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WORLD / America
Bush calls for expansion of spy law
(AP)
Updated: 2007-09-20 04:08
FORT MEADE, Md. - President Bush said Wednesday that a law hastily passed
in August to temporarily give the government more power to eavesdrop
without warrants on foreign terror suspects must be made permanent and
expanded.
If this doesn't happen, Bush said, "Our national security professionals
will lose critical tools they need to protect our country."
"Without these tools, it will be harder to figure out what our enemies
are doing to train, recruit and infiltrate operatives into America," he
said on a visit to the super-secret National Security Agency's
headquarters in suburban Fort Meade, Md. "Without these tools, our
country will be much more vulnerable to attack."
The 30-year-old Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act governs when
warrants for eavesdropping must be obtained from a secret intelligence
court. This year's update - approved by the Senate and House just before
Congress adjourned for an August break - allows more efficient
interceptions of foreign communications.
Under the new law - the Protect America Act - the government can
eavesdrop, without a court order, on communications conducted by a person
reasonably believed to be outside the United States, even if an American
is on one end of the conversation so long as that American is not the
intended focus or target of the surveillance.
That change was urgently requested by the Bush administration, which said
that the modernization of communications technology had created a dire
gap in the nation's terrorism intelligence collection capabilities.
Such surveillance was generally prohibited under the original FISA law if
the wiretap was conducted inside the United States, unless a court
approved it. Because of changes in telecommunications technology, many
more foreign communications now flow through the United States. The new
law allows those to be tapped without a court order.
But civil liberties groups and many Democrats say the new changes go too
far. Congress' Democratic leaders set it to expire in six months so that
it could be fine-tuned, and that process is beginning on Capitol Hill now.
Democrats hope to change the law to provide additional oversight when the
government eavesdrops on US residents communicating with overseas parties.
Bush timed his visit to the NSA facility to press his case.
"The threat from al Qaida is not going to expire in 135 days," he said,
"so I call on Congress to make the Protect America Act permanent."
He also pleaded with lawmakers to expand the law, not restrict it. One
provision particularly important to the administration, but opposed by
many Democrats, would grant retroactive immunity to telecommunications
companies which may have helped the government conduct surveillance prior
to January 2007 without a court order.
Bush was joined at the podium in an NSA hallway by Vice President Dick
Cheney, National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell and others.
The president received private briefings from intelligence officials and
mingled with employees in the National Threat Operations Center. While
cameras and reporters were in the room, the large video screens that
lined the walls displayed unclassified information on computer crime and
signal intelligence.
Along one wall at NSA is a sign that says, "We won't back down. We never
have. We never will."
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