Intelligence
officials overheard joking about how NSA leaker should be
'disappeared' after handing classified documents to press
- Editor-at-large of The Atlantic Steve Clemons tweeted the 'disturbing' discussion after overhearing it at Washington's Dulles airport on Saturday
- The four men were speaking loudly and 'almost bragging'
- They said both the leaker and Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald, who broke the story, should be 'disappeared'
- Comes after National Intelligence director James R Clapper defended the surveillance programs for keeping America safe
- NSA filed criminal report with Justice Dept. in relation to leaks to The Guardian and The Washington Post
10
June, 2013
A
group of intelligence officials were overheard yesterday discussing
how the National Security Agency worker who leaked sensitive
documents to a reporter last week should be 'disappeared.'
Foreign
policy analyst and editor at large of The Atlantic, Steve Clemons,
tweeted about the 'disturbing' conversation after listening in to
four men who were sitting near him as he waited for a flight at
Washington's Dulles airport.
'In
Dulles UAL lounge listening to 4 US intel officials saying loudly
leaker & reporter on #NSA stuff should be disappeared recorded a
bit,' he tweeted at 8:42 a.m. on Saturday.
According
to Clemons, the men had been attending an event hosted by the
Intelligence and National Security Alliance.
One
of the officials was wearing 'a white knit national counter-terrorism
center shirt,' Clemons told the Huffington Post. He added that it was
clear from their conversation they were among the intelligence
community
Clemons
said the conversation initially centered around the event the men had
just attended but soon turned to the NSA leaks, which were first
reported by Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald.
The
term 'disappeared' refers to a secret murder or assassination carried
out by dictatorship governments.
Clemons
described the discussion on Twitter as 'bravado' and said he believed
the disappearing comment was 'half joke half serious.'
'They
were loud. Almost bragging. Lacked circumspection about comments &
jokes,' he wrote about the conversation in the busy airport lounge.
Defensive:
Director of National Intelligence James R Clapper said in a statement
Saturday that disclosures on intelligence gathering practices were
'reckless'
Clemons
said he didn't know the identities of the officials or which agency
they worked for. He wrote on twitter that he recorded part of the
conversation and took a number of poor quality photos, which he said
he would post online.
'Was
a shock to me and wasn't prepared,' he tweeted.
The
dinner was in honor of former NSA director Michael Hayden and chaired
by former Ambassador John Negroponte.
The
news comes after Director of National Intelligence James R Clapper
responded on Saturday to the defended the classified government
surveillance programs that were leaked during the week, insisting the
measures kept Americans safe and were 'authorized by Congress'.
Hoping
to 'dispel some of the myths' after leaked documents published by The
Guardian and The Washington Post shed light on two top-secret
government surveillance programs, Clapper said in a statement the
purpose of the programs is 'to obtain foreign intelligence
information, including information necessary to thwart terrorist and
cyber attacks against the United States and its allies'.
The
classified document, published by The Guardian, detailed how a
division of Verizon was ordered to give cell phone records to the
NSA. The Guardian and The Washington Post also reported that another
program, called 'PRISM', was used by U.S. intelligence agencies to
gain access to the files maintained by top Internet companies like
Google, Microsoft and Facebook. In statements, those companies denied
providing the government with special access to their files.
'Necessary':
The top intelligence official, James R Clapper, said the NSA's
intelligence measures disclosed in recent reports were 'used to keep
Americans safe
Both
the phone-records program and PRISM were approved by a judge, but
PRISM allowed government agencies to gain access to various Internet
conversations, including email.
In
his statement, Clapper said PRISM, which was authorized in the
Patriot Act, has been in place since 2008.
The
Associated Press reported on Saturday that earlier this week the NSA
filed a criminal report with the Justice Department in relation to
the leaks.
Clapper
called the disclosures 'reckless'.
'In
a rush to publish, media outlets have not given the full
context–including the extent to which these programs are overseen
by all three branches of government–to these effective tools,' he
said. 'In particular, the surveillance activities published in The
Guardian and The Washington Post are lawful and conducted under
authorities widely known and discussed, and fully debated and
authorized by Congress.'
Clapper's
statement came as a new Guardian report revealed more information on
the NSA's tool for recording and analyzing intelligence.
Documents
obtained by the Guardian reveal the government uses a data mining
tool, called Boundless Informant, to map information the agency
collects. The Guardian reported the agency collected 'almost 3
billion pieces of intelligence from US computer networks over a
30-day period ending in March 2013'.
National
security: Top intelligence official James R Clapper said secret
programs revealed in recent news reports are 'necessary to thwart
terrorist and cyber attacks against the United States and its allies'
'The
tool allows users to select a country on a map and view the metadata
volume and select details about the collections against that
country,' according to an NSA fact sheet about the program obtained
by The Guardian.
In
his statement, Clapper said the agency is limited in discussing their
intelligence gathering practices by the NSA's need to protect their
methods and sources.
'Disclosing
information about the specific methods the government uses to collect
communications can obviously give our enemies a "playbook"
of how to avoid detection,' Clapper said.
Clapper
added the recent disclosures have caused 'significant
misimpressions', adding he could not correct all 'inaccuracies'
without revealing even more classified information.
In
order to 'dispel some of the myths', the NSA also released a
three-page fact sheet on intelligence collection as outlined by the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
The
fact sheet noted the government 'does not unilaterally obtain
information from the servers of U.S. electronic communication service
providers' but only through court approval with provider's knowledge.
Congress
also authorized the use of PRISM, which the fact sheet called an
'internal government computer system' and 'not an undisclosed
collection or data mining program'.
The
fact sheet also tried to dispel many Americans' concerns, noting the
government cannot target anyone's computer or phone records without
'an appropriate, and documented, foreign intelligence purpose for the
acquisition (such as for the prevention of terrorism, hostile cyber
activities, or nuclear proliferation) and the foreign target is
reasonably believed to be outside the United States.
The
fact sheet detailed how their intelligence gathering was approved or
overseen by the three branches of government.
'Finally,
the notion that Section 702 activities are not subject to internal
and external oversight is similarly incorrect. Collection of
intelligence information under Section 702 is subject to an extensive
oversight regime, incorporating reviews by the Executive, Legislative
and Judicial branches,' the fact sheet said.
In
the fact sheet, Clapper also highlighted how intelligence gathered
using these programs has provided 'insight into terrorist networks
and plans'.
'For
example, the intelligence community acquired information on a
terrorist organization's strategic planning efforts,' he said in the
fact sheet.
'Communications collected under Section 702 have yielded
intelligence regarding proliferation networks and have directly and
significantly contributed to successful operations to impede the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and related
technologies.'
President
Barack Obama also noted the importance of the intelligence programs
in an event in California Friday.
'I
came in with a healthy skepticism about these programs,' he said
according to multiple reports. 'My team evaluated them. We scrubbed
them thoroughly–we actually expanded some of the oversight,
increased some of the safeguards. But my assessment and my team's
assessment was that they help us prevent terrorist attacks. You can't
have 100 per cent security and also then have 100 per cent privacy
and zero inconvenience. We're going have to make some choices as a
society.'
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