By James
Bovard
July 10, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "The
American Conservative."
Fox
News host Tucker Carlson was mocked on social media
this week for stating that he had been told that the
National Security Agency was reading
his private emails and spying
on him. The usual suspects called Carlson paranoid,
because there are so many checks and balances to
assure the feds would never illegally target a
vexatious critic of President Joe Biden.
However, late last
month,
a dissent by Travis LeBlanc,
a member of the Privacy and Civil Liberties
Oversight Board, revealed that one of the NSA’s most
intrusive surveillance engines, XKeyscore, may be
violating federal law and Americans’ rights and
privacy.
In 2013, Edward Snowden
leaked documents proving that
XKeyscore was
the surveillance state’s incarnation of paranoia.
What did it take for the NSA to justify vacuuming up
Americans’ emails and internet data? Merely
detecting “someone searching the web for suspicious
stuff.”
The peril of that
farcical standard was compounded because, as Snowden
explained, NSA surveillance tools enabled him to
“wiretap anyone, from you or your accountant, to a
federal judge or even the president, if I had a
personal email.” Thanks to its all-encompassing
standard of “suspicious,” NSA has “assembled on the
order of 20 trillion [email and phone] transactions
about U.S. citizens with other U.S. citizens,”
according to former NSA senior analyst William
Binney.
Six months after
Snowden’s disclosures began, federal judge Richard
Leon issued a ruling denouncing the NSA surveillance
regime as “almost
Orwellian”:
“I cannot imagine a
more indiscriminate and arbitrary invasion than
this systematic and high-tech collection and
retention of personal data on virtually every
single citizen for purposes of querying and
analyzing it without prior judicial approval.”
Watchdog Begins
Investigation
After the uproar
created by the Snowden revelations, the civil
liberties watchdog board leaped into action to
investigate XKeyscore. Six years later, the board
finished its 56-page report, a confidential version
of which was provided to the White House and select
members of Congress in March.
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Unfortunately, the
board apparently did not have time to look under any
rocks to see what the NSA might be hiding. In a dissent
partially declassified in
late June, LeBlanc complained that the board failed
to ask “how many U.S. persons have been impacted by
XKeyscore, how much data the program collects and
analyzes, how widely information analyzed through
XKeyscore is shared, the number of lives saved, or
the number of terrorist events averted as a result
of XKeyscore.”
In 2019, XKeyscore
resulted in “hundreds of compliance incidents,” and
LeBlanc noted that “U.S. law and the known
collection or processing of U.S. person information
are serious compliance issues.” However, the civil
liberties oversight board did not “request specific
information” about violations of U.S. law by NSA.
LeBlanc groused that the
board’s report “reads
more like a book report of the XKeyscore program
than an independent oversight analysis.”
The NSA apparently
never even bothered doing a formal analysis of the
legality or constitutionality of XKeyscore until
2016, after the oversight board specifically
requested such information. The NSA later claimed
that it had done earlier legal analyses that
justified XKeyscore but refused to share them with
the oversight board. LeBlanc told
The Washington Post,
“We have a very
powerful surveillance program that eight years
or so after exposure, still has no judicial
oversight, and what I consider to be inadequate
legal analysis and serious compliance
infractions.”
NSA Repeats
Itself
The NSA claims it
conducted “appropriate legal reviews” for XKeyscore.
It said the same thing when Snowden started blasting
their credibility to smithereens. Rebecca Richards,
NSA’s civil liberties and privacy officer, declared
that the compliance incidents were investigated and
“we found them to be standard intelligence
practices.”
This is not as
reassuring as Richards might have hoped. Consider
the harebrained legal rationales that justified data
roundups after 9/11. Section 215 of the Patriot Act
entitles the government to seize — without a warrant
— information relevant to a terrorism investigation.
The Bush and Obama administrations decided that all
phone records of all Americans were “relevant”
to terrorism investigations.
The NSA effectively
claimed that it was not “targeting” any individual
since it was seizing everyone’s data. This “finding”
was kept secret from the public and the vast
majority of Congress — as well as from federal
judges who heard cases challenging the
constitutionality of federal surveillance regimes.
Many of LeBlanc’s
XKeyscore criticisms remain classified. In his
publicly released statement, he said it was
“inexcusable” that the board failed to make any
effort to seek declassification of the report or any
portions thereof.
Sen. Ron Wyden, the
most dogged congressional watchdog of federal
spying, commented
on LeBlanc’s disclosure:
“I continue to be concerned that Americans still
know far too little about the government’s
surveillance activities under Executive Order 12333
and how it threatens their privacy.” Wyden is
pressing for numerous civil liberties board reports
to be declassified to “shed light on these secret
authorities that govern the collection and use of
Americans’ personal information.” Wyden, a member of
the Senate Intelligence Committee, is muzzled from
disclosing the NSA’s confidential dirt [though he
has immunity to do so in a legislative act under the
Constitution’s Speech and Debate clause].
Another Lap Dog
Unfortunately, the
Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, created
in 2004, is the same type of lap dog as the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court, which rubber-stamps
99 percent of requested search warrants.
In late 2005, The New
York Times reported that George W. Bush’s
“secret presidential order has given the NSA the
freedom to peruse… the email of millions of
Americans.”
The NSA’s program was
quickly christened the “J. Edgar Hoover Memorial
Vacuum Cleaner,” but that didn’t stop the civil
liberties watchdog board from
heartily endorsing it.
In 2007, before the board could issue its belated
first annual report, Bush White House staffers
massively rewrote and censored a draft version,
spurring Democratic board member Lanny Davis to
resign in protest.
The watchdog board,
unlike Sen. Wyden, failed to issue any pre-Snowden
warnings that federal surveillance regimes were out
of control.
None of this proves
that the NSA has been wiretapping Carlson. But his
situation might parallel one of the most untimely
and embarrassing Supreme Court decisions in the
modern era. Barack Obama had campaigned for the
presidency as an opponent of warrantless wiretaps,
but after taking office, quickly swooned for that
push-button power.
Numerous lawsuits
challenged the constitutionality of sweeping
warrantless surveillance, but the Justice Department
perennially sought to get plaintiffs thrown out of
court. The New York Times in
2012 called the
Obama administration’s position “a particularly
cynical Catch-22: Because the wiretaps are secret
and no one can say for certain that their calls have
been or will be monitored, no one has standing to
bring suit over the surveillance.” This was the
legal version of frat party ethics: As long as the
government blindfolds its victims, it can do as it
pleases.
The Supreme Court
swallowed that argument in an early 2013 decision.
Justice Samuel Alito, writing for the 5-4 majority,
noted that the Court was averse to granting standing
to challenge the government based on “theories that
require guesswork” and tutted that the complainants
“have set forth no specific facts demonstrating that
the communications of their foreign contacts will be
targeted.”
Alito upheld the Obama
administration’s position because the complaints
about spying were “necessarily conjectural” and “too
speculative” based on fears of “hypothetical future
harm.” The majority opinion also insisted that the
government had plenty of safeguards — such as the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court — to assure
innocent Americans’ rights are not violated.
A few months later,
Snowden’s revelations blew those arguments to
pieces, revealing that the NSA can tap almost any
cell phone in the world, vacuum up smartphone data,
remotely access computers, and crack the vast
majority of computer encryption.
After Carlson stated
that his emails were being intercepted, the NSA
issued a statement declaring that “Tucker Carlson has
never been an intelligence
target of the Agency… With limited exceptions (e.g.
an emergency), NSA may not target a US citizen
without a court order that explicitly authorizes the
targeting.”
“Not an intelligence
target” is about as re-assuring as “not the drone
target” was for the huge number of innocent
bystanders blown up by Obama’s assassination
program. Ninety percent of the people whose emails
and other data were dragged into NSA surveillance
dragnets were not
the NSA’s actual targets,
according to a 2014 Washington Post analysis
based on data that Snowden provided.
Since 9/11, trampling
the Constitution has been a no-fault offense in
Washington. In his dissent, LeBlanc declared that
“the public is rightly worried about secret
surveillance programs.” Many of the folks mocking
Carlson’s concerns would be wise to read up on the
recent history of mass illicit surveillance.
“Government under the law” requires more than
perfunctory denials of federal crimes.
James Bovard is
the author of 10 books, including 2012’s Public
Policy Hooligan, and 2006’s Attention
Deficit Democracy. He is also a USA
Today columnist.
Follow him on
Twitter @JimBovard,
read
his blog
and send him email.
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