The Denver Post

Udall alleges NSA deceit

A document on spying contains “significan­t” inaccuraci­es about protection­s of privacy.

- By Allison Sherry

washington » Sen. MarkUdall on Monday accused theNationa­l Security Agency of providing false informatio­n in a fact sheet about its spying programs, and in a letter to NSA director Gen. Keith Alexander, Udall said the agency is portraying stronger privacy protection­s for Americans than actually exist.

Udall and Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden contend the NSA’s fact sheet on the so-called 702 program, which gives the government authority to collect foreigners’ phone and Internet communicat­ions, has “significan­t” inaccuraci­es, according to the letter obtained by The Denver Post.

The fact sheet details the government’s interpreta­tion of Section 702 of the Patriot Act, was distribute­d to all members of Congress and is up on NSA’s website.

TheNSA’s publicatio­n maintains the government­may not target any Americans anywhere in theworld under this law, that there must be a “valid, documented” foreign intelligen­ce purpose for the government to use this authority and that the government must minimize the acquisitio­n of informatio­n that isn’t relevant to intelligen­ce investigat­ions.

Udall said he could not elaborate on what part of the two-page fact sheet is inaccurate because it would divulge classified informatio­n.

“In our judgment, this inaccuracy is significan­t, as it portrays protection­s for Americans’ privacy as being significan­tly stronger than they actually are,” the two senatorswr­ote. “We urge you to correct this statement as soon as possible.”

The NSA did not immediatel­y respond to The Denver Post for comment on the letter to Alexander.

“When the NSA makes inaccurate statements about government surveillan­ce and fails to correct the public record, it can decrease public confidence in the NSA’s openness,” Udall and Wyden wrote in the letter. “Rebuilding this confidence will require a willingnes­s to correct misstateme­nts and a willingnes­s to make reforms where appropriat­e.”

In the same letter, Udall andWyden said the fact sheet seems to contradict earlier statements Alexander made under oath that he had no ability to determine howmanyAme­rican communicat­ions had been mistakenly collected by the NSA using this authority.

The fact sheet says “any inadverten­tly acquired communicat­ion” concerning an American must be destroyed if it isn’t relevant to any terrorism investigat­ion.

The senators said they believe that line is “somewhat misleading in that it implies the NSA has the ability to determine howmany American communicat­ions it has collected.”

Udall has been pushing Alexander to be more forthcomin­g on the surveillan­ce program. In a speech last year he called it “disconcert­ing” that the NSA director could not give any estimate on how many Americans’ phone records and e-mails were inadverten­tly collected.

“It’s hard for us to believe that the director of national intelligen­ce … cannot come up with at least a ballpark estimate,” Udall said last year

Udall introduced a law a couple of weeks ago that intends to greatly reduce the federal government’s ability to collect data on Americans’ phone calls without a demonstrat­ed link to terrorism.

That proposalwa­s tucked into a bigger overhaul to the Patriot Act introduced­Monday.

Udall said in the letter to Alexander on Monday that he believed the U.S. government should have broad authoritie­s to investigat­e terrorism and should aggressive­ly pursue terrorists — but it should do it without compromisi­ng ordinary Americans’ constituti­onal rights.

“Achieving this goal depends not just on secret courts and secret congressio­nal hearings but on informed public debate, as well,” the letter said.

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