“When the president does it that means it is not illegal.” These infamous words from
appear to summarize the public legal justification for the Obama
administration’s unprecedented mass surveillance operation. Perhaps
worse, Permanent Washington would have us believe that this rationale is
unquestionably accurate and that therefore the National Security
Administration’s surveillance is perfectly legal.
of the Council on Foreign Relations said of Edward Snowden:
“‘Whistleblower’ is person who reveals wrongdoing, corruption, illegal
activity. none of this applies here even if you oppose U.S. government
policy.” Likewise, the
insists,
“I wish media would stop calling Snowden a whistleblower — it maligns
those who truly reveal corrupt or illegal activity.” And the
The
idea here, which has quickly become the standard talking point for
partisans trying to defend the NSA program and the Obama administration,
is that while you may object to the NSA’s mass surveillance system, it
is nonetheless perfectly legal as is the conduct surrounding it.
Therefore, the logic goes, Snowden isn’t an honorable “whistle-blower”
he’s a traitorous “leaker,” and the only criminal in this case is
Snowden and Snowden alone.
The first — and most simple — way to
debunk this talking point is to simply behold two sets of testimony by
Obama administration national security officials. In one, Director of
National Intelligence
categorically denies that the government “collect(s) any type of data
at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans.” In another,
the
reports that NSA Director General Keith Alexander “denied point-blank
that the agency had the figures on how many Americans had their
electronic communications collected or reviewed.”
Both
of those claims, of course, were exposed as lies by Snowden’s
disclosures. So at minimum Snowden deserves the title “whistle-blower”
(and the attendant protections that are supposed to come with such a
title) because his disclosures outed Clapper and Alexander’s statements
as probable cases of
illegal perjury before Congress. In other
words, in terms of perjury, the disclosures didn’t expose
controversial-but-legal activity, they exposed illegal behavior.
That’s
not some technicality, by the way; the whole reason perjury before
Congress is considered a serious crime is because if executive branch
officials like Clapper and Alexander are permitted to lie to the
legislative branch, then that branch cannot exercise its constitutional
oversight responsibilities. Harsh punishment for perjury is considered a
necessary deterrent to such deception.
There’s also the issue of
whether the NSA’s surveillance itself is legal, and whether Snowden’s
disclosures show the NSA is continuing to break U.S. federal statutes
(we’ll get to the Constitution in a second). Yes, you read that right:
The word “continuing” is appropriate because back in 2009, NSA officials
admitted they were breaking the law.
As the
New York Times
reported at the time, the agency “intercepted private e-mail messages
and phone calls of Americans in recent months on a scale that went
beyond the broad legal limits established by Congress.” Additionally,
the Times noted that “several intelligence officials, as well as lawyers
briefed” about the illegal activity “described the practice as
significant and systemic.” Meanwhile,
Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., yesterday declared that his review of the program proved it violates federal statutes.
“When I saw what was being done, I felt it was so out of sync with the plain language of the law,” he told MSNBC.
In
light of the NSA itself already admitting it broke the law in
“systemic” fashion; in light of a prominent senator saying the program
is illegal; and in light of the
“Boundless Informant”
disclosure showing the NSA may be broadly surveilling domestic (rather
than exclusively foreign) communications as statutes are supposed to
curtail: In light of all that, why would anyone simply assume at face
value that the program Snowden exposed is perfectly legal?
Finally,
over and above whether the NSA program is complying with federal
statutes, there’s the issue of the program’s constitutionality — aka the
ultimate definition of “legality.”
Permanent Washington and Obama
partisans who support the NSA surveillance program cite the Patriot Act
and the fact that NSA obtained a FISA warrant as proof that the program
is legal and as a way to ignore the constitutional questions. They
would have us not only ignore the NSA’s own aforementioned admissions of
illegal behavior, but additionally have us believe the
constitutionality of NSA’s unprecedented surveillance and of such a
broad-sweeping
“ongoing” FISA warrant has already been definitively established, even though, of course, it hasn’t. Not even close.
Four cases are particularly relevant here. In the first two (
ACLU vs. NSA and the
al-Haramain charity case),
district courts ruled for plaintiffs in their arguments that the NSA’s
warrantless surveillance is illegal. There was also the Clapper vs.
Amnesty International case, which challenged the constitutionality of
the underlying FISA law, which authorizes the kind of surveillance that
Snowden’s disclosures document. And, according to
Mother Jones,
there is “an 86-page court opinion that determined that the government
had violated the spirit of federal surveillance laws and engaged in
unconstitutional spying.” In that latter case, the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence actually admits that the NSA has
engaged in behavior that is “unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment”
and that “circumvented the spirit of the law.”
In the first three cases, technicalities won the day when they were
all eventually overturned
not on grounds that the NSA’s mass surveillance is constitutional, but
on grounds that the plaintiffs supposedly didn’t have standing. Summing
it up,
Reuters
reports, to date, “The (Supreme Court) has refused to review government
surveillance practices adopted since the attacks of September 11,
2001.”
Why weren’t all these plaintiffs granted standing, you ask?
As legal expert Marcy Wheeler notes, it’s all related to — you guessed
it! — secrecy.
“The government has gone to great lengths to say
because this is all secret, no one can prove they’ve been surveilled, so
(plaintiffs) can’t make a harm argument,” she said.
Put another
way, it’s difficult to prove a case against the government when the
government is allowed to keep case-critical information classified.
Meanwhile, on the fourth case reported by Mother Jones, the government is still fighting to keep the court ruling secret.
All
of that brings us back to Snowden’s disclosure. With his
whistle-blowing, more germane details about the NSA’s entire
surveillance operation are now public, meaning other plaintiffs may now
have access to information necessary to achieve standing. And there are,
indeed, already other plaintiffs: For instance,
Sen. Rand Paul (R)
is promising to mount a Supreme Court challenge to the
constitutionality of the broad FISA warrant at issue in Snowden’s
disclosure (at issue will be the yet-to-be-adjudicated question of
whether such an
“ongoing”
warrant that allows spying on millions of Americans really comports
with the Fourth Amendment’s “probable cause” precept). Similarly, the
Electronic Frontier Foundation already has a case against NSA surveillance pending.
Those
cases coupled with the information from Snowden could, in turn, compel
an explicit Supreme Court ruling on the entire surveillance system’s
legality.
Looked at from a constitutional perspective, then, we
shouldn’t simply assume Snowden’s disclosures are about a
controversial-but-legal NSA program, as NSA defenders and Obama
loyalists assert. Instead, it’s quite possible they may help
definitively
prove the
illegality of the surveillance operations.
No
doubt, all these statutory and constitutional questions surrounding the
NSA’s surveillance operations are why when publicly claiming that the
program is perfectly legal, Obama officials also, according to
Businessweek,
refuse to make public their jurisprudential justifications for such a
claim. They clearly fear that when subjected to scrutiny, the program
will be shown to be, as Sen. Merkley put it, “Out of sync with the plain
language of the law.”
Thus, the administration’s strategy is to
at once stonewall on the details and insist ad nauseam that everything
is perfectly legal, when that assertion is, at best, a fact-free
assumption, and more likely a devious misdirect. That Permanent
Washington and so many Obama loyalists would nonetheless echo such a
misdirect is a commentary on how political self-interest and
partisanship now trumps everything else — even the law of the land.
http://www.salon.com/2013/06/11/put_the_nsa_on_trial/
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