by Gene Howington, Guest Blogger
“O, beware, my lord, of jealousy;
It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock
The meat it feeds on; that cuckold lives in bliss
Who, certain of his fate, loves not his wronger.”
“Trifles light as air
Are to the jealous confirmations strong
As proofs of holy writ.”
– Wm. Shakespeare, Othello, Act III, Sc. 3
Shakespeare had a lot to say about human nature. He was particularly fond of addressing jealousy. Indeed, jealousy is the axis around which his play Othello revolves although it features prominently in some of his other works as well. He so profoundly understood human nature, one has to wonder what he would make of the NSA surveillance state. To go to the other end of the literary scale, but to a no less valid observation and aspirational goal, Spiderman’s prime operating principle is a lesson he learned both directly from and from the death of the character of his uncle, Ben Parker. “With great power comes great responsibility.” Not all people behave responsibly, let alone consistently responsible. This is why we build systems that allegedly contain oversight mechanisms – to prevent, catch and rectify irresponsible behavior as quickly as possible. When these systems fail, we must evaluate the wisdom of creating such a power to begin with. Just because we can do something doesn’t mean we should do something. Which brings us to the NSA’s total information awareness strategy, their employees and policies for dealing with abusive employees and the tools to implement this ongoing violation of our 4th Amendment right “to be secure in [our] persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures”. An NSA employee was found to have twice collected communications of an American and had been secretly intercepting the phone calls of nine foreign women for six years (1998-2003) without ever being detected by his managers. The consequences of this criminal abuse of power upon discovery?
Nothing of substance.
In fact, no one might have ever known about this unauthorised abuse of the NSA’s surveillance tools. One of the women being spied upon, who also happened to be a US government employee he was having a sexual relationship with, complained to a colleague that she suspected the man was listening to her calls. But for that, this criminal abuse might still be going on.
The way the public found out about it was that this was one of a dozen cases of abuse documented in a letter from the NSA’s Inspector General Dr. George Ellard to Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA), who as ranking minority member of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary had asked for a breakdown of cases in which the agency’s powerful surveillance apparatus was deliberately abused by staff. Other abuses cited include:
- A member of the US military who, on the first day he gained access to the surveillance system, used it to spy on six email addresses belonging to former girlfriends.
- In 2011, an NSA employee based abroad admitted during a lie-detector case that he had obtained details about his girlfriend’s telephone calls “out of curiosity”.
- In 2005, an NSA employee admitted to obtaining his partner’s phone data to determine whether she was “involved” with any foreign government officials.
- In another instance, a female NSA employee – suspecting he “had been unfaithful” – said she listened to calls on an unknown foreign telephone number she discovered stored on her partner’s cell phone.
- In 2011, a female employee of the agency confessed that she had obtained information about the phone of “her foreign-national boyfriend and other foreign nationals”. She later told investigators she often used the NSA’s surveillance tools to investigate the phone numbers of people she met socially, to ensure they were “not shady characters”. This was discovered only discovered during an investigation of an ancillary matter.
As the Bard asked in The Comedy of Errors, “How many fond fools serve mad jealousy?” More than one it would seem. The letter only lists cases that were investigated and later “substantiated” by the IG’s office of the NSA. Without question though, this raises the very real possibility that there are many more cases that go undetected. As reported by Paul Lewis in The Guardian, in a full quarter of the cases cited, “the NSA only found out about the misconduct after the employee confessed.” This is particularly important when you know that the IG of the NSA is appointed by the Director of the NSA and is answerable only to that office. Consider this in contrast to the IG of the CIA, who has been an independent office since 1989. As described on the CIA’s website:
The IG is nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate, and may only be removed from office by the president. The IG’s authorities and responsibilities are provided in 50 U.S.C. §403q. Although the IG reports to the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, the statute creates obligations and responsibilities to both the Director and to the Congress.”
Also consider that the letter revealed “limited disciplinary action taken against NSA staff found to have abused the system. In seven cases, individuals guilty of abusing their powers resigned or retired before disciplinary action could be taken. Two civilian employees kept their jobs – and, it appears, their security clearance – and escaped with only a written warning after they were found to have conducted unauthorised interceptions.
The abuses – technically breaches of the law – did not result in a single prosecution, even though more than half of the cases were referred to the Department of Justice. The DoJ did not respond to a request for information about why no charges were brought.”
Consider too that the NSA’s director, Gen. Keith Alexander, referred to the twelve cases in testimony to a congressional hearing last Thursday where he told senators on the intelligence committee that abuse of the NSA’s powerful monitoring tools were “with very rare exception” unintentional mistakes. Gen. Alexander went on to say that “The press claimed evidence of thousands of privacy violations. This is false and misleading. According to NSA’s independent inspector general, there have been only twelve substantiated case of willful violation over ten years. Essentially, one per year.” To which he added, “Today, NSA has a privacy compliance program any leader of a large, complex organization would be proud of.”
Keep in mind that this is shortly after the NSA sent out a letter to all of its employees and affiliates including contractors – that they emphasized could and should be printed and shared with family, friends and colleagues – intended to reassure them that the NSA is “not really the abusive and unchecked spying agency engaged in illegal activity that someone reading former NSA contractor Edward Snowden’s disclosures might think it happens to be.” Sent on September 13 and signed by NSA Director Alexander and NSA Deputy Director John Inglis, the letter begins, “We are writing to you, our extended NSA/CSS family, in light of the unauthorized disclosure of classified information by a former contractor employee.” To further ease minds clearly in need of assurances, the letter further states that “We want to put the information you are reading and hearing about in the press into context and reassure you that this Agency and its workforce are deserving and appreciative of your support. [. . .] Some media outlets have sensationalized the leaks to the press in a way that has called into question our motives and wrongly cast doubt on the integrity and commitment of the extraordinary people who work here at NSA/CSS—your loved one(s). It has been discouraging to see how our Agency frequently has been portrayed in the news as more of a rogue element than a national treasure.”
Salve is usually applied to an area of irritation, one that is often indicative of a larger ailment.
However, being that the small number cases depicted in the inspector general’s rather self-serving letter to Sen. Grassley could betray a far larger number abuses that NSA managers never uncovered and that these unpunished bright line abuses of civil rights and the Constitution were preceded by what can only be described accurately as NSA apologist propaganda designed to quash the fears of prosecution those who aid the NSA in breaking the law might rightfully have?
I think it is high time for an independent IG to oversee the the NSA. To that end, I strongly suggest reading the sourced item below from The Washington Post.
I also think it’s fair to say the NSA has gone way past the point of being able to claim they are a “national treasure” and well into the factual territory of being a national disgrace.
What do you think?
Source: The Guardian. The Dissenter, The Washington Post. CIA.gov
~ submitted by Gene Howington, Guest Blogger
Gene,
(: It took me awhile to get back to this thread.
Live U Stream feed happening right now as Alex Jones sends in a crew of journalists into an NSA Data center. Check out Infowars dot com or go to UStream as Alex challenges the criminals.
The crew has just gotten into the building (12:30pm eastern time)
God bless Alex and his crew!
lol
GMTA, ap.
I read that at Wired this morning and flagged as a potential column for the weekend.
How a Purse Snatching Led to the Legal Justification for NSA Domestic Spying
By David Kravets
10.02.13
6:30 AM
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/10/nsa-smith-purse-snatching/
Reddit Q&A with Glenn Greenwald and Janine Gibson. They wrapped it up just a short while ago:
http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/1nisdy/were_glenn_greenwald_and_janine_gibson_of_the/
You’re welcome, Gene H. I have that urge to say, “One lives to be of service.” 😉
“Author and NSA critic denied entry into US”
Published: 1 Oct 2013 16:11
“A German author and fierce NSA critic has pointed to his attacks on America’s mass surveillance programme as the reason behind authorities denying him entry to the United States on Monday.”
http://www.thelocal.de/national/20131001-52193.html
Ilija Trojanov, who has spoken out against mass surveillance by America’s National Security Agency (NSA) revealed by whistleblower Edward Snowden, wanted to fly from the Brazilian city of Salvador with American Airlines to attend a conference of German academics in Denver.
But the 48-year-old said he was barred without reason on Monday from getting onto the plane at the airport in eastern Brazil.
Writing for the website of the Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper on Tuesday, he said he was given no explanation and had to fly back to Germany.
“The airline worker had hardly entered my name when she paused, stood up and disappeared without explanation behind a door,” he wrote.
“A few moments later she returned with clearly a high ranking person who told me in rapid Portuguese and then almost as quickly in English that because of “Border Crossing Security” she was duty bound to inform American authorities immediately about my arrival at the airport.”
Three-quarters of an hour before his flight was due to leave Trojanov was told he would not be allowed to travel.
The German-Bulgarian author suggested the refusal to let him into America was revenge for his writing about surveillance states.
He added: “One of the most important and most threatening aspects of the NSA scandal is the secretiveness of the system. Transparency is apparently the greatest enemy of anyone who allegedly defends freedom.”
Trojanov was one of the leading figures behind an open letter to Chancellor Angela Merkel earlier this year about the NSA scandal which revealed a mass spying programme in Germany. The letter spoke of an “historic attack on our democratic, constitutional state.”
He said: “It is more than ironic when an author who has used his voice for years to stand up to the danger of surveillance and of a secret state within a state is rejected entry into the ‘land of the brave and free’.”
Trojanov was born in Bulgaria in 1965 but fled in to Germany with his parents in 1971.
(From where I’m sitting, we’re totally phucked, unless someone like Snowden has the courage to get the whole story (with backup documentation) on the table. Not only will Americans be “shocked and angry” (Wyden’s words), they will be sickened. Sickened about what we’ve become. American exceptionalism, indeed.)
ap,
Thanks for the (as always) valuable additions. Your vigiliance is both noted and appreciated.