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Views /Opinion

Surveillance policies hinder scrutiny

Robert Barnes

10 Jun 2013

By Robert Barnes, Timothy B Lee and Ellen Nakashima

The disclosure of vast government surveillance programmes has renewed the debate — whether the transparent oversight Americans expect from their government can work and if it might compromise efforts to keep them safe from terrorism.

President Barack Obama and his national security leaders have asserted that vigorous oversight of government surveillance of phone calls and Internet data exists and denounced reports that brought the programmes to public attention.

On Saturday, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper called the reports “reckless disclosures,” scoring the media for not giving “full context” to the “extent to which these programmes are overseen by all three branches of the government.”

But civil libertarians, some members of Congress and others criticise the oversight as hollow. Secrecy binds the traditional role of Congress to debate the programmes, they say, while the special court to deal with the government’s requests under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act operates out of public view.

“I find it difficult to believe that Congress or the FISA court provide the robust oversight to which President Obama alluded,” said Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at American University’s Washington College of Law and an expert on national security law.

“The lack of transparency impacts negatively the ability of Congress to conduct effective oversight,” said Amie Stepanovich of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. 

Jameel Jaffer, Deputy Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union, said judicial oversight of the programmes is undermined when the only court entrusted to ensure Americans’ rights are not compromised “meets in secret, allows only the government to appear before it and rarely publishes its decisions.” Obama, a bipartisan group of congressional leaders and Clapper have pushed back hard against such assertions. Clapper declassified for release on Saturday ways in which he said the programmes are monitored, including “an unprecedented degree of accountability and transparency” to members of Congress through reports and briefings to congressional intelligence and judiciary committees. But members of Congress on their own have no way of knowing whether violations of procedure have occurred, and any public discussion of the reports is curtailed.

Senator Ron Wyden, D-Ore. warned that Americans would be “stunned” if they learned how the government had interpreted Section 215 of the Patriot Act. He was likely referring to the dragnet surveillance of call records revealed by the Guardian. But because the programme’s existence was classified, Wyden was barred from disclosing what he learned as a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

“The committee knew, and members [of Congress] could go into the Intelligence Committee room and read the documents,” said Jennifer Hoelzer, a former Wyden staffer. “But they couldn’t bring staff, they couldn’t take notes, they couldn’t consult outside legal scholars.”

Moreover, he said, there is little incentive for a member of Congress to object to something the administration says is necessary to combat terrorism. “Nobody necessarily wants their fingerprints on anything that could ever go wrong. They may be for or against it in theory, but they don’t want their name on the record.”

And the FISA court has similarly been the subject of complaints. The court, created in 1978 in response to fears of abusive government spying, operates from a secure courtroom in the District of Columbia federal courthouse. It comprises 11 federal judges chosen by Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. Only the government appears before it when a judge considers programmes such as the telephone records search or the PRISM Internet surveillance programme uncovered last week.

One judge at a time considers the government’s requests, and any denials can be appealed to a three-member panel. But that is rare. The court reported that in 2012, it approved 1,789 eavesdropping requests from the Justice Department, save for one that was withdrawn. The court made modifications in 40.

One of the court’s roles is to ensure the government’s procedures regarding foreign targets does not interfere with the Fourth Amendment rights of Americans who might be swept up in the surveillance. The court reported at least once that had occurred. But details about that and other opinions are unknown, because all of the court’s work is secret.

Judges who have served on the court  have described the work as intense and pressurized. “It has opened my eyes to the level of hatred that exists in the world,” District Judge Reggie Walton, now the court’s chief judge, said in 2009.

Congressional leaders and civil liberties groups have pressed the Obama administration and the court to release redacted versions of opinions that show the underlying legal reasoning for surveillance under the FISA law. But officials have resisted, saying that redaction is difficult because classified information is so intertwined with legal analysis.

The revelations have briefly united conservatives and liberals who are distrustful of too much government power. But that does not mean anything will change. The controversy also has created a political convergence among congressional leaders who have spent years fighting each other on other issues: House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., lead the bipartisan defence of the aggressive surveillance techniques.

Timothy Edgar, a former privacy officer for Obama and former president George W Bush, faults both leaders for failing to be more transparent with the public about the standards for collection of data and the privacy protections in place.                        WP-BLOOMBERG

By Robert Barnes, Timothy B Lee and Ellen Nakashima

The disclosure of vast government surveillance programmes has renewed the debate — whether the transparent oversight Americans expect from their government can work and if it might compromise efforts to keep them safe from terrorism.

President Barack Obama and his national security leaders have asserted that vigorous oversight of government surveillance of phone calls and Internet data exists and denounced reports that brought the programmes to public attention.

On Saturday, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper called the reports “reckless disclosures,” scoring the media for not giving “full context” to the “extent to which these programmes are overseen by all three branches of the government.”

But civil libertarians, some members of Congress and others criticise the oversight as hollow. Secrecy binds the traditional role of Congress to debate the programmes, they say, while the special court to deal with the government’s requests under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act operates out of public view.

“I find it difficult to believe that Congress or the FISA court provide the robust oversight to which President Obama alluded,” said Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at American University’s Washington College of Law and an expert on national security law.

“The lack of transparency impacts negatively the ability of Congress to conduct effective oversight,” said Amie Stepanovich of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. 

Jameel Jaffer, Deputy Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union, said judicial oversight of the programmes is undermined when the only court entrusted to ensure Americans’ rights are not compromised “meets in secret, allows only the government to appear before it and rarely publishes its decisions.” Obama, a bipartisan group of congressional leaders and Clapper have pushed back hard against such assertions. Clapper declassified for release on Saturday ways in which he said the programmes are monitored, including “an unprecedented degree of accountability and transparency” to members of Congress through reports and briefings to congressional intelligence and judiciary committees. But members of Congress on their own have no way of knowing whether violations of procedure have occurred, and any public discussion of the reports is curtailed.

Senator Ron Wyden, D-Ore. warned that Americans would be “stunned” if they learned how the government had interpreted Section 215 of the Patriot Act. He was likely referring to the dragnet surveillance of call records revealed by the Guardian. But because the programme’s existence was classified, Wyden was barred from disclosing what he learned as a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

“The committee knew, and members [of Congress] could go into the Intelligence Committee room and read the documents,” said Jennifer Hoelzer, a former Wyden staffer. “But they couldn’t bring staff, they couldn’t take notes, they couldn’t consult outside legal scholars.”

Moreover, he said, there is little incentive for a member of Congress to object to something the administration says is necessary to combat terrorism. “Nobody necessarily wants their fingerprints on anything that could ever go wrong. They may be for or against it in theory, but they don’t want their name on the record.”

And the FISA court has similarly been the subject of complaints. The court, created in 1978 in response to fears of abusive government spying, operates from a secure courtroom in the District of Columbia federal courthouse. It comprises 11 federal judges chosen by Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. Only the government appears before it when a judge considers programmes such as the telephone records search or the PRISM Internet surveillance programme uncovered last week.

One judge at a time considers the government’s requests, and any denials can be appealed to a three-member panel. But that is rare. The court reported that in 2012, it approved 1,789 eavesdropping requests from the Justice Department, save for one that was withdrawn. The court made modifications in 40.

One of the court’s roles is to ensure the government’s procedures regarding foreign targets does not interfere with the Fourth Amendment rights of Americans who might be swept up in the surveillance. The court reported at least once that had occurred. But details about that and other opinions are unknown, because all of the court’s work is secret.

Judges who have served on the court  have described the work as intense and pressurized. “It has opened my eyes to the level of hatred that exists in the world,” District Judge Reggie Walton, now the court’s chief judge, said in 2009.

Congressional leaders and civil liberties groups have pressed the Obama administration and the court to release redacted versions of opinions that show the underlying legal reasoning for surveillance under the FISA law. But officials have resisted, saying that redaction is difficult because classified information is so intertwined with legal analysis.

The revelations have briefly united conservatives and liberals who are distrustful of too much government power. But that does not mean anything will change. The controversy also has created a political convergence among congressional leaders who have spent years fighting each other on other issues: House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., lead the bipartisan defence of the aggressive surveillance techniques.

Timothy Edgar, a former privacy officer for Obama and former president George W Bush, faults both leaders for failing to be more transparent with the public about the standards for collection of data and the privacy protections in place.                        WP-BLOOMBERG