Jeff Herz
Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance

From the Journal Times and the LA Times an excellent summation of my current frustration with the current administration’s policy on this subject:

SLOWLY BUT surely, the National Security Agency’s eavesdropping on Americans suspected of ties with foreign terrorists is being brought under the rule of law. But the Bush administration still owes not just Congress but the country some straight answers about the program.

Last week, Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales agreed to provide Congress details of the program’s new arrangement for being monitored by a special court set up by the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Gonzales’ latest concession comes a few weeks after the administration abruptly reversed itself and said that it could, after all, conduct surveillance of international calls and e-mails under the court’s supervision.

But the administration has still refused to spell out whether the court will approve individual requests for wiretapping authority — as it traditionally has done — or just sign off on more general requests. This is the crucial question.

A Justice Department official said last month that the new court orders are not “cookie-cutter” and were more specific than an “advisory opinion” on the overall program. That sounds encouraging, but the public deserves to know whether the administration is providing the court with probable cause about specific U.S. citizens.

Perhaps the answer to that question is in the documents Gonzales is turning over to Congress. If so, it should be shared with the public.

No one suggests that investigators should publicize the names or locations of people under suspicion or the technology being used to capture their communications. But it shouldn’t be a state secret whether the NSA is getting case-by-case approval for surveillance of Americans or engaging in some less discriminate “data mining.”

Two realities strengthen the hand of Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) and other lawmakers who want to bring oversight to the program: the new Democratic-controlled Congress and a lawsuit that reached a federal appeals court in Cincinnati last week. Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), who succeeded Specter as chairman of the Judiciary Committee, is threatening new legislation if the documents suggest the administration hasn’t achieved the “proper balance” between privacy and security. Last week, two of three judges on a panel of the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati reacted skeptically to the suggestion that a legal challenge to the original program was moot.

The attacks of 9/11 changed a lot of things in the United States — but not the meaning of the 4th Amendment or the need for congressional oversight of the executive branch. The administration can show its respect for these principles by being more forthcoming with the American people about its activities.

Rate this post:

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

| Print This Post Print This Post | 0 views | Other posts by Jeff Herz

Stumble It!

book mark Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance in del.icio.us | Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance to Slashdot.com | Submit Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance to Digg.com | Submit Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance to BoingBoing.net | Bookmark Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance in Furl | Bookmark Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance in Spurl | Bookmark Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance in Reddit | Bookmark Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance in Tailrank | Bookmark Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance in Newsvine | Bookmark Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance to Yahoo! | Bookmark Privacy and Security Needs Proper Balance to Fark

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

MND Opinion
editor's bio | article rss | comments rss | itunes podcast | tos | privacy policy
MensNEWSdaily®, mndnet.com, BlogWonks.com™, BlogWonk.com™, NewsWax.com™, YakVox.com™, DorkWatch.org™, CounterPulse.com™, JavaKing.com™ © 2001 - 2006 Java King, Inc.. Opinions found on this website are expressly those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of this publication, its editorial staff or contributors. Words, graphics, audio, video, and all other content published on this domain must adhere to our Terms of Service . JAVA KING, INC AND ITS SUBSIDIARIES, ADVERTISERS, SPONSORS AND AFFILIATES, DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, REPRESENTATIONS OR ENDORSEMENTS HEREIN EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED.
Site Meter
RETURN TO MENS NEWS DAILY
counter