TPTB
will NOT like this.
New
Snowden leak upstages U.S. move to declassify documents
New
revelations from former security contractor Edward Snowden that U.S.
intelligence agencies have access to a vast online tracking tool came
to light on Wednesday, as lawmakers put the secret surveillance
programs under greater scrutiny
31
July, 2013
The
Guardian, citing documents from Snowden, published National Security
Agency training materials for the XKeyscore program, which the
British newspaper described as the NSA's widest-reaching system that
covers "nearly everything a typical user does on the Internet."
Intelligence
analysts can conduct surveillance through XKeyscore by filling in an
on-screen form giving only a "broad justification" for the
search and no review by a court or NSA staff, the newspaper said.
Snowden's
disclosures to media that U.S. intelligence agencies collected data
on phone calls and other communications of Americans and foreign
citizens as a tool to fight terrorism have sparked uproar in the
United States and abroad.
Intelligence
officials insist the surveillance programs helped thwart terrorist
attacks and saved many American lives.
"The
implication that NSA's collection is arbitrary and unconstrained is
false," the agency said in a statement in response to the
Guardian's new report, calling XKeyscore part of "NSA's lawful
foreign signals intelligence collection system."
Opposition
to the sweeping surveillance has been gaining traction in Congress,
despite intense lobbying on the intelligence agencies' behalf from
the Obama administration, congressional leaders and members of the
House of Representatives and Senate Intelligence Committees.
President
Barack Obama scheduled a meeting for Thursday with Republican and
Democratic lawmakers, including the leaders of the U.S. Senate and
House of Representatives Intelligence Committees, to discuss programs
under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, a White House
official said on Wednesday.
Intelligence
officials were grilled at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on
Wednesday about their data gathering, the lack of transparency and
security lapses that let Snowden get away with so much information.
SENATE,
HOUSE LEGISLATION
Two
Democratic members of the committee, Senators Al Franken and Richard
Blumenthal, said they would introduce legislation on Thursday to
force the Obama administration to provide more information about the
data collection programs, including how many Americans' records were
reviewed by federal agents.
"The
government has to give proper weight to both keeping America safe
from terrorists and protecting Americans' privacy," Franken
said.
Senior
intelligence officials at the hearing said they were open to making
some changes in the system.
Keith
Alexander, the NSA director, jousted with hecklers at the Black Hat
security conference in Las Vegas on Wednesday as he defended the U.S.
spy agency's surveillance programs before a crowd of cybersecurity
experts and hackers.
"Read
the Constitution!" one shouted. But the four-star general
replied: "I have. So should you," to sustained applause.
Last
week, the House defeated by a narrow 217-205 margin a bill that would
have cut funding of the NSA program that collects the phone records.
Strong support for the measure - bolstered by an unlikely alliance of
liberal Democrats and libertarian Republicans - surprised many
observers.
Snowden,
who has been charged under the U.S. Espionage Act and had his
passport revoked, left Hong Kong more than a month ago and is stuck
in limbo at a Moscow airport while seeking asylum in Russia, which
has refused to extradite him.
"If
a 29-year-old school dropout could come in and take out massive,
massive amounts of data, it's obvious there weren't adequate
controls," Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy, the committee
chairman, said at the hearing. "Has anybody been fired?"
John
Inglis, the NSA's deputy director, said no one had been dismissed and
no one had offered to resign.
GOVERNMENT
DECLASSIFIES DOCUMENTS
The
director of national intelligence released three declassified
documents on Wednesday in the "interest of increased
transparency." They explained the bulk collection of phone data
- one of the secret programs revealed by Snowden.
Much
of what is in the newly declassified documents has already been
divulged in public hearings by intelligence officials. The released
documents included 2009 and 2011 reports on the NSA's "Bulk
Collection Program," carried out under the U.S. Patriot Act, the
anti-terrorism legislation passed shortly after the September 11,
2001, attacks.
They
also included an April 2013 order from the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court, which directed communications company Verizon to
hand over data from millions of Americans' telephone calls. The
declassified documents said the data would only be used when needed
for authorized searches.
"Although
the programs collect a large amount of information, the vast majority
of that information is never reviewed by anyone in the government,
because the information is not responsive to the limited queries that
are authorized for intelligence purposes," the 2009 report said.
But
the secret NSA slide show from 2008, posted by the Guardian on its
website, showed that XKeyscore allowed analysts to access databases
that collect and index online activity around the world, including
searching for email addresses, extracted files, phone numbers or chat
activity.
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