Obama On NSA Spying: "I Would Be Concerned Too, If I Weren't Inside The Government"
10
August, 2013
In
what is as close to saying 'trust us, we're from the
government,' as it gets; President Obama's traitor-identifying,
blame-pointing, cover-your-assing speech on Friday has done nothing
to end the supposedly "critical NSA counter-terrorism tool,"
from being used on American citizens. People of America should
be relieved, as the President stated unequivocally that he is
"comfortable that the program is not being abused." If
only American citizens were able to see all the moving pieces, Obama
implied, they would say "you know what? These [government] folks
are following the law," but because the program remains
classified, it remains impossible to know what is really going on.
Reassuring rhetoric aside, as the AP notes, Obama offered these
inspiring words regarding the ongoing concerns that law-abiding
citizens may still have beyond his assurances: "I would be
worried too, if I weren't inside the government." Another
teleprompter-less glimpse of what he really thinks? Perhaps; but
for now, the NSA will continue to sweep phone records of all
Americans with the possibility of creating similar databases of
credit card transactions, hotel records, and Internet searches.
Via
AP,
President
Barack Obama made it clear Friday he has no intention of stopping the
daily collection of American phone records. And while he offered
"appropriate reforms," he blamed government leaks for
creating distrust of his domestic spying program.
...
"I
am comfortable that the program currently is not being abused," Obama
said. "I am comfortable that if the American people examined
exactly what was taking place, how it was being used, what the
safeguards were, that they would say, 'You know what? These
folks are following the law.'"
Because
the program remains classified, however, it's impossible for
Americans to conduct that analysis beyond the assurances his
administration has given.
...
"Understandably,
people would be concerned," the president said. "I
would be, too, if I weren't inside the government."
...
Every
day, the NSA sweeps up the phone records of all Americans. The
program was authorized under the USA Patriot Act, which Congress
hurriedly passed after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The NSA
says phone records are the only information it collects in bulk under
that law. But officials have left open the possibility that it
could create similar databases of people's credit card transactions,
hotel records and Internet searches.
Obama
said he welcomed the debate, but his national security team also
said it never intended to tell Americans about the highly classified
phone program, which it falsely denied existed.
...
Obama
is creating an outside advisory panel to review U.S. surveillance
powers. He did not say who would be on that panel but over the
past week, the president met secretly with technology business
leaders, some of whom cooperated with the government surveillance and
were unhappy to see their companies named in leaked government
documents.
The
government already has a panel, mandated by Congress, to conduct the
same review. The U.S. Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight
Board has already held one hearing on the surveillance systems and
constitutional concerns and its five members have been given
classified briefings on NSA operations.
...
As
Obama spoke, the Justice Department released what Obama called
"the legal rationale" for the surveillance. But the
document was not a legal analysis and amounted primarily to a
recitation of what the administration has already told Congress.
...
The
administration says it only looks at the phone records when
investigating suspected terrorists. But testimony before
Congress revealed how easy it is for Americans with no connection to
terrorism to unwittingly have their calling patterns analyzed by the
government.
...
Even
with the proposed changes, Obama will have to persuade Congress
to reauthorize the Patriot Act in 2015.
...
The
White House chose to announce the changes and release the documents
on a Friday afternoon in August when Congress was on vacation and
much of Washington had cleared out.
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