Posted on 12/20/2005 6:30:32 AM PST by The_Victor
WASHINGTON - Some Democrats say they never approved a domestic wiretapping program, undermining suggestions by President Bush and his senior advisers that the plan was fully vetted in a series of congressional briefings.
"I feel unable to fully evaluate, much less endorse, these activities," West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller, the Senate Intelligence Committee's top Democrat, said in a handwritten letter to Vice President Dick Cheney in July 2003. "As you know, I am neither a technician nor an attorney."
Rockefeller is among a small group of congressional leaders who have received briefings on the administration's four-year-old program to eavesdrop without warrants on international calls and e-mails of Americans and others inside the United States with suspected ties to al-Qaida.
The government still would seek court approval to snoop on purely domestic communications, such as calls between New York and Los Angeles.
Some legal experts described the program as groundbreaking. And until the highly classified program was disclosed last week, those in Congress with concerns about the National Security Agency spying on Americans raised them only privately.
Bush, accused of acting above the law, on Monday issued a forceful defense of the program he first authorized shortly after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. His senior aides have stressed the program was narrowly targeted at individuals with a suspected link to al-Qaida or affiliated extremist groups. And Bush said it was "a shameful act" for someone to have leaked details to the media.
He bristled at the suggestion at a White House news conference that he was assuming unlimited powers.
"To say 'unchecked power' basically is ascribing some kind of dictatorial position to the president, which I strongly reject," he said angrily. "I am doing what you expect me to do, and at the same time, safeguarding the civil liberties of the country."
Despite the defense, there was a growing storm of criticism in Congress and calls for investigations, from Democrats and Republicans alike. Until the past several days, the White House had only informed Congress' top political and intelligence committee leadership about the program that Bush has reauthorized more than three dozen times.
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said he and other top aides were just now educating the American people and Congress. "The president has not authorized ... blanket surveillance of communications here in the United States," he said.
The spying uproar was the latest controversy about Bush's handling of the war on terror. It follows allegations of secret prisons in Eastern Europe and of torture and other mistreatment of detainees, and an American death toll in Iraq that has exceeded 2,150.
The eavesdropping program was operated out of the NSA, the nation's largest and perhaps most secretive spy operation. Employees there appreciate their nicknames: No Such Agency or Never Say Anything.
Decisions on what conversations to monitor are made at the Fort Meade, Md., headquarters, approved by an NSA shift supervisor and carefully recorded, said Gen. Michael Hayden, the principal deputy director of intelligence.
"The reason I emphasize that this is done at the operational level is to remove any question in your mind that this is in any way politically influenced," said Hayden, who was NSA director when the program began.
Since the program was disclosed last week by The New York Times, current and former Congress members have been liberated to weigh in.
Former Sen. Bob Graham (news, bio, voting record), D-Fla., who was part of the Intelligence Committee's leadership after the 9/11 attacks, recalled a briefing about changes in international electronic surveillance, but does not remember being told of a program snooping on individuals in the United States.
"It seemed fairly mechanical," Graham said. "It was not a major shift in policy."
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., received several briefings and raised concerns, including in a classified letter, her spokeswoman Jennifer Crider said.
Former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle said he, too, was briefed by the White House between 2002 and 2004 but was not told key details about the scope of the program.
Daschle's successor, Sen. Harry Reid (news, bio, voting record), D-Nev., said he received a single briefing earlier this year and that important details were withheld. "We need to investigate this program and the president's legal authority to carry it out," Reid said.
Republicans, too, were skeptical.
Sen. Arlen Specter (news, bio, voting record), R-Pa., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has promised hearings next year and said he would ask Bush's Supreme Court nominee, Samuel Alito, his views of the president's authority for spying without a warrant.
Bush said the electronic eavesdropping program lets the government move faster than the standard practice of seeking a court-authorized warrant under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. "We've got to be fast on our feet, quick to detect and prevent," the president said.
And he was cool toward investigations. "An open debate would say to the enemy, `Here is what we're going to do.' And this is an enemy which adjusts," he said.
___
"As you know, I am neither a technician nor an attorney but I play one on TV."
The FISA hearings which I just read on the web, acknowledge that "we are at war".
Nice link. I'd forgotten that people were upset that there were so many "unaccounted-for" foreign students in the US.
And what exactly do they mean by "have been liberated"
This is still classified information
And how did they get their hands on that Rockefeller memo?
He knows nothing and seems proud of it!
BTW, he supposedly had this hiden in his office safe!
If someone is smart, they are going to make Harry Reid's quip a conmmercial where he say "We just killed the Patriot Act" and a throng of leftist, hate America cheers go up.
He released it; said he had it hidden in his office safe.
There are only EIGHT of them who were briefed; and it was only on 30 occasions.
Liberals are not to be trusted with the defense of the country.
&&
Ditto! See my long-standing tag line.
That sounds odd .. and he still should not have released it .. the details are still clasified information
There is also a reference to another intel project pushed by John Poindexter.
Clearly Rockefeller's role there is to figure out how best to use classified national security information in ways that give aid and comfort to the Democrat party and to other enemies of America. Ignore his "playing dumb" act, because that's just for show. Do not be too surprised if this leak has his fingerprints on it.
The Congressional Democrats are most upset about the POWER that they THINK they are being denied because Bush used his EXECUTIVE POWERS in these orders. I heard an attorney on FOX say the other night that neither Congress or the courts do NOT have the authority to take this option away from the President. He has full use as Commander in Chief to do this as did FDR, JFK, etc. One democrat whined about how Bush has "gone around the congress and the courts" Yes, he sure did because you guys are leakers and traitors!
Being stupid is not an excuse Mr. Rockefeller.
"Clearly the aitiuties [?] raise profound oven light issues."I thought democRATs used the latest (30 years in future in some cases) technology to produce memos to file. This looks to have been written in haste. Not the sort of product one would send to the VPOTUS.
Senators don't "do" stuff like this, you know that! Probably the first letter he's written in years.
I'd like to have the White House verify they actually GOT this letter.
wiretapping BAD....stealing FBI files GOOD...
Animal farm is alive and well within the democrap party.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.