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House Democrats Fail to Protect America
Little Green Footballs ^ | Feb. 16, 2008 | Charles Johnson

Posted on 02/16/2008 7:27:21 PM PST by jdm

In his radio address today, President Bush blasted the House Democrats for failing to extend the Protect America Act that authorizes terrorist surveillance.

Good morning.  At the stroke of midnight tonight, a vital intelligence law that is helping protect our nation will expire.  Congress had the power to prevent this from happening, but chose not to. 

The Senate passed a good bill that would have given our intelligence professionals the tools they need to keep us safe.  But leaders in the House of Representatives blocked a House vote on the Senate bill, and then left on a 10-day recess. 

Some congressional leaders claim that this will not affect our security.  They are wrong.  Because Congress failed to act, it will be harder for our government to keep you safe from terrorist attack.  At midnight, the Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence will be stripped of their power to authorize new surveillance against terrorist threats abroad.  This means that as terrorists change their tactics to avoid our surveillance, we may not have the tools we need to continue tracking them — and we may lose a vital lead that could prevent an attack on America. 

In addition, Congress has put intelligence activities at risk even when the terrorists don’t change tactics.  By failing to act, Congress has created a question about whether private sector companies who assist in our efforts to defend you from the terrorists could be sued for doing the right thing.  Now, these companies will be increasingly reluctant to provide this vital cooperation, because of their uncertainty about the law and fear of being sued by class-action trial lawyers.

For six months, I urged Congress to take action to ensure this dangerous situation did not come to pass.

Andrew McCarthy has more: When the Clock Strikes Midnight, We Will Be Significantly Less Safe.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 110th; democrats; fisa; pelosi; presidentbush; radioaddress; surveillance
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1 posted on 02/16/2008 7:27:25 PM PST by jdm
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To: jdm

In other news, the sun rose in the east today....


2 posted on 02/16/2008 7:29:10 PM PST by G8 Diplomat
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To: jdm

The president could have sold me on it by promising the act would never be used to spy on American citizens with out constitutional protections. As it is, I don’t trust the government enough right now to see this authorized.


3 posted on 02/16/2008 7:30:30 PM PST by gondramB (Preach the Gospel at all times, and when necessary, use words.)
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To: jdm

No kidding.


4 posted on 02/16/2008 7:31:42 PM PST by Man50D (Fair Tax, you earn it, you keep it!)
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To: jdm

Judging by only the headline, I was expecting to see Captain Obvious when I opened the thread.


5 posted on 02/16/2008 7:32:24 PM PST by GregoTX (The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.)
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To: gondramB

That’s insane talk. Would you rather have a nuke detonated on American soil?


6 posted on 02/16/2008 7:32:48 PM PST by End Times Crusader (The Ann Coulter Suicide Voters Brigade - Electing Democrats because they don't get their way. JIHAD!)
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To: jdm

How’s that increased border security working out?


7 posted on 02/16/2008 7:34:35 PM PST by FReepapalooza (Look away, look away, look away Dixieland)
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To: jdm
My Senator, Senator Sherrod Brown from Ohio, voted against both this bill and the waterboarding bill. Even Bill O’Reilly calls him a “left wing kook.” Hey, ho, way to go, Ohio!
8 posted on 02/16/2008 7:35:23 PM PST by GOP_Lady
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To: jdm

The dims don’t give a darn about “we the people”, they just want power.


9 posted on 02/16/2008 7:35:52 PM PST by alice_in_bubbaland (Vote Obillary! And we'll be picking shrapnel out of our butts for decades!)
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To: gondramB
Move.

10 posted on 02/16/2008 7:36:10 PM PST by I see my hands (_8(|)
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To: jdm

When the Clock Strikes Midnight, We Will Be Significantly Less Safe
The Democrats’ FISA talking points are nonsense.

By Andrew C. McCarthy

According to top Democrats, the expiration of the Protect America Act (PAA) when the clock strikes midnight Sunday is no big deal. Our ability to monitor foreign threats to national security, they assure us, will be completely unaffected.

This is about as dumb a talking point as one can imagine. And it is just as demonstrably false.

Think for a moment about Tuesday’s crucial Senate bill overhauling our intelligence law that Speaker Nancy Pelosi refused to allow the House to consider before recessing Friday — for a vacation. (Democrats evidently had no time for national security, having exhausted themselves on such cosmic matters as a baseball pitcher’s alleged steroid use and unenforceable, unconstitutional contempt citations in a stale investigation into something that wasn’t a crime and that no one but MoveOn.org cares about any longer).

In a Senate controlled by the Democrats, the bill passed by an overwhelming 2-to-1 margin. To attract such numbers, the Bush administration (as I detailed yesterday) gave ground on critically important issues of executive power and expansion of the FISA court’s role.

Democrats surely did not want to give President Bush this legislative victory, and President Bush certainly did not want to cave on these issues. But both sides compromised precisely because they understood that failing to do so, failing to preserve current surveillance authority, would endanger the United States.

Now, maybe they did it because they didn’t want to be blamed if something catastrophic happened; I prefer to think it was because they felt it their obligation to prevent something catastrophic from happening. But either way, the certainty that a failure to act would mean an exorbitant increase in the odds of catastrophe clearly weighed on both sides.

That is why so many Senate Democrats went along. That is why Democrats in both houses agreed to the PAA in the first place. That is why 34 House Democrats defied their leadership on Wednesday, voting against another temporary extension of the PAA in an effort to force a vote on the Senate bill — which, had Pelosi allowed it to come to the floor, would have become law by a healthy bipartisan margin.

If the expiration of the PAA made no difference, as top Democrats are speciously claiming now, there is not the remotest chance any of those things would have happened.

So how can they make such an argument? Here is the sleight of hand.

The PAA permitted, without court authorization for up to one year, surveillance of foreign targets outside the U.S. who were communicating with other foreigners outside the U.S. The PAA was passed in August 2007 with a six-month sunset provision (which expires at midnight). But the end of the PAA does not mean the immediate end of all surveillance authorized by the PAA.

Let’s say we started surveillance on Pakistani Suspected Terrorist A on December 1, 2007. The PAA provides that even if the PAA sunsets, any surveillance authorized under it may continue for the full year from the start date of the surveillance. Thus, to the extent Democrats are saying the PAA’s expiration would not affect the monitoring of Pakistani Suspected Terrorist A, they are correct — that surveillance may continue through November 30, 2008.

But here’s the problem: What if, tomorrow, for the first time, Pakistani Suspected Terrorist B comes on our radar screen — to say nothing Pakistani Suspected Terrorists C though ZZZ? Let’s say, as is entirely possible (if not likely), that B & Co. are not necessarily affiliated with al-Qaeda or any currently known terrorist group. Starting tomorrow, there will be no PAA authority to begin monitoring those suspected terrorists.

To that rather obvious point, leading Democrats counter, “Wait just a second — you can still go to the FISA court.”

Right.

Can you see what’s happening here? The whole reason Congress enacted the PAA in the first place is because FISA was never meant to apply to foreigners outside the U.S. communicating with other foreigners outside the U.S. We are not supposed to need court authorization for that. We are not supposed to have to write affidavits, approved by the attorney general and others, demonstrating probable cause that such people are agents of foreign powers — as well as demonstrating that other alternative investigative techniques would not yield the same intelligence.

Those are protections afforded by the FISA statute. Foreigners outside the U.S. are supposed to be outside the protection of the FISA statute, just as they are outside the protection of the Constitution. Saying the government can go to the FISA court is no answer: Government is not supposed to have to go to the FISA court. These people are not supposed to have FISA rights. They are not supposed to have Fourth Amendment rights.

We are talking about thousands upon thousands of communications, totally outside the U.S. (in the sense that no person inside our country is a participant) which the intelligence community used to be able to intercept and sift through without any burdensome judicial procedures whatsoever. That is how FISA was written, and that is how FISA was understood for almost 30 years. Then last year, a secret FISA-court ruling attempted to bring all those communications under FISA-court control — apparently on the theory that, because some digital bits of these conversations may zoom through U.S. hubs in global telecommunications networks, somehow a conversation between a guy in Pakistan and a guy in Afghanistan should now be considered a U.S. wire communication.

But FISA was not intended to protect Pakistanis and Afghans. It was intended to protect people inside the U.S. from being subjected to national-security surveillance absent probable cause that they were acting as foreign agents.

Requiring FISA compliance for foreign-to-foreign communications does not protect anyone inside the U.S. It protects non-Americans, some of whom will be terrorists and none of whom is entitled to any protection under American law. It makes it impossible for the intelligence community to monitor all the foreign-to-foreign communications that we used to monitor because we will never be able to show, for every target, probable cause that he is an agent of a foreign power — as FISA requires. The PAA did not call for that; it simply required a certification that we were monitoring people believed to be outside the United States.

The claim that the expiration of the PAA will not open a huge gap in surveillance coverage is laughable. Right now, we are permitted to collect foreign-to-foreign communications absent probable cause that the target is an agent of a foreign power. As of 12:00 A.M., we will no longer be permitted to do that. It is absurd to suggest that this huge drop-off in collection will have no impact on our security.

The July 2007 National Intelligence Estimate stated:

globalization trends and recent technological advances will continue to enable even small numbers of alienated people to find and connect with one another, justify and intensify their anger, and mobilize resources to attack — all without requiring a centralized terrorist organization, training camp, or leader.

Translation: There are ever larger numbers of potentially hostile operatives who are galvanized by jihadist ideology without necessarily being connected to a known terrorist organization. Casting a broad surveillance net to collect intelligence overseas is how we detect and thwart any threat they may pose. It’s how we protect Americans in the homeland and on the battlefield.

As of midnight, that net is gone.


11 posted on 02/16/2008 7:36:51 PM PST by ventanax5
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To: ventanax5

Thanks, that might as well be posted too, since I don’t believe it has to be excerpted.


12 posted on 02/16/2008 7:40:26 PM PST by jdm (You must have cookies enabled to log-in.)
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To: jdm

moveon.org und Soros uber alles


13 posted on 02/16/2008 7:42:58 PM PST by Rosemont
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To: jdm
House Democrats Fail to Protect America

Well, duh. That's what they do.

14 posted on 02/16/2008 7:45:34 PM PST by TigersEye (This is the age of the death of reason.)
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To: ventanax5

I saw this as another Presidential failure!

He would have been within his right to mandate that the House continue in session and forgo their vacation on such a vital issue.

But he is being compassionate, apparently.


15 posted on 02/16/2008 7:50:00 PM PST by pennboricua
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To: jdm

If the RNC had any balls, they’d saturate the airways and make THIS the central issue in 2008.


16 posted on 02/16/2008 7:51:05 PM PST by Senator Goldwater
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To: gondramB

“The president could have sold me on it by promising the act would never be used to spy on American citizens with out constitutional protections. As it is, I don’t trust the government enough right now to see this authorized.”

pinko/s


17 posted on 02/16/2008 7:51:36 PM PST by Grunthor (A man can only hold his nose so hard before real tissue damage results - jeddavis)
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To: jdm
Good morning. At the stroke of midnight tonight, a vital intelligence law that is helping protect our nation will expire. Congress had the power to prevent this from happening, but chose not to.

It's not a political concern with politicians, they are focusing on what is best for our country.

Don't let the rhetoric mislead you all. /s

18 posted on 02/16/2008 7:52:11 PM PST by EGPWS (Trust in God, question everyone else)
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To: jdm

“When the Clock Strikes Midnight, We Will Be Significantly Less Safe.”

NNNNNNNNNNNNNNOoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

(i iz askeered!)


19 posted on 02/16/2008 7:52:40 PM PST by Grunthor (A man can only hold his nose so hard before real tissue damage results - jeddavis)
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To: Senator Goldwater
If the RNC had any balls,...

They don't and the lack of influx of funds is the result of the lack of a pair.

20 posted on 02/16/2008 8:01:15 PM PST by EGPWS (Trust in God, question everyone else)
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