Bush administration violated the National
Security Act
Washington Post
By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 19, 2006; A05
The Bush administration appears to have violated the National Security Act
by limiting its briefings about a warrantless domestic eavesdropping program to
congressional leaders, according to a memo from Congress's research arm
released yesterday.
The Congressional Research Service opinion said that the amended 1947 law
requires President Bush to keep all members of the House and Senate
intelligence committees "fully and currently informed" of such intelligence
activities as the domestic surveillance effort.
The memo from national security specialist Alfred Cumming is the second
report this month from CRS to question the legality of aspects of Bush's
domestic spying program. A Jan. 6 report concluded that the administration's
justifications for the program conflicted with current law.
Yesterday's analysis was requested by Rep. Jane Harman (Calif.), the ranking
Democrat on the House intelligence committee, who wrote in a letter to Bush
earlier this month that limiting information about the eavesdropping program
violated the law and provided for poor oversight.
The White House has said it informed congressional leaders about the NSA
program in more than a dozen briefings, but has refused to provide further
details. At a minimum, the briefings included the chairmen of the House and
Senate intelligence oversight committees and the two ranking Democrats, known
collectively as the "Gang of Four," according to various sources.
"We believe that Congress was appropriately briefed," White House
spokeswoman Dana Perino said in a statement last night.
Bush has publicly acknowledged issuing an order after the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks that allowed the National Security Agency to intercept telephone and
e-mail exchanges between the United States and overseas without court
authorization. The cases were limited to people suspected of al Qaeda ties,
Bush and his aides said.
Cumming's analysis found that both intelligence committees should have been
briefed because the program involved intelligence collection activities.
The only exception in the law applies to covert actions, Cumming found, and
those programs must be reported to the "Gang of Eight," which includes House
and Senate leaders in addition to heads of the intelligence panels. The
administration can also withhold some operational details in rare
circumstances, but that does not apply to the existence of entire programs, he
wrote.
Unless the White House contends the program is a covert action, the memo
said, "limiting congressional notification of the NSA program to the Gang of
Eight . . . would appear to be inconsistent with the law."
Also yesterday, the Electronic Privacy Information Center said it would file
a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit today demanding information about the NSA
spying. The American Civil Liberties Union and the Center for Constitutional
Rights filed separate lawsuits Tuesday asserting that Bush exceeded his
authority and violated Fourth Amendment guarantees in authorizing the NSA
surveillance.
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