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 Lies, taps and presidential snoops 

The Buffalo News
December 27, 2005
by Clarence Page

Mark Twain, prophet that he was, once decried a woeful decay in the fine art of lying. Judging by the fibs of recent presidents, the decay continues.

One of the first rules of skilled fibbing is to avoid leaving evidence lying around that might expose your deception. President Bush has left evidence on the White House Web site. There we can see Bush promoting the Patriot Act at an April 2004 appearance in Buffalo and assuring us that his administration does not conduct wiretaps on Americans without court approval.

"Now, by the way, any time you hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires - a wiretap requires a court order," he says. "Nothing has changed, by the way. When we're talking about chasing down terrorists, we're talking about getting a court order before we do so."

Two years before Buffalo, Bush authorized the National Security Agency to turn its mighty electronic ears on thousands of phone calls and e-mails between the United States and abroad without bothering to get a warrant. He does not deny violating the now-famous Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) of 1978. Instead, he argued in a news conference following the disclosures by the New York Times, that he does not have to obey the FISA. He argues, echoing other presidents, that the special circumstances of the "war on terror" authorize him to take any steps he needs to keep Americans safe. But, one wonders, if the president can do whatever he wants, why do we need a Patriot Act?

Bush was too busy complaining about the "shameful" leak to the Times to answer that question at his media faceoff. "The fact that we're discussing this program is helping the enemy," he fumed. Ah, when discussing a well-known security program is "helping the enemy," George Orwell must be spinning in his grave.

Actually, we need to discuss his NSA "program," among other things, and why the president didn't take his gripes to Congress or the public before deciding to circumvent the law.

After all, there's nothing new about terrorism or the great debate over how much power the executive branch should be allowed to have during times of war. The extreme examples include President Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus during the Civil War and Franklin D. Roosevelt's internment of 120,000 Japanese Americans for no other crime than being Japanese American.

It is to avoid such grievous mistakes and more recent abuses, including warrantless eavesdropping by the FBI of Dr. Martin Luther King and Richard Nixon's infamous "enemies list" of his political critics, that Congress came up with FISA. The secret FISA court is empowered to approve national-security-related eavesdropping warrants, provided they meet certain minimal criteria.

Despite Bush's complaint that FISA courts slow down terrorist-catching abilities, FISA allows up to 72 hours of grace, if the Justice Department needs to eavesdrop on someone immediately. And of the thousands of warrant applications filed between 1979 and 2004, FISA judges have only rejected four, according to the Electronic Privacy Information Center, and two of those were approved later after revisions.

Which brings us back to the central question Bush has yet to answer: Why did he not follow the laws that Congress has passed? The great balance of liberty vs. national security should not be a partisan issue. Many principled conservatives have raised this issue, as they should. For those who still are not sure, I offer this advice: Don't grant powers to President Bush that you would not want to grant to President Hillary Clinton.

Chicago Tribune

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