Telecoms let NSA spy on calls
Yahoo News/USA Today
By Leslie Cauley and John Diamond, USA TODAY
February 6, 2006
The National Security Agency has secured the cooperation of large
telecommunications companies, including AT&T, MCI and Sprint, in its
efforts to eavesdrop without warrants on international calls by suspected
terrorists, according to seven telecommunications executives.
The executives asked to remain anonymous because of the sensitivity of the
program. AT&T, MCI and Sprint had no official comment.
The Senate Judiciary Committee begins hearings today on the government's
program of monitoring international calls and e-mails of a domestic target
without first obtaining court orders. At issue: whether the surveillance is
legal, as President Bush insists, or an illegal intrusion into the lives of
Americans, as lawsuits by civil libertarians contend. (Related: Committee chief
says program violates law)
In domestic investigations, phone companies routinely require court orders
before cooperating.
A majority of international calls are handled by long-distance carriers
AT&T, MCI and Sprint. All three own "gateway" switches capable of routing
calls to points around the globe. AT&T was recently acquired by SBC
Communications, which has since adopted the AT&T name as its corporate
moniker. MCI, formerly known as WorldCom, was recently acquired by Verizon.
Sprint recently merged with Nextel.
The New York Times, which disclosed the clandestine operation in December,
previously reported that telecommunications companies have been cooperating
with the government, but it did not name the companies involved. (Related: Bush
says NSA program is legal)
Decisions about monitoring calls are made in four steps, according to two
U.S. intelligence officials familiar with the program who insisted on anonymity
because it remains classified:
• Information from U.S. or allied intelligence or law enforcement
points to a terrorism-related target either based in the United States or
communicating with someone in the United States.
• Using a 48-point checklist to identify possible links to al-Qaeda,
one of three NSA officials authorized to approve a warrantless intercept
decides whether the surveillance is justified. Gen. Michael Hayden, the
nation's No. 2 intelligence officer, said the checklist focuses on ensuring
that there is a "reasonable basis" for believing there is a terrorist link
involved.
• Technicians work with phone company officials to intercept
communications pegged to a particular person or phone number.
Telecommunications executives say MCI, AT&T and Sprint grant the access to
their systems without warrants or court orders. Instead, they are cooperating
on the basis of oral requests from senior government officials.
• If the surveillance yields information about a terror plot, the NSA
notifies the FBI or other appropriate agencies but does not always disclose the
source of its information. Call-routing information provided by the phone
companies can help intelligence officialseavesdrop on a conversation. It also
helps them physically locate the parties, which is important if cellphones are
being used. If the U.S. end of a communication has nothing to do with
terrorism, the identity of the party is suppressed and the content of the
communication destroyed, Hayden has said.
The government has refused to publicly discuss the precise number of
individuals targeted.
The Times and The Washington Post have said thousands have had
communications intercepted.
The two intelligence officials said that number has been whittled down to
about 600 people in the United States who have been targeted for repeated
surveillance since the Sept. 11 attacks.
|