January 26, 2006
Illegal
& Indiscriminate Spying Hurts Our National Security, Here is Why
By Sibel
Edmonds
According to numerous reports and audits released by
entities such as Inspector General Offices of agencies that deal with national
security and various presidential commissions, today, more than four years
after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, almost all our national
security related agencies are in disarray, riddled with incompetence,
corruption, and in some cases criminal activities. While most of the real
problems facing our national security today stem from gross mismanagement,
inefficiency, incompetence and a lack of sensible policies and vigorous
oversight, the Bush Administration insists upon blaming these deficiencies on a
regrettable and dangerous lack of power in the executive branch. But the kind of power the Administration
pursues is the kind of power that would vault the presidency to monarchical
status and nullify the Bill of Rights.
· According to the DOJ-IG Report on the FBI’s
Foreign Language Program that was released in October 2004, “more than 89,000 hours of audio and 30,000
hours of audio in other Counterterrorism languages have not been reviewed.
Additionally, over 370,000 hours of audio in languages associated with
counterintelligence activities have not been reviewed.”
· According to a report by the Commission on
the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding WMD
(Robb-Silberman Report), released in March 2005, in just the past 20 years the
CIA, FBI, NSA, DIA, NRO, and the Departments of Defense, State, and Energy have
all been penetrated by espionage. Secrets stolen include nuclear weapons data,
U.S. cryptographic codes and procedures, identification of U.S. intelligence sources
and methods (human and technical), and war plans. Indeed, it would be difficult
to exaggerate the damage that foreign intelligence penetrations have caused.
· According to the final report by the 9/11
Discourse Project released in December 2005, the commissioners gave the federal
government mediocre and failing grades for its response to its 41
recommendations, and characterized some failures as "shocking."
The
commission cited huge remaining loopholes in aviation security, a politicized
system of doling out billions of homeland security dollars, and a failure to
give firefighters and other responders the radio spectrum they need to
communicate during crises.
· According
to an audit released by the Department of Homeland Security in December 2005,
nearly three years after it was formed, the immense DHS remains hampered by
severe management and financial problems; problems that contributed to the
flawed response to Hurricane Katrina.
·
In December 2005, a group of House Democrats issued a report alleging that the
Department of Homeland Security had failed to follow through on 33 promised
improvements to border security, infrastructure protection and other physical
security projects.
· According to an AP news article released on
January 18, 2006, by Ted Bridis, the FBI missed neon-bright signs of espionage
in the case of Bureau Intelligence Analyst Leandro Aragoncillo. He was arrested
a few months ago. Despite several IG reports, congressional inquiries, and
media reports on several other recent cases of alleged espionage activities,
the bureau’s inability to secure even its own offices continues today. Here is
an agency that is in charge of defending our national security and protecting
our safety, but it has yet to prove it is capable of securing itself.
What
do the various reports mentioned above have in common? These reports &
audits, whether conducted by the Inspector General offices of our federal
agencies, congress, or the presidential commissions, indicate that the weak
state of our nation’s security today is a result of inefficient, incompetent
and mismanaged government. How can any of the failures established by these
reports be attributed to the lack of power to engage in massive communications
intercepts of Americans? Based on these reports, how can one go about fixing
our nation’s security problems by unlawfully gathering millions of discrete
pieces of information from the citizens of our country, inundating our
intelligence agencies with huge amounts of raw intelligence, and causing an
insurmountable backlog?
The
NSA has overwhelmed the FBI with raw intelligence gathered at the price of our
liberty, privacy, and due process. Information culled from electronic
eavesdropping and intercepted Internet traffic by the NSA resulting from Bush’s
illegal authorization of domestic surveillance turned into a flood, requiring
hundreds of agents to check out thousands of tips each month. A New York Times story says that FBI
officials repeatedly complained to the spy agency that the unfiltered
information was swamping investigators. The Times
also reported that almost all of the tips led to dead ends, and one former FBI
official said: "We'd chase a number, find it's a schoolteacher with no
indication they've ever been involved in international terrorism -- case
closed." He added: "After you get a thousand numbers and not one is
turning up anything, you get some frustration."
Mr.
President, please stop. You are damaging our national security and
simultaneously destroying what makes us American in mind and soul; our Bill of
Rights. Remember what you told us just a few days after 9/11: “The terrorists
hate our way of life, and they want to take it away from us.’” Mr. President,
they haven’t, you beat them to that result. Do you really want to fix our
security problems? Do you really want to address and fix our vulnerabilities?
Then here is a start for you; implement a three-phrase program, and we can
guarantee that you’ll make our “national security” problems disappear:
Government Accountability, Government Oversight, and Government Integrity.
####
Sibel Edmonds is the founder and
director of National Security Whistleblowers Coalition (NSWBC), a nonprofit
organization dedicated to aiding national security whistleblowers. Ms. Edmonds
worked as a language specialist for the FBI’s Washington Field Office. During
her work with the bureau, she discovered and reported serious acts of security
breaches, cover-ups, and intentional blocking of intelligence that had national
security implications. After she reported these acts to FBI management, she was
retaliated against by the FBI and ultimately fired in March 2002. Since that
time, court proceedings on her issues have been blocked by the assertion of
“State Secret Privilege” by Attorney General Ashcroft; the Congress of the United
States has been gagged and prevented from any discussion of her case through
retroactive re-classification by the Department of Justice. Ms. Edmonds is
fluent in Turkish, Farsi and Azerbaijani; and has a MA in Public Policy and
International Commerce from George Mason University, and a BA in Criminal
Justice and Psychology from George Washington University. www.nswbc.org