Wyden told the New York Times that his amendment would require
the government to get a warrant whenever it wants to wiretap an
American outside the country, such as a U.S. soldier serving overseas
or an American on a business trip.
The individual freedom of an
American shouldnt depend on their physical geography, Wyden told the
Times. He said his amendment passed on a 9-6 vote in a closed Senate
Intelligence Committee meeting on Oct. 18. [
NYT, Oct. 19, 2007]
After the committee vote, the Bush administration and a key Senate Republican took direct aim at Wydens provision.
We have strong concerns about that amendment, said White House spokesman Tony Fratto. We certainly could not accept it.
Sen.
Christopher Bond of Missouri, the ranking committee Republican, said
Wydens amendment was problematic and could scuttle the entire bill
if not changed.
In other words, the seemingly loose phrasing of
the Protect America Act wasnt just an oversight or something that
would be cleaned up with some internal technical adjustments. Rather,
it was an important feature of the legislation that was slipped past
the Democratic leadership and most of the Washington press corps in
August.
The law 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.
The laws advocates claimed that
this provision was intended to intercept communications when at least
one party was linked to a terrorist group or a terrorist affiliate and
was outside the United States.
No Terrorist Wording
But
the laws language didnt limit the surveillance to terrorists or
enemy combatants indeed those words were not mentioned in the
legislation.
Nor does the Protect America Act, 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.
In the rush to
wrap up legislative business before the August recess and to avoid
soft on terror accusations Democratic congressional leaders offered
only cursory attention to what this provision meant and what new abuses
might become 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, or a senator meeting with a foreign leader, or a journalist
filing stories from overseas?
The only 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, such as 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.
Other supposed safeguards in the Protect America Act might not be reassuring to its targets, either.
While
the targets 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 court created by the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act, with appeals of adverse rulings allowed by either
side up to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Lawsuit Immunity
But
service providers get 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 retaliates by shifting 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 law 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,
regardless of how unjustified the surveillance may have been.
Initially,
administration officials said their goal in pushing through the new law
was to address a glitch related to cases in which two terror suspects,
both abroad, have their communication routed through a U.S. switching
point and thus might require a warrant.
Citing this
vulnerability, President Bush demanded that Democrats revise FISA
before leaving for the August recess. Democrats thought they had
reached a compromise that would address the administrations narrow
concern, but the White House and the congressional Republicans then
demanded more sweeping changes.
The Senate caved in first,
voting 60-28 to authorize Bushs broader spying powers, with many
centrist Democrats joining a solid phalanx of Republicans.
(Presidential contenders Sens. Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Chris
Dodd and Joe Biden voted no.)
On Aug. 4, Bush then 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 to the floor. It carried, 227-183, with 41 Democrats backing Bushs
bill.
Trying to put the best spin on their defeat, Democratic
leaders pointed to their one concession: a sunset provision that
required Bush to seek renewal of his powers in six months. Still, the
Democratic base and many other Americans were furious at the latest
cave-in, sending House Speaker Nancy Pelosi more than 200,000 angry
e-mails.
Stung by the reaction, Democratic leaders promised that
the spying law would be revisited immediately after the August recess,
rather than waiting around for a required reauthorization in February
2008.
New Concessions
Now, however, the Senate Democrats
appear headed toward another major concession to Bush, making
retroactive the legal immunity for telecommunications companies that
collaborated with the administrations warrantless surveillance over
the past six years.
Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-West Virginia,
Senate Intelligence Committee chairman, shepherded this new concession
through his panel, which approved a revised version of the Protect
America Act on a 13-2 vote with Wyden and Sen. Russ Feingold,
D-Wisconsin, voting no.
The bill now goes to the Senate
Judiciary Committee, which also has jurisdiction. Sen. Dodd,
D-Connecticut, has vowed to put a hold on the bill to block the
retroactive immunity provision.
But the Democrats will face the
same dilemma that has stymied their attempts to end the Iraq War. The
Republicans are in the drivers seat because they can filibuster in the
Senate, forcing the Democrats to round up 60 votes on anything that
restricts the Presidents powers, such as Wydens amendment.
The
GOP also has used parliamentary maneuvers in the House to delay its
consideration of a different surveillance bill that includes more
constraints on Bush and leaves out the amnesty for telecommunications
companies.
Even if a new bill not to Bushs liking can clear
those hurdles, he can veto it, requiring two-thirds majorities in both
houses to override.
An impasse would leave the Democrats back
where they started. Then, with the law set to expire in February 2008,
Bush and his political allies would taunt them as soft on terror
and theres little reason to believe that congressional Democrats will
show more backbone in an election year.