NSA
Whistleblower Backs Trump Up on Wiretap Claims
By Curt
Mills
March 08,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "US
News"
-
President Donald
Trump is
"absolutely right"
to claim he was wiretapped and monitored, a
former NSA official claimed Monday, adding that
the administration risks falling victim to
further leaks if it continues to run afoul of
the intelligence community.
"I think the
president is absolutely right. His phone calls,
everything he did electronically, was being
monitored," Bill Binney, a
36-year veteran of the National Security Agency
who resigned in protest from the organization in
2001, told Fox Business on Monday. Everyone's
conversations are being monitored and stored,
Binney said.
Binney resigned from NSA shortly after the U.S.
approach to intelligence
changed
following the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. He
"became a whistleblower after discovering that
elements of a data-monitoring program he had
helped develop -- nicknamed ThinThread -- were
being used to spy on Americans," PBS reported.
On Monday he came to the defense of the
president, whose allegations on social media
over the weekend that outgoing President Barack
Obama tapped his phones during the 2016 campaign
have rankled Washington.
"How low has
President Obama gone to tapp my phones during
the very sacred election process. This is
Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!" Trump
tweeted.
"Is it legal for a
sitting President to be 'wire tapping' a race
for president prior to an election? Turned down
by court earlier. A NEW LOW!... I'd bet a good
lawyer could make a great case out of the fact
that President Obama
was tapping my phones in October,
just prior to Election!," he
continued.
Binney seemed to go further than the assessment
of former Attorney General Michael Mukasey, a
George W. Bush administration official, who
offered a tacit defense of Trump to ABC on
Sunday.
"This is the difference between being correct
and right," Mukasey said. "The president was not
correct in saying President Obama ordered a tap
on a server in Trump Tower. However, I think
he's right in that there was surveillance and
that it was conducted at the behest of the
attorney general – at the Justice Department
through the FISA court."
But Binney
told Sean Hannity's radio show
earlier Monday, "I think the FISA court's
basically totally irrelevant."
The judges on the
FISA court are "not even concerned, nor are they
involved in any way with the
Executive Order 12333
collection," Binney said during the radio
interview. "That's all done outside of the
courts. And outside of the Congress."
Binney told Fox the laws that fall under the
FISA court's jurisdiction are "simply out there
for show" and "trying to show that the
government is following the law, and being
looked at and overseen by the Senate and House
intelligence committees and the courts."
"That's not the main collection program for NSA,"
Binney said.
What Binney did not delve into, however, was if
President Obama directed surveillance on Trump
for political purposes during the campaign, a
core accusation of Trump's. But Binney did say
events such as publication of details of private
calls between President Trump and the Australian
prime minister, as well as with the Mexican
president, are evidence the intelligence
community is playing hardball with the White
House.
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"I think that's
what happened here," Binney told Fox. "The
evidence of the conversation of the president of
the U.S., President Trump, and
the [prime minister] of Australia
and
the president of Mexico.
Releasing those conversations. Those are
conversations that are picked up by the
FAIRVIEW program,
primarily, by NSA."
Curt Mills
is a news writer at U.S. News & World Report. Email
him at cmills@usnews.com
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing
House.
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