The bills advocates claim it is intended to intercept
communications when at least one party is linked to a terrorist group
or a terrorist affiliate and is outside the United States. But the
bills language doesnt limit the surveillance to terrorists or
enemy combatants indeed those words are not mentioned in the
legislation.
Nor does the bill, which was drafted by the Bush
administrations national security team, specify what happens to a
one-year surveillance order against a target if the person then enters
or returns to the United States. The vaguely worded act gives broad
discretion to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and Director of
National Intelligence Mike McConnell.
Its key language states:
Notwithstanding any other law, the Director of National Intelligence
and the Attorney General may for periods of up to one year authorize
the acquisition of foreign intelligence information concerning persons
reasonably believed to be outside the United States.
In the
pre-recess rush to wrap up legislative business and to avoid a messy
confrontation with President Bush Congress offered only cursory
attention to what this provision means and what new abuses are now
possible.
For instance, could a one-year surveillance order be
issued against an American attorney who was representing a Guantanamo
detainee and who traveled to Europe for a legal conference? Could the
surveillance order follow that person back home? How about an outspoken
peace activist who visited a friend in Canada?
The key
limitation on the administrations authority is the need to be seeking
foreign intelligence information. Though the term does cover
information about possible hostile acts by a foreign power or an agent
of a foreign power, including sabotage, terrorism or clandestine
intelligence activities, the phrase can be interpreted in a far looser
way.
The term can be defined broadly as information about a
foreign power that relates to U.S. national defense, national security
or the conduct of foreign affairs. In todays world, those categories
could mean pretty much anything.
Not Reassuring
Other
supposed safeguards in the bill might not be reassuring to its targets,
either. While the targets obviously are kept in the dark about the
surveillance, their communications providers such as phone companies
or e-mail services can challenge the governments order if theyre
willing to absorb the expense and offend the Executive Branch, which
often has giant contracts with the same providers.
Even then,
the service providers, which aren't told the classified basis for the
surveillance order, can only contest the surveillance on procedural
grounds through the secret channels of the FISA court system, with
appeals of adverse rulings allowed by either side up to the U.S.
Supreme Court.
But service providers are given a strong
incentive not to challenge the governments order. While a legal
challenge on behalf of an unsuspecting client could be expensive
especially if the Bush administration were to retaliate by shifting
government contracts to a competitor the legislation grants immunity
from liability to any service provider who complies.
Notwithstanding
any other law, no cause of action shall lie in any court against any
person for providing any information, facilities, or assistance in
accordance with a directive under this section, the bill states.
In
other words, if spying targets later discover that their service
providers gave the government access to their phone calls and e-mails,
they have no grounds to sue for damages, regardless of how unjustified
the surveillance may have been.
Given the Bush administrations
proclivity for stretching the boundaries of its powers, the scope of
the spying legislation alarmed civil libertarians and some Democrats
who favored a more limited revision of FISA to address a supposed new
obstacle related to spying on suspected al-Qaeda operatives.
Boehners Leak
House
Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, divulged in a Fox News interview
on July 31 that a FISA court had ruled in secret that warrantless
intercepts of foreign communications routed through the United States
were illegal.
There's been a ruling, over the last four or five
months, that prohibits the ability of our intelligence services and our
counterintelligence people from listening in to two terrorists in other
parts of the world where the communication could come through the
United States," Boehner said.
President Bush then demanded that
Democrats approve a revision to the FISA law before leaving for the
August recess. Democrats thought they had reached a compromise that
would address the kind of situation described by Boehner, but the White
House and the Republicans demanded more sweeping changes.
The
Senate caved in first, voting 60-28 to authorize Bushs broader spying
powers, with many centrist Democrats such as California Sen. Dianne
Feinstein and Virginia Sen. Jim Webb joining a solid phalanx of
Republicans. (Presidential contenders Sens. Hillary Clinton, Barack
Obama, Chris Dodd and Joe Biden voted no.)
On Aug. 4, Bush
turned up the heat on the House. He called the spying powers contained
in the bill crucial weapons in the fight against terrorism and declared
that protecting America is our most solemn obligation.
Many
Americans would disagree, arguing that the most solemn obligation is to
protect the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. But the Democratic
congressional leaders acted as if their highest priorities were getting
away for the August recess and avoiding ugly attacks on their
patriotism from Fox News and the right-wing media.
Instead of
canceling the recess and using the month of August to fight over both
Bushs extraordinary expansion of presidential powers and the Iraq War
House Democratic leaders brought the Senate-approved Protect America
Act of 2007 to the floor. It carried, 227-183, with 41 Democratic
defections.
Trying to put the best spin on their defeat,
Democratic leaders pointed to their one concession: a sunset provision
that requires President Bush to seek renewal of his powers in six
months.
However, not only it is it hard to envision the
Democrats finding more backbone to stand up to the soft on terror
charge in an election year, but passage of the bill complicates the
argument that Bush broke the law with his prior warrantless wiretapping.
Bushs
defenders can now cite this broad legislative authority as giving, in
effect, a retroactive congressional blessing to Bushs apparent
violations of FISA, which requires a secret court warrant for
eavesdropping and other spying inside the United States.
Some
rank-and-file Democrats also may wonder how valuable their partys
electoral victory in November 2006 has proved to be. Despite gaining
control of Congress, the Democrats have failed to stop the Iraq War or
to reinstate habeas corpus and other constitutional rights that were
breached by the Military Commissions Act of 2006, passed before the
election.
[For more on Bushs assault on American liberties, see our new book,
Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush.]
Ducking a Fight
The
Democratic leaders have failed to slow the growth of presidential power
in large part because they keep avoiding a showdown with Bush.
Early
on, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California, took presidential
impeachment off the table. Plus, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Michigan,
chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he would always
approve Bushs requests for Iraq War funding even as Republicans use
vetoes and filibusters to block Democratic war policy alternatives.
Democrats
also remain fearful of right-wing media attacks on their patriotism. In
a July meeting with former CIA officer Ray McGovern and some
impeachment backers, House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers,
D-Michigan, lamented that the Republicans and Fox News would have a
field day if a Democratic impeachment effort flopped. [See
Consortiumnews.coms
John Conyers Is No Martin Luther King.]
Now,
in August, the Democrats have shied away from another confrontation
with Bush, leaving little doubt that last Novembers election has done
little to change the underlying political dynamic of Washington.