White House Knew That Mike Rogers Withheld Details Of NSA Surveillance From Others In Congress
from the it's-the-coverup-that-gets-you dept
In the last week or so it's come out that Rep. Mike Rogers, the head of the House Intelligence Committee has actively blocked requests from members of Congress to review details of the NSA's surveillance program -- showing that the claim that everyone in Congress was informed about these programs isn't just a lie but a duplicitous one. And then it got worse. Rep. Justin Amash pointed out that Rogers' committee actually withheld key information from all incoming Representatives in the class of 2010, who had to vote on the Patriot Act's reauthorization, which renewed the program to collect data on all Americans in bulk.Amash highlighted a document showing that the White House had sent a letter to Rogers, telling him that he should make the document available to all members of Congress, and then noted that he had not actually done so in 2011 (though he had in 2009). Marcy Wheeler has pointed out that if you actually closely read the DOJ's paper that was released on Friday defending this program, you'd see that the White House was well aware that Rogers never made the document available to Congress.
Of course, you have to read the document very, very, very carefully to spot that. The paper first talks about the document that was provided to the House and Senate Intelligence Committees in 2009, and then notes that both committees made those documents available to all of their colleagues:
In December 2009, DOJ worked with the Intelligence Community to provide a classified briefing paper to the House and Senate Intelligence Committees that could be made available to all Members of Congress regarding the telephony metadata collection program. A letter accompanying the briefing paper sent to the House Intelligence Committee specifically stated that “it is important that all Members of Congress have access to information about this program” and that “making this document available to all members of Congress is an effective way to inform the legislative debate about reauthorization of Section 215.” See Letter from Assistant Attorney General Ronald Weich to the Honorable Silvestre Reyes, Chairman, House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (Dec. 14, 2009). Both Intelligence Committees made this document available to all Members of Congress prior to the February 2010 reauthorization of Section 215. See Letter from Sen. Diane Feinstein and Sen. Christopher S. Bond to Colleagues (Feb. 23, 2010); Letter from Rep. Silvestre Reyes to Colleagues (Feb. 24, 2010)But, when it came to the similar document in 2011, the White House report only notes that the Senate Intelligence Committee made the document available, and never says anything about the House. And of course, the letter that Amash highlighted points out that the White House was clearly urging Rogers to make it available as well -- and he did not do that.
An updated version of the briefing paper, also recently released in redacted form to the public, was provided to the Senate and House Intelligence Committees again in February 2011 in connection with the reauthorization that occurred later that year. See Letter from Assistant Attorney General Ronald Weich to the Honorable Dianne Feinstein and the Honorable Saxby Chambliss, Chairman and Vice Chairman, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (Feb. 2, 2011); Letter from Assistant Attorney General Ronald Weich to the Honorable Mike Rogers and the Honorable C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, Chairman and Ranking Minority Member, House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (Feb. 2, 2011). The Senate Intelligence Committee made this updated paper available to all Senators later that month. See Letter from Sen. Diane Feinstein and Sen. Saxby Chambliss to Colleagues (Feb. 8, 2011).In other words: in 2009, this information was made available to everyone in Congress. In 2011, Rogers chose not to make it available to House members, meaning that (in particular) the 65 new members of Congress who voted for the reauthorization that year had no idea about this program, completely contrary to the later claims of Rogers and the White House that every member of Congress was fully aware of this program. (Updated to clarify that the 65 members were new, not briefed on this and voted for reauthorization).
Given all of this, the calls are getting louder and louder both inside and outside of Congress to get Mike Rogers to explain why he actively withheld critical information on NSA surveillance from Members of Congress who were tasked with reviewing and voting on the continuation of the program. And, it's now becoming quite obvious that Mike Rogers is not representing the interests of the American public, but rather his friends and former colleagues within the intelligence community:
We've talked about regulatory capture for years, but this is an extreme form, and when it reaches the point that the head of the Committee charged with oversight appears to be proactively seeking to block critical information from other members of Congress, and the White House looks the other way (while claiming something entirely different in public) it should be obvious that there is no oversight at all. There is, instead, a government that is helping the intelligence community at the expense of the American public."The congressional committees charged with oversight of the intelligence community have long been captive to, and protective of, the intelligence agencies," said Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on Government Oversight.
"Many of the congressional staff, in fact, come from those agencies. This latest revelation demonstrates the harm caused by that conflict of interest. When the congressional oversight committee is more loyal to the agency it oversees than to the legislative chamber its members were elected to serve in, the public's interest is seriously compromised."
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Filed Under: congress, house intelligence committee, justin amash, mike rogers, patriot act, section 215
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New Book Surviving Bigfoot and the Dixie Mafia
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"you have to read the document very, very, very carefully"
They're ALL thoroughly corrupt and in on the game secrets, Mike. At best, you have insufficient cynicism.
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Re: "you have to read the document very, very, very carefully"
It's still there, but it's not as bad as usual.
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Re: Re: "you have to read the document very, very, very carefully"
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Re: "you have to read the document very, very, very carefully"
See? You’re not all bad, OOTB. Probably 95%, at the most.
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Re: "you have to read the document very, very, very carefully"
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Ladies and Gentlemen...
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It is obvious to the meanest intelligence that Pepsi has far more authority and clout than your President Obama, or any other president since Roosevelt.
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You definitely can't rebuild trust when the original version was nothing but a greenback foundation with a servant's entrance and a revolving door for the lords.
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Each seemingly minute data point like the one in this article is a concrete thing, not another vague pronouncement of vague evildoings. In the court of public opinion the latter results in a mistrial. The former, when gathered together, can bring down institutions.
And that's what is needed, right? The intelligence apparatus in its current form needs to be dismantled and made to be part of that government of, by and for the people we heard about in civics class. Otherwise I'm going to have to get US Government classes taught side by side with Creationism, as they'll contain equal amounts of the truth
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A thousand times this.
Further, when you loudly make broad-brushed accusations -- even if they're absolutely true -- you sound like a crank and will be ignored by the very people you're trying to reach.
It's much more effective to take advantage of the steady drip of specific wrongdoings by pointing them out individually. People will eventually get the gist.
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Yeah, pretty much where I was going with that, but typing a reply on my phone while the cursor keeps going places I don't want... well, that derailed my train of thought. Thanks for taking it to its proper conclusion.
Seriously, a couple years ago anyone standing up and waving his arms about saying the NSA was reading everyone's emails and tracking their phone calls would have been taken as seriously by the general publc as a 911 "truther" or chemtrail snorter, just another paranoid in the cacophonous chorus. But these sequential, verifiable revelations are the equivalent of a DoD-stamped shipping manifest of 55-gal drums filled hallucinogenic aerosols with a handwritten note stating "this lot is for the airspace over West Hollywood."
Every time the Guardian drops another Snowdenbomb, and every time someone outs another bit of government Truthiness, we get further away from a smile and a wink. We're well on our way to a determined grimace, methinks.
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Again as demonstrated in this article, we can not trust any one supporting the spying at the magnitude it has reached. What little trust the government could have gotten from the public has been squandered.
There is little hope in my mind of the NSA nor congress critters ever regaining that trust until they realize that it can't go on as it has. I'm not talking band aid fixes that just cover up for eyesight what's wrong.
All the word twisting, lying, and misdirection has indeed had an effect. That is to totally destroy any belief in this government over what it is doing in this matter.
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Would you believe that?
At this point I'd have to say no I don't believe it. Total creditability has been lost.
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Article 12.
No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.
https://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/
So not only is the Constitution and Bill of Rights being ignored, so is a treaty.
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"..a government that is helping the intelligence community at the expense of the American public."
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