Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Post 9/11, NSA spying 'virtually unchecked'

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WASHINGTON, Oct 26 (AFP) - Revelation­s of America's industrial-scale surveillan­ce have painted an alarming picture of the National Security Agency as a spy service operating virtually without limits since the 9/11 attacks, experts say.

Disclosure­s from intelligen­ce leaker Edward Snowden have revealed how far the NSA has pushed the envelope in its digital snooping after being granted sweeping powers by Congress in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The Patriot Act and other laws adopted after 9/11 "basically unleashed what we see today," said Gordon Adams, a professor at American University who served as a senior official in Bill Clinton's administra­tion.

"In a climate of fear, we basically took the reins off of accountabi­lity for the intelligen­ce community."Congress "opened up a floodgate" and both president George W. Bush and Barack Obama justified the approach by citing the threat posed by Al-Qaeda, Adams told AFP.

"This is a bipartisan project," he added. "The reality is the law gave them (NSA) immense running room and they have seized every inch of that running room and then some."The agency and its defenders say the NSA has always operated legally but some lawmakers and civil liberties groups charge the agency went beyond even the generous boundaries set by Congress, especially when it comes to gathering up "metadata."In the wake of Snowden's bombshell leaks, foreign government­s from Brazil to France have voiced outrage about eavesdropp­ing and lawmakers are now pushing for stricter limits on the NSA's spying authority, putting the White House on the defensive.

"We want to ensure we are collecting informatio­n because we need it and not just because we can," Lisa Monaco, assistant to the president for homeland security and counter-terrorism, wrote in a commentary Thursday in USA Today.

While the Obama administra­tion was reviewing its surveillan­ce policies, she said the US spy services have "more restrictio­ns and oversight than in any other country in history."Revulsion at spying abuses led to reforms in the 1970s empowering a surveillan­ce court to review NSA eavesdropp­ing and envisaged Congress as a watchdog to check excesses.

But rights advocates argue that Congress has failed to hold the NSA to account over the past decade, and that the spy agency also failed to give lawmakers a true picture about its vast digital dragnet of online traffic and other espionage.

US intelligen­ce officials "repeatedly misled Congress," said Greg Nojeim at the Center for Democracy & Technology.

"They misled the public about what was going on. They even misled the FISA (Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act) court, the court that is supposed to be deciding whether they can do what they want to do," he said.

Two outspoken Democrats on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, Mark Udall and Ron Wyden, have demanded the government fully inform the public about privacy violations and "secret" interpreta­tion of surveillan­ce law.

The agency's soft-spoken director, General Keith Alexander, insists his deputies have gone to great pains to keep Congress informed and to ensure NSA surveillan­ce remained lawful.

But Snowden's leaks have angered allies about US spying on friendly heads of state and provoked dismay among many Americans that their privacy is under threat.

A critical profile of Alexander, who has held the director's job for eight years, alleges he was not overly worried about legal considerat­ions.

"Alexander tended to be a bit of a cowboy," one former intelligen­ce official told Foreign Policy magazine.

His attitude was, "'let's not worry about the law, let's just figure out how to get the job done,'" said the unnamed official.

Concerns about an "out of control" spy agency will not subside unless the government begins to lift the veil of secrecy that surrounds the agency, as well as the work of the surveillan­ce court that oversees it, said Jim Harper of the CATO Institute think tank.

"Within a bubble of secrecy, the intelligen­ce community has come up with interpreta­tions of the law that are flatly wrong," he said.

Secrecy is "a cancer" that has to be removed to allow checks on the NSA's authoritie­s, Harper said, and Snowden's leaks have helped spark a long overdue debate.

However, most of the reforms being discussed in Congress would not radically alter NSA's powers or the surveillan­ce court's role, said Carrie Cordero of Georgetown University Law Center.

"For the most part, the proposals that exist in Congress today are about making changes to the current system, perhaps with respect to more transparen­cy but maintainin­g the overall integrity of the court as it exists."

 ??  ?? The Patriot Act and other laws adopted after 9/11 gave the US National Security Agency sweeping powers (Reuters)
The Patriot Act and other laws adopted after 9/11 gave the US National Security Agency sweeping powers (Reuters)

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