Thursday, March 09, 2006

 

AG: Don't Need No Stinking Law To Wiretap

At the risk of sounding racist, can Gonzales be paraphrased as saying “I don’t gotta show you no stinking law?”

Why is the Republican controlled Congress even bothering, for Christ’s sake? They huff and they puff and then they roll over and play dead. You’re right: that’s exactly what the Democrats do, too. A while back, I suggested that maybe federal-law law enforcement has collected enough sleaze on the Demos that anytime they look like they might say something, they get a little audio-visual reminder of past behaviors. The J. Edgar Hoover Treatment.

This latest example of the arrogance—tempered by contempt, of course—will probably just pass on down the alley-ways of history, maybe to become material in some Republican memorial when Gonzales passes away. No doubt, when Chief of National Homeland Glorious Security dies, there’ll be quite a wing-ding. Maybe even some public burnings of suspected terrorists....or liberal bloggers.

Yahoo! News
Gonzales: NSA Program Doesn't Need a Law

By KATHERINE SHRADER, Associated Press WriterWed Mar 8, 5:55 PM ET

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales made clear Wednesday that the White House is not seeking congressional action to inscribe the National Security Agency's monitoring into U.S. law, even as members of Congress negotiate with the Bush administration about legislation. Gonzales maintained the program is legal the way it is.

"There's a general consensus — quite frankly — that this is a needed program" designed to listen to al-Qaida's communications, Gonzales told the National Association of Attorneys General Wednesday. "The concern I think that people have, which is a natural concern, is that, is this a limited program?"

Gonzales said administration officials have gone a long way in reassuring lawmakers about the NSA's operations. Over four years, he said, the administration has met "with select congressional leadership on both sides of the aisle about the scope of this program — everything that we're doing related to this program."

Yet House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California, the former top Democrat on the intelligence panel, has publicly questioned what those select lawmakers don't know. Her spokeswoman, Jennifer Crider, said congressional Republicans have been unwilling to perform oversight of the administration.

"Since the members were not all briefed at the same time or place, it's not possible to know whether the same information was given to each," Crider said. And "the administration has been unwilling to provide a list of which members were briefed and when," she added.

Aides to West Virginia Sen. Jay Rockefeller, the Senate Intelligence Committee's top Democrat, noted that he visited the NSA all day Friday — with 450 questions he wanted answered. He's complained about the briefings he received before that session, saying they consisted of intelligence officials rushing through flip-charts.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter, R-Pa., remains the most skeptical Republican in Congress. He's said he intends to call Gonzales up to his committee for a second appearance to testify about other classified intelligence programs that the attorney general hinted at in a recent letter.

Specter also had been pressing for a hearing with former Attorney General John Ashcroft and his deputy, but has abandoned that request.

Among other issues, lawmakers wanted to know about a 2004 dustup over the surveillance between the White House and Justice officials, including Deputy Attorney General James Comey. It reportedly got so serious that White House Chief of Staff Andy Card and then-White House counsel Gonzales visited Ashcroft in the hospital to discuss the concerns of his deputies.

Specter hinted that that the administration opposed the testimony of Gonzales and Comey.

"I've talked to both of those individuals and understandably they would require administration consent. I do not believe that we would be successful, were they to testify, to find what happened in the reported conversations in the hospital," said Specter, noting the issues touch on the internal deliberation of government lawyers.

Specter was also critical of a terrorist surveillance bill — soon to be introduced by Sen. Mike DeWine (news, bio, voting record), R-Ohio, and other moderate lawmakers — that would allow the government to monitor the international calls of U.S. residents for 45 days without a warrant. The White House has called that approach a "generally sound measure."

Specter is planning to offer his own proposal that would require a federal intelligence court to vouch for the program's constitutionality every 45 days.

Democrats are calling for more oversight and may not embrace either approach.

"So little is known about this illegal program that it's akin to legislating in the dark," said Tracy Schmaler, Democratic spokeswoman for the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Copyright © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.
Copyright © 2006 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.

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