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NSA counsel says agency does not do illegal spying
- Date: Tue, 07 Dec 1999 12:37:02 -0500
- To: politech@vorlon.mit.edu
- Subject: FC: NSA counsel says agency does not do illegal spying
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
********
http://wired.lycos.com/news/reuters/0,1349,32941,00.html
Reuters
7:05 a.m. 7.Dec.1999 PST
WASHINGTON -- The National Security
Agency, which uses spy satellites and
foreign listening posts to monitor threats
to US security, denied on Monday that it
intended to begin spying on Americans at
home.
Newsweek magazine in its Dec. 13 issue
said the NSA was drafting a memorandum
of understanding to clarify ways in which
it could help the FBI track terrorists and
criminals in the United States.
[...]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-12/07/005l-120799-idx.html
NSA Obeying the Law
Tuesday, December 7, 1999; Page A30
In his Nov. 14 Outlook article, "Loud and Clear," James Bamford wrote
that he is "certain that NSA is not overstepping its [legal] mandate," then
spent the bulk of his article speculating that the agency might do so in the
future.
As the general counsel of the National Security Agency, I wish to make
clear that the agency does not violate the Constitution or the laws of the
United States. NSA operates under the eyes of Congress, the executive
branch and the judiciary, and an extensive oversight system regulates and
limits its activities.
Mr. Bamford wrote that the laws regulating NSA's activities need to be
updated in light of the communications revolution, but the laws are based
on the Fourth Amendment and do not need to be changed every time
technology changes.
Mr. Bamford said that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act's
provisions regarding the interception of "wire or radio communications" are
inapplicable because the communications involved have changed from
telephone to e-mail, fax or cell phone. This is false. The privacy
protections
remain applicable.
Mr. Bamford also suggested that NSA uses foreign countries to conduct
surveillance that NSA is prohibited from conducting. That activity has been
prohibited since 1978. NSA does not ask other countries to do what it is
prohibited from doing.
Mr. Bamford also incorrectly said that NSA "stonewalled" a request for
documents by the House Intelligence Committee. Discussions between the
committee and my office focused on the proper balance between the
committee's need to conduct oversight and the need to give sound legal
advice to NSA employees. But there was no intent to withhold the
substantive information requested by the committee, and, as Chairman
Porter Goss has publicly noted, NSA is currently providing documents
responsive to the committee's requests.
NSA obeys the law; Mr. Bamford's speculations serve only to fuel the fires
of uninformed debate.
ROBERT L. DEITZ
Fort George G. Meade, Md.
The writer is general counsel of the National Security Agency.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/WPlate/1999-12/03/032l-120399-idx.html
Checking Up on the NSA
Friday, December 3, 1999; Page A40
James Bamford [Outlook, Nov. 14], in his expose of the National Security
Agency's worldwide eavesdropping network, points out that he really
doesn't believe the NSA is a bad guy. From his privileged demi-insider
position, he can be "certain that the NSA is not overstepping its bounds."
He just wants to protect us from what might happen if the NSA decides to
break or evade laws. After all, back in the old days the agency had acted
"as though the laws which applied to the rest of government did not apply
to it."
As one who was involved during the Church-Pike episode in the '70s, I
would point out that the NSA appeared both publicly and in closed session
before Congress and demonstrated that it had every respect for the laws of
this country. It took extraordinary internal measures to meet the
requirements of Congress then and adopt a course of cooperation with the
select committees on intelligence, which were created thereafter. Even as
an outsider now, I cannot believe that the NSA would even tell Congress
to "take a hike" or any like denial.
Mr. Bamford is correct in observing that our rights to privacy are at risk,
but he is crying out at the wrong wolf.
JACK HARNEY
New Carrollton
The writer was an NSA official from 1951 to 1980.
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