Edmonton Journal

Surveillan­ce could have prevented 9/11, Cheney says

- LEE- ANNE GOODMAN

WASHINGTON —DickCheney, one of the most controvers­ial political figures in contempora­ry American politics, said Sunday that Americans have nothing to fear from widespread government surveillan­ce programs, adding the practices could have prevented the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Cheney, vice-president to George W. Bush during the post-9/11 period when the current surveillan­ce programs were first implemente­d, said congressio­nal lawmakers like fellow Republican Rand Paul are wrong to suggest the practices are an invasion of Americans’ privacy.

He also branded Edward Snowden, the former government contractor who leaked details of the National Security Agency programs to the media, a “traitor” and suggested he was a Chinese spy.

“As everybody who’s been associated with the program’s said, if we had had this before 9/11 ... we might well have been able to prevent 9/11,” Cheney said on Fox News Sunday.

Of Snowden, he added: “I think he’s a traitor. I think it’s one of the worst occasions, in my memory, of somebody with access to classified informatio­n doing enormous damage to the national security interests of the United States. ... I am very, very worried that he still has additional informatio­n that he hasn’t released yet, that the Chinese would welcome the opportunit­y.”

Cheney’s comments aren’t surprising — in the traumatic aftermath of 9/11, the Bush administra­tion initiated many of the current, far-reaching surveillan­ce tactics that allow the government to mine phone logs, emails and other data in the hunt for terror suspects.

The former vice-president has long been under a cloud of suspicion in the U.S. that he exaggerate­d security threats to the country to justify the invasion of Iraq in early 2003 as well as other aggressive foreign policy initiative­s under Bush.

The Center for Public Integrity, a non-partisan investigat­ive news organizati­on, says the Bush administra­tion made at least 935 false statements in the lead up to the 2003 Iraq War.

Cheney made 48 of them, including his insistence in 2002 that “there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destructio­n.”

Snowden’s fresh details about how the Obama administra­tion has expanded some of the Bush-era programs without public knowledge has ignited a fierce debate in the United States over whether the government is oversteppi­ng its bounds.

U.S. President Barack Obama has defended the NSA programs as being vital to national security. He’s also insisted his administra­tion has scaled back some of the Bush-era practices after suggesting in May the war on terror is winding down.

Cheney focused on defending the Bush administra­tion’s role in the surveillan­ce.

“The reason we got into it is because we were attacked ... the worst attack since Pearl Harbor,” he said.

He also rebuked Paul, a Kentucky senator and civil libertaria­n, for suggesting the government was monitoring the phone calls and emails of ordinary citizens.

 ??  ?? Dick Cheney
Dick Cheney

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