‘Low-level NSA analysts can spy on Americans’by aletho |
RT :: July 28, 2013
NSA
spying programs give access to US citizens’ private data to low-level
analysts with little court approval or supervision, says Guardian
journalist Glenn Greenwald, who broke the story on Washington’s PRISM
surveillance system.
“[PRISM] is an incredibly powerful and invasive tool,” Greenwald told ABC’s ‘This Week.’ The NSA programs are “exactly the type that Mr. Snowden described. NSA officials are going to be testifying before the Senate on Wednesday, and I defy them to deny that these programs work exactly as I’ve said.”
The
NSA keeps trillions of telephone calls and emails in their databases
which they can access anytime with simple screen programs, he said.
“And
what these programs are, are very simple screens, like the ones that
supermarket clerks or shipping and receiving clerks use, where all an
analyst has to do is enter an email address or an IP address, and it
does two things.”
“It
searches that database and lets them listen to the calls or read the
emails of everything that the NSA has stored, or look at the browsing
histories or Google search terms that you’ve entered, and it also alerts
them to any further activity that people connected to that email
address or that IP address do in the future.”
While the program conducts wiretapping with little court approval or supervision, there are “legal constraints”
on surveillance that require approval by the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA) of 1978, in which court judges can secretly
review the government's plans to track suspected terrorists in advance.
“You can’t target [Americans] without going to the FISA court,” Greenwald stressed. “But
these systems allow analysts to listen to whatever emails they want,
whatever telephone calls, browsing histories, Microsoft Word documents.”
“And it’s all done with no need to go to a court, with no need to even get supervisor approval on the part of the analyst,” he added.
Greenwald will testify before a Congressional committee on Wednesday, along with NSA officials who have previously downplayed Snowden’s claims about the agency’s easy-access data.
PRISM
is a mass electronic surveillance data mining program operated by the
NSA since 2007. The program was exposed by former NSA contractor Edward
Snowden earlier this summer. Snowden leaked information about the
program to the media, warning of a far greater extent of mass data
collection than the public knew existed. The disclosures were published
by The Guardian and The Washington Post on June 6.
Snowden
later leaked further information to Greenwald which pertained to mass
security operations carried out across the world. He spoke of British
spy agency GCHQ, which uses the Tempora surveillance program. The
whistleblower also shared information regarding Germany’s cooperation
with US intelligence, which reportedly combs through half a billion
German phone calls, emails, and text messages on a daily basis.
A call for transparency on surveillance programs
The call for increased oversight and transparency for surveillance programs has been growing, even among supporters of the NSA.
“I do think that we’re going to have to make some change to make things more transparent,” Senator Saxby Chambliss, vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, told ABC.
Former
federal judge James Robertson, who used to grant surveillance orders,
said he was shocked to hear of changes to allow broader authorization of
NSA programs - such as the monitoring of US phone records. He urged for
a reform which would to allow counter-arguments to be heard.
“What FISA does is not adjudication, but approval,” Robertson said, speaking as a witness during the first public hearings into the Snowden revelations. “This
works just fine when it deals with individual applications for
warrants, but the 2008 amendment has turned the FISA court into an
administrative agency making rules for others to follow.”
However,
government officials have defended the surveillance initiatives as
authorized under law, claiming they are necessary in order to guard the
country against terrorist threats.
Following Snowden’s revelations on NSA surveillance, President Barack Obama assured US citizens in June that “nobody is listening to [their] telephone calls."
He said the surveillance programs monitor phone numbers and the durations of calls, adding that if there are any suspicions and "if
the intelligence community then actually wants to listen to a phone
call, they've got to go back to a federal judge, just like they would in
a criminal investigation."
President Obama added that America is "going to have to make some choices" between privacy and security, warning that the highly publicized programs will make it harder to target terrorists.
Meanwhile, deputy FBI Director Sean Joyce said that the “program is not intentionally used to target any US citizens" and is “key in our counter-terrorism efforts."
Testifying
on Capitol Hill before the House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence in June, NSA director Gen. Keith Alexander claimed that the
NSA’s storage of millions of phone records has thwarted more than 50
terror attacks in more than 20 countries since September 11, 2001.
However, evidence of the prevented attacks has not been revealed.
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