U.S. INTELLIGENCE
The Guardian Newspaper, a London based broadsheet, has reported that intelligence analysts can conduct surveillance by giving only a ‘broad justification’ by filling in an on-screen form through a system known as XKeyscore. No review is needed either by a court or National Security Agency Staff.
Following disclosures made by the US fugitive and whistleblower, Edward Snowden, that U.S. intelligence agencies collected data on phone calls and other communications of Americans and foreign citizens as a tool to fight terrorism, those revelations have sparked uproar in the United States, Britain and other foreign countries.
America’s National Security Agency (NSA) has called XKeyscore ‘a lawful foreign signals intelligence collection system’. In a statement to the Guardian following the newspaper’s report the agency said it was ‘false’ its collection is arbitrary and unconstrained. Intelligence analysts insist the surveillance programs have helped to thwart terrorist attacks and have saved many lives.
Opposition to the sweeping surveillance has been gaining traction in Congress, despite intense arguments and lobbying on behalf of the intelligence agencies’ from the Obama administration, congressional leaders and members of the House of Representatives and Senate Intelligence Committees.President Obama will meet with U.S. lawmakers today to discuss programs under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. This follows a grilling yesterday of intelligence officials by the Senate Judiciary Committee about their data gathering, the lack of transparency and security lapses that allowed Snowden to get away with so much information.
Two Democratic members of the committee, Senators Al Franken and Richard Blumenthal, said they would introduce legislation to force the Obama administration to provide more information about the data collection programs, including how many Americans’ records were reviewed by federal agents. A covert NSA programme allows analysts to search with no prior authorisation through vast databases.
Senator Franken said: “The government has to give proper weight to both keeping America safe from terrorists and protecting Americans’ privacy.”
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.
Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy, the committee chairman, said: “If a 29-year-old school dropout could come in and take out massive amounts of data, it’s obvious there weren’t adequate controls… has anybody been fired?”
John Inglis, the NSA’s deputy director, said no one had been dismissed and no one had offered to resign.
This week, the director of national intelligence has released three declassified documents 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 Sept. 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 authorised searches.
The 2009 report states: “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 authorised for intelligence purposes.”
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.