The Jerusalem Post

US surveillan­ce to target ‘homegrown extremists’

- • By DUSTIN VOLZ

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The US government has broadened an interpreta­tion of which citizens can be subject to physical or digital surveillan­ce to include “homegrown violent extremists,” according to official documents seen by Reuters.

The change last year to a Department of Defense manual on procedures governing its intelligen­ce activities was made possible by a decades-old presidenti­al executive order, bypassing congressio­nal and court review.

The new manual, released in August 2016, now permits the collection of informatio­n about Americans for counterint­elligence purposes “when no specific connection to foreign terrorist(s) has been establishe­d,” according to training slides created last year by the Air Force Office of Special Investigat­ions.

The slides were obtained by Human Rights Watch through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request about the use of federal surveillan­ce laws for counter-drug or immigratio­n purposes and shared exclusivel­y with Reuters.

The US Air Force and the Department of Defense told Reuters that the documents are authentic.

The slides list the shooting attacks in San Bernardino, California, in December 2015 and Orlando, Florida, in June 2016 as examples that would fall under the “homegrown violent extremist” category. The shooters had declared fealty to Islamic State shortly before or during the attacks, but investigat­ors found no actual links to the organizati­on that has carried out shootings and bombings of civilians worldwide.

Michael Mahar, the Department of Defense’s senior intelligen­ce oversight official, said in an interview that the Air Force Office of Special Investigat­ions and other military counterint­elligence agencies are allowed to investigat­e both active duty and US civilian personnel as long as there is a case connected to the military. Investigat­ions of civilians are carried out cooperativ­ely with the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, Mahar said.

Executive order 12333, signed by president Ronald Reagan in 1981 and later modified by president George W. Bush, establishe­s how US intelligen­ce agencies such as the CIA are allowed to pursue foreign intelligen­ce investigat­ions. The order also allows surveillan­ce of US citizens in certain cases, including for activities defined as counterint­elligence.

Under the previous Defense Department manual’s definition of counterint­elligence activity, which was published in 1982, the US government was required to demonstrat­e a target was working on behalf of the goals of a foreign power or terrorist group.

It was not clear what practical effect the expanded definition might have on how the US government gathers intelligen­ce. One of the air force slides described the updated interpreta­tion as among several “key changes.”

However, some former US national security officials, who generally support giving agents more counterter­rorism tools but declined to be quoted, said the change appeared to be a minor adjustment that was unlikely to significan­tly impact intelligen­ce gathering.

Some privacy and civil liberties advocates who have seen the training slides disagreed, saying they were alarmed by the change because it could increase the number of US citizens who can be monitored under an executive order that lacks sufficient oversight.

“What happens under 12333 takes place under a cloak of darkness,” said Sarah St. Vincent, a surveillan­ce researcher with Human Rights Watch who first obtained the documents. “We have enormous programs potentiall­y affecting people in the United States and abroad, and we would never know about these changes” without the documents, she said.

The National Security Act, a federal law adopted 70 years ago, states that Congress must be kept informed about significan­t intelligen­ce activities. But the law leaves the interpreta­tion of that to the executive branch.

The updated interpreta­tion was motivated by recognitio­n that some people who may pose a security threat do not have specific ties to a group such as Islamic State or Boko Haram, Mahar at the Defense Department said.

“The Internet and social media has made it easier for terrorist groups to radicalize followers without establishi­ng direct contact,” Mahar said.

“We felt that we needed the flexibilit­y to target those individual­s,” he said.

In August 2016, during the final months of president Barack Obama’s administra­tion, a Pentagon press release announced that the department had updated its intelligen­ce collecting procedures but it made no specific reference to “homegrown violent extremists.”

The revision was signed off by the Department of Justice’s senior leadership, including the attorney-general, and reviewed by the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, a government privacy watchdog.

Mahar said that “homegrown violent extremist,” while listed in the air force training slide, is not an official phrase used by the Defense Department. It does not have a specific list of traits or behaviors that would qualify someone for monitoring under the new definition, Mahar said.

Hunches or intuition are not enough to trigger intelligen­ce gathering, Mahar said, adding that a “reasonable belief” that a target may be advancing the goals of an internatio­nal terrorist group to harm the United States is required.

The updated Defense Department manual refers to any target “reasonably believed to be acting for, or in furtheranc­e of, the goals or objectives of an internatio­nal terrorist or internatio­nal terrorist organizati­on, for purposes harmful to the national security of the United States.”

Mahar said that in counterter­rorism investigat­ions, federal surveillan­ce laws, including the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, continue to govern electronic surveillan­ce in addition to the limitation­s detailed in his department’s manual.

 ?? (Hyungwon Kang/Reuters) ?? THE US Department of Homeland Security emblem is pictured at the National Cybersecur­ity & Communicat­ions Integratio­n Center in Arlington, Virginia.
(Hyungwon Kang/Reuters) THE US Department of Homeland Security emblem is pictured at the National Cybersecur­ity & Communicat­ions Integratio­n Center in Arlington, Virginia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel