On Friday, the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service released an analysis that "raised numerous doubts about the [president's] power to bypass Congress in ordering such operations [as the NSA spying revealed by the New York Times on Dec. 15], saying the legal rationale 'does not seem to be as well grounded' as the administration's lawyers have argued," the New York Times reported in a front-page story Saturday. -- CRS noted, in an analysis that "was repeatedly reviewed by senior staff members at the research service for accuracy and bias before its release," that 'the administration reading of some provisions of federal wiretap law could render them "meaningless.'" -- "Many Democrats and some Republicans pointed to the findings as perhaps the strongest indication that Mr. Bush might have exceeded his authority in fighting terrorism," Eric Lichtblau and Scott Shane observed. -- (The 44-page CRS analysis by Elizabeth B. Bazan and Jennifer K. Elsea has been posted online in .pdf format by the Federation of American Scientists. -- The document strengthens the hand of those calling for the impeachment of the president and the vive president.) -- In other developments, the Times reported in the same article that for the first time, Thomas H. Kean, the Republican who chaired the Sept. 11 commission, said he doubted the legality of the NSA program, saying in an interview that the administration did not inform the 9/11 commission about the program and that he wished it had done so. -- "We live by a system of checks and balances," Kean said. "And I think we ought to continue to live by a system of checks and balances." -- Also, Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ 12th), a former assistant director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab and a member of the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, angrily accused the NSA of "actively misleading" him (lying, in ordinary parlance), the Times reported....
Washington
BASIS FOR SPYING IN U.S. IS DOUBTED By Eric Lichtblau and Scott
Shane
** Study by Arm of Congress Questions Legality **
New York Times January 7, 2006 Page A1
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/07/politics/07nsa.html
WASHINGTON -- President Bush's rationale for eavesdropping on
Americans without warrants rests on questionable legal ground, and Congress does
not appear to have given him the authority to order the surveillance, said a
Congressional analysis released Friday.
The analysis, by the Congressional Research Service, a nonpartisan research
arm of Congress, was the first official assessment of a question that has
gripped Washington for three weeks: Did Mr. Bush act within the law when he
ordered the National Security Agency, the country's most secretive spy agency,
to eavesdrop on some Americans?
The report, requested by several members of Congress, reached no bottom-line
conclusions on the legality of the program, in part because it said so many
details remained classified. But it raised numerous doubts about the power to
bypass Congress in ordering such operations, saying the legal rationale "does
not seem to be as well grounded" as the administration's lawyers have argued.
The administration quickly disputed several conclusions in the report.
The report was particularly critical of a central administration
justification for the program, that Congress had effectively approved such
eavesdropping soon after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks by authorizing "all
necessary and appropriate force" against the terrorist groups responsible.
Congress "does not appear to have authorized or acquiesced in such
surveillance," the report said, adding that the administration reading of some
provisions of federal wiretap law could render them "meaningless."
The president acknowledged last month that he had given the security agency
the power to eavesdrop on the international telephone and e-mail communications
of Americans and others in the United States without a warrant if they were
suspected of ties to Al Qaeda.
The Justice Department is investigating the disclosure of the program, first
reported in the *New York Times*. With Congressional hearings expected this
month, the Congressional research report intensified debate on the program.
Administration lawyers quickly responded that Mr. Bush had acted within his
constitutional and statutory powers.
"The president has made clear that he will use his constitutional and
statutory authorities to protect the American people from further terrorist
attacks," said Brian Roehrkasse, a Justice Department spokesman, adding that the
program represented "a critical tool in the war on terror that saves lives and
protects civil liberties at the same time."
Many Democrats and some Republicans pointed to the findings as perhaps the
strongest indication that Mr. Bush might have exceeded his authority in fighting
terrorism.
Representative George Miller, Democrat of California, who leads the House
Democratic Policy Committee, said the report "raises serious questions about the
president's legal authority to conduct domestic spying."
Mr. Miller said the justifications for the program were unacceptable.
Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California, said the report made
"absolutely clear that the legal authorities advanced by the president in
justifying domestic surveillance are on very shaky ground."
Thomas H. Kean, a Republican who was chairman of the Sept. 11 commission,
weighed in for the first time in the debate. Mr. Kean said he counted himself
among those who doubted the legality of the program. He said in an interview
that the administration did not inform his commission about the program and that
he wished it had.
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which Congress passed in 1978
after widespread abuses by intelligence agencies, created a system for
court-ordered wiretaps for terrorism and espionage suspects. That system "gives
very broad powers to the president and, except in very rare circumstances, in my
view ought to be used," Mr. Kean said.
"We live by a system of checks and balances," he said. "And I think we ought
to continue to live by a system of checks and balances."
One reason the administration has cited for not seeking to change the
intelligence law and obtain specific approvals for eavesdropping was that it
might "tip off" terrorists to the program. The Congressional research service
found that unconvincing.
"No legal precedent appears to have been presented," the study said, "that
would support the president's authority to bypass the statutory route when
legislation is required" simply because of secrecy.
Opinions on domestic spying have largely broken down, though not exclusively,
along partisan lines, causing splits between the top Republicans and Democrats
on the House and Senate Intelligence Committees.
The analyses of the Congressional Research Service, part of the Library of
Congress created in 1914, are generally seen as objective and without partisan
taint, said Eleanor Hill, staff director of the Congressional inquiry on the
Sept. 11 attacks.
Because of its importance, the report was repeatedly reviewed by senior staff
members at the research service for accuracy and bias before its release,
officials there said.
Some Democrats say the administration bypassed the authority of Congress in
ordering the eavesdropping. One congressman said he was actively misled. In a
letter released Friday, Representative Rush D. Holt, a New Jersey Democrat on
the Intelligence Committee, complained to the N.S.A. over what he described as
deception by its director, Lt. Gen. Keith B. Alexander of the Army.
Mr. Holt, a physicist who has worked as an arms control specialist at the
State Department, visited the agency on Dec. 6 for a briefing by General
Alexander and agency lawyers about protecting Americans' privacy. The officials
assured him, Mr. Holt said, that the agency singled out Americans for
eavesdropping only under warrants from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court.
After the program was disclosed, Mr. Holt wrote a blistering letter to
General Alexander, expressing "considerable anger" over being misled. An agency
spokesman, Don Weber, declined to comment on the letter.
|