Trackback This Post | Subscribe to the comments through RSS Feed
The Senate approved espionage legislation Tuesday that would expand the government’s authority to intercept international phone calls and e-mails and to block lawsuits against U.S. telecommunications companies that aided in past spying efforts.
The 68-29 vote was a victory for the White House, which has battled Congress for two years over the legality of an eavesdropping operation — launched by President Bush in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks — that involved intercepting calls in the United States without court warrants.
Despite Senate passage, the fate of the legislation remains uncertain. The Senate bill has to be reconciled with competing legislation that passed in the House. Democrats in that chamber have opposed shielding the phone companies from liability for taking part in what some members have called an illegal spying operation.
Senior congressional aides said there was no clear path to a compromise on the issue. But a series of recent defections by moderate Democrats in the House raises prospects that the White House position — or something close to it — eventually may prevail.
As part of a stopgap measure passed last month, the government’s existing surveillance powers are to expire Friday.
Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.) said the measure would “restore civil liberties protections . . . and allow for targeted surveillance of potential terrorists.”
But critics said the vote sacrificed civil liberties in a capitulation to the White House. Sen. Russell D. Feingold (D-Wis.) said the Senate had let the Bush administration “off the hook for its illegal wiretapping program.”
Among the presidential hopefuls in the Senate, John McCain (R-Ariz.) voted in favor of the bill; Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) did not vote.
Tuesday’s vote was the latest in a series of halting attempts by Congress to update a 30-year-old statute known as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which governs how the United States carries out electronic espionage.
The debate centers on how to update the law to accommodate new technologies, including the Internet and cellular telephones, and preserve long-standing privacy protections for Americans.
The Senate bill, set to expire after six years, would bolster the authority of a secret surveillance court to oversee the activities of the National Security Agency, which eavesdrops on phone calls and e-mail traffic around the world. The measure would require the government to obtain a warrant whenever the target of surveillance is a U.S. citizen.
But the bill would give the NSA sweeping new powers to intercept phone calls and e-mails traveling through fiber optic cables in the U.S. and would compel the nation’s largest phone carriers to grant access to their networks.
Top intelligence officials have testified that being able to tap into those U.S. networks — and not be slowed by a requirement to obtain a warrant — is crucial to monitoring the communications of Al Qaeda and other adversaries. That is because much of the world’s communications traffic, even calls that start and end overseas, passes through U.S. networks.
The House and Senate agree on the outlines of these authorities, though they differ to some extent on the powers of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to monitor the NSA and prevent abuse.
Their main disagreement centers on whether to grant retroactive legal immunity to phone companies facing lawsuits for cooperating in a White House program that bypassed the FISA court and that was kept secret from all but a handful of members of Congress.
Key Senate Democrats argued that the companies shouldn’t be punished for complying with requests that the Bush administration led them to believe were legal. “The fact is, if we lose cooperation from these or other private companies, our national security will suffer,” Rockefeller said.
Bush has threatened to veto any bill that doesn’t include protection for the companies.
Leading House Democrats have resisted, saying that the companies shouldn’t be shielded from liability for taking part in what many call an illegal surveillance program.
Democratic leaders were in negotiations Tuesday over possible compromise language or temporary extensions to give both sides time to work out a deal. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Silvestre Reyes (D-Texas) said Tuesday that he planned to oppose the Senate bill.
But there were signs that other Democrats were prepared to endorse the Senate approach and avoid further debate on a national security issue that many say plays to the political strengths of the White House and Republicans.
Reluctant to be portrayed as depriving the government of a key tool in the war on terrorism, 21 members of a bloc of moderate House Democrats signed a letter endorsing the Senate approach. Senior Democratic aides said those defections suggested there might be enough support in the House to pass the Senate bill.
– By Greg Miller
Popularity: 1% [?]
Obama did vote on this bill and he voted against it.
How did Senator Clinton vote?
What kind of people are representing us in the Senate? Have they all been bought and paid for by corporate America? I don’t support Sen Clinton candidacy because she is part of the corporatocracy — fascism. Who do you think she will represent in the White House? Not me. Not you.
What terrifying utter nonsense and treason!
We are not at war, since our nations’ authorities do not stand for reality– that which pseudo-theocratic postmodernist Republicans do not recognize and have replaced with “whatever public interest secret agenda universe they secretly try to sell by using Kantian lies and falsified date and fake arguments”. I we throw reality away along with individual rights and warrantable cause requirements restraining such governors, we then have no difference from our Near Eastern tyrants
enemies over which to quarrel. This latest Act would then be an argument with fellow totalitarian ‘tsars’ wherein we would differ only in degree. Is the concept of “reasoning selfhood” now so far beyond theminds of our so-called leaders that these unscientific running dogs of crypto-fascism cannot even conceive of a legal means of surveillance that defines the actions of its responsible practitioners as something other a terrifing threat that requires them to declare themselves as DAs and every citizen an enemy of their fantasy state? No such emergency as they are preyending is rout there exists or has ever existed; certainly not in an opposition between a technologically-advanced state and flea-bittern sand squatting pseudo-theocrats using WWII weapons of mass murder against unarmed civilians as well as our military? The communications coporations’ CEOs knew exactly what they were doing when they spied on citizen selves. They were violating the laws of the US, which Congress passes and the Surpreme Court tests. They have stolen billions for over a century and give miserable performance in return. They can afford to be punished for their crimes; we cannot afford not to strike down their wrongdoing. We cannot let their crimes go unpunished, since we have no rights any longer, even without this hideous and insane bill’ additional harms.
I demand my rights. My life is not lived at the permissions of public-interest ‘tsars” of life. My liberty, if I regain it, will not depend on permission from collectivistic god-players. And my pursuit of goals of prioritized potential ‘happiness’ must not be filtered through the gatekpeeer tyrants of bureau, government-licensed corporation nor paranoid surveillance agencies’ additional gangsters.
To adopt such an act would obviously require three things not in evidence: 1. a clear logical proof of the scientific rightness of such a procedure as a result-getting method. 2. the existence of a real not spurious wartime emregency condition, one which would pit us against an advanced, technologically-sophsticated and mentally-active opponent; 3. the provision of regulatory steps by means of which citizens acting upon their soveriegn rights could go about their basic capitalist business of investing their own life- positive energy, time, ability and money while governmentally-employed servitors safeguarded them from threats foreign and domestic.
Under this
unAmerican bill, no such provisions could be maintained. I oppose it for many reasons; I will assert four here. It is unConstitutional and it won’t work; it institutionalizes a criminal executive brainch, and it further fosters collusion with destroyers of individual rights into a permanent imperial-presidential tyranny as a form of government. I solemny warn the people and governors of the United States–unless this insane bill is defeated, nothing can ever undo the damage its adherents will do. We lost our individual-rights based Constitution in 1902. The institutional framework of American rights-based law was finally destroyed in the reininvented Constitutional changes of 1994. Adding this step to those priro crimes–already committed against individuals’ lberties–will set in motion catastrophic forces, whose declared enemy is the libertarian responsible self, and whose end is broadened powers of tyranny, not merely broad fact gathereing that will feed incompetent analysts fodder for more of their shocking failures to deal with the real, assess with objectivity and act with efficacy. They have done none of these things in the years since 09/11. Why would giveing these utterly incompetent un-Americans powers no tsar of the Russias ever dreamed of having make their bumbling power-seeking criminality any more successful than it already hasn’t been–when they lacked such immoral and unethical powers before?
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.

FREE TRIAL SUBSCRIPTION
This quarterly journal highlights trends in the coverage of current issues and includes research about the effects of media coverage on business, politics, society and the economy. International Issue: Yearly subscription only 90$ including VAT!