US intelligence czar wants power to snoop on all non-Americans

jay28

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US intelligence czar wants power to snoop on all non-Americans

<!-- begin content --> Submitted by Canada IFP on Fri, 2007-06-29 16:42.Americas | United States | News


US intelligence czar wants congress to pass a bill that would allow American spies to snoop electronically on non-Americans anywhere in the world by forcing telecommunication carriers to comply in exchange for immunity from prosecution by affected individuals.
"The law needs to be updated so that we can target foreigners, regardless of where [communications are] intercepted in the world, and at the same time, if a U.S. person is ever a subject of surveillance for any reason, it would require a warrant," Admiral Michael McConnell, the US director of national intelligence said in an interview with Council of Foreign Relation's Eben Kaplan. "The threat has increased, the intent is stated, and the way the wording in the current law is captured inhibits or prevents us from being successful."
He also wants Congress to grant immunity against legal action to telephone companies and ISPs who collaborate and cooperate with the United States.
The Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 would update the definition of electronic surveillance to cover all forms of telecommunications.
It authority both to force providers to cooperate with authorized intelligence activities, and protect those carriers when they do comply with requests under FISA.
The new bill also redefines the term "agent of a foreign power" to include any non-U.S. persons whom the US Government believes possess significant intelligence information, even if there's no evidence to substantiate that belief.
If the bill becomes law, the US spies would be able to eavesdrop on foreigners who use US servers for communications, including those who use popular email services such as Google's Gmail and Yahoo! mail, Internet chatrooms and VOIP services.
Civil rights groups have the FISA "modernisation" bill an attempt by Bush administration to retroactively legitamise President's illegal wiretapping.
"Congress enacted FISA with the intention of protecting Americans from the very sort of domestic wiretapping the administration has engaged in," said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. "Amending FISA after the fact would only serve to legitimize and reward the president's illegal actions. There is no legitimate need to expand FISA and the argument that this law cannot keep up with technology is flatly false. "
The US house of representatives last month passed the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 bill and the bill has been referred to the Senate Intelligence Committee.
But the Committee is unable to proceed as the White House has repeatedly refused to hand over documents related to Administration's illegal wiretapping.
 
Re: US intelligence czar wants power to snoop on all non-Americans

US intelligence czar wants power to snoop on all non-Americans

This is Fantastic Jay --- Does this mean we will be able to listen to you talk to your buddy in the mosque ? If so, this is fantastic.
 
Re: US intelligence czar wants power to snoop on all non-Americans

They can do whatever they want to people who aren't American citizens as far as I'm concerned.
 
Re: US intelligence czar wants power to snoop on all non-Americans

<dl><dd>They came first for the Communists,</dd><dd>and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.</dd></dl> <dl><dd>Then they came for the Jews,</dd><dd>and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.</dd></dl> <dl><dd>Then they came for the trade unionists,</dd><dd>and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.</dd></dl> <dl><dd>Then they came for the Catholics,</dd><dd>and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant.
</dd></dl> <dl><dd>Then they came for me,</dd><dd>and by that time no one was left to speak up.</dd></dl>
Pastor Martin Niem?ller
Speaking about the failure of Germans to oppose the policies of the Nazis.

4625:
Beware of whose rights you would so cavalierly take away. For once you circumscribe the rights of others, your rights will come immediately behind them. . . .
 
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Re: US intelligence czar wants power to snoop on all non-Americans

Sacrafices have to be made.

The surveilence in the U.K. seems to have been useful lately...
 
Re: US intelligence czar wants power to snoop on all non-Americans

"Those Who Sacrifice Liberty For Security Deserve Neither" - Benjamin Franklin

I, for one, am not much worried about the towel-heads who wish to return to the seventh century; we can beat those types. However, I am much more worried about governmental powers that are not constrained by the Constitution. Hence, my caution in ceding hard-won constitutional rights for temporary pseudo-security.

JH - I agree that the British intelligence services performed admirably. However, the British don't really have a "constitution" per se. Morever, I haven't seen anything yet that the British did that American law enforcement could not do now without a warrant. In other words, police here are free to approach anyone and ask questions (though one doesn't have to answer); free to follow anyone without a warrant; and, free to investigate (and reasonably detain) for offenses conducted in plain view.
 
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