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星期天, 2007年5月6日

暗中侦察的溜滑倾斜

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参议院情报委员会有二个非常充足的理由抵抗布什政府的最新的要求更加宽广的暗中侦察的力量。 你是布什总统,纪录为尊敬美国人保密性不是什么都短小可怜。 其他是Alberto Gonzales检察长,有成为的先生。 布什的enabler通过导致法律上的肯定意见企图辩解白宫要求总统投资了以详尽的监视力量由宪法和国会。

In truth, the White House is required to observe the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which regulates government eavesdropping on phone calls, e-mails and other correspondence of fellow Americans and legal residents. That law requires the government to seek a warrant from a secret tribunal, known as the FISA Court, every time it wants to monitor a citizen’s conversations and correspondence.

The White House has been ignoring that provision for years, on the grounds that Congress gave it the power to conduct warrantless surveillance after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. It also claims that the Constitution provides such powers during time of war. Nonetheless, a judge has ruled that the president does not have unlimited surveillance authority, and now the White House has returned to Congress to amend the FISA law to what it says are the changing needs of the times.

The administration’s argument goes like this: The war on terror has presented challenges unlike any other age, as has the rapid change in phone and other communication technologies. Therefore, the government needs to act in an instant when it suspects an American citizen might be in contact with terrorists. To wait too long could imperil national security.

But that argument has been rejected by critics, including this page, as disingenuous. The FISA law already allows government agents to act on a moment’s notice when they have reason to believe a terrorist connection has been made. They can seek a warrant from the FISA court retroactively. The court almost always complies.

One reason the White House is turning to Congress now appears to be to gain immunity from prosecution for the telecommunications companies that cooperated with the warrantless spying program in the past. But that could sacrifice the right of Americans to seek court redress if their rights were violated.

Just as troubling, the White House’s proposed bill would weaken FISA standards, and some critics say it would even gut the law. Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., says there is nothing in the White House bill that “confines the President to work within” the FISA law in the future. Which means there is nothing in the bill that warrants congressional approval.

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  • This entry was posted on Sunday, May 6th, 2007 at 4:36 pm and is filed under Surveillance . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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