NSA chief defends spying on Americans

Collection of bulk phone records by US intelligence agencies is essential to preventing terrorist attacks and œwrong decisions” by Congress could curb this power, the head of the National Security Agency said.

œWe need our nation to understand why we need these tools, and what those tools mean to civil liberties and privacy and what they mean to defending this country,” NSA Director General Keith Alexander said during a keynote speech at a security conference in Washington on Wednesday.

Bulk phone records were used to determine if there was a threat to New York City in the aftermath of the April 15 bombing of the Boston Marathon, as well as to determine if there were terrorist plots against US embassies abroad during the summer, Alexander said in an interview after his speech.

œSomebody who has a database that can look at the foreign and the domestic numbers can look at those and get the information back quickly can tell you where there™s a threat and where there™s not,” Alexander said. He declined to discuss details about the cases.

The NSA is facing a backlash from some lawmakers and privacy advocates over abuses in spy programs exposed by former government contractor Edward Snowden and in documents recently declassified by President Barack Obama™s administration.

Alexander pleaded for support of NSA programs during his speech at the conference, which was attended primarily by government and industry officials specializing in cybersecurity.

œWe can™t do that without your help,” he said. œThat™s my ask of you.”

In particular, Alexander said the agency needs to collect bulk phone metadata, such as numbers dialed and call durations, to connect intelligence dots.

Alexander said it™s œflat wrong” that NSA analysts have been listening to all phone calls of Americans or reading citizens™ emails.

He said analysts who were found to have committed 12 intentional abuses within the past 10 years have been punished or left the agency.

œCongress is back in session. This is going to pick up,” Alexander said. œThe American people have to weigh in and get the tools we need to protect this country and defend our civil liberties and privacy.”

Alexander also warned that a terrorist attack similar to the mall shooting in Nairobi, Kenya, last week could occur in the US if NSA authorities are curbed.

Snowden fled the US after releasing classified data to media outlets and is currently in Russia on temporary asylum. Salon.com

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Copyright: Press TV