NP Rank:
"Hello America? This is the Enemy"
The U.S. government and associated security agencies could make far better use of their time engaged in intelligence gathering activities that will actually yield results, rather than on listening for hypothetical jihadist calls from behind enemy cellphone tower lines.
President Bush on Monday lobbied again for an intelligence law allowing government eavesdropping on phone calls and e-mails, as the tone of the dispute between the White House and Congress over terrorist surveillance grew increasingly sharp."To put it bluntly, if the enemy is calling into America, we really need to know what they're saying, and we need to know what they're thinking, and we need to know who they're talking to," Bush said at the start of his annual meeting with the nation's governors at the White House.
"This is a different kind of struggle than we've ever faced before. It's essential that we understand the mentality of these killers," Bush said.
The law in question targets foreign terrorist threats and allows eavesdropping on communications involving people in the U.S., so long as those people are not the intended focus or target of the surveillance. The latest version of the legislation expired on Feb. 16, and the rules reverted to those outlined in the 30-year-old Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
Bush and Congress are at odds over whether to give legal immunity to companies that in the past helped the government spy on customers without court warrants.
Bush wants the House to act on legislation the Senate has passed. That bill provides retroactive protection for telecommunications companies that wiretapped U.S. phone and computer lines at the government's request after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, without court permission.
The House version does not provide such immunity.
February 25, 2008 at 04:36 pm by Jarrett Martineau, 337 views, 2 comments
Crowd Power
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Michelle Says So
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 17:10 on February 25th, 2008
Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff. I agree with you (and love the headline). How anyone can fail to see through the charade is beyond me.
at 04:56 on February 26th, 2008
Good Concepts.