish and the security we provide.”
Two Democrats on the Senate Intelligence
Committee, Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon and Senator Mark Udall of
Colorado, have raised warnings about the government’s overbroad
interpretation of its surveillance powers. “We believe most Americans
would be stunned to learn the details of how these secret court opinions
have interpreted Section 215 of the Patriot Act,” they wrote last year
in a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. “As we see it, there is
now a significant gap between what most Americans think the law allows
and what the government secretly claims the law allows. This is a
problem, because it is impossible to have an informed public debate
about what the law should say when the public doesn’t know what its
government thinks the law says.”
On Thursday, Representative Jim Sensenbrenner,
Republican of Wisconsin, who introduced the Patriot Act in 2001, said
that the National Security Agency overstepped its bounds by obtaining a
secret order to collect phone log records from millions of Americans.
“As the author of the Patriot Act, I am
extremely troubled by the F.B.I.’s interpretation of this legislation,”
he said in a statement. “While I believe the Patriot Act appropriately
balanced national security concerns and civil rights, I have always
worried about potential abuses.” He added: “Seizing phone records of
millions of innocent people is excessive and un-American.”
Stunning use of the act shows, once again, why it needs to be sharply curtailed if not repealed.
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