The Wiretapping Scam
By Saul Landau
Progreso Weekly
01-07 June 2006 Issue
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/060106A.shtml
Karl Rove or his White House troglodytes shape discussion around
themes that distract the public from the issues and place the
incompetent and corrupt Bush Administration in a patriotic
light. The current subterfuge deals with the Administration's
"security need" to monitor telephone calls - vital intelligence.
"If Al-Qaeda phones the U.S., we want to know about it," said
Bush, defending the constitutionally dubious and very massive
eavesdropping program.
In fact, little "vital intelligence" derives from phone
monitoring. Nor do eavesdropping agencies seem to care about
getting good intelligence. On September 10, 2001, for example,
NSA experts encountered a seemingly juicy Arabic phone call. But
they didn't translate the message, "tomorrow is zero hour,"
until September 12.
"Real intelligence," Special Agent of the FBI Robert Scherrer
told me in 1980, "comes from framing the right question and
finding the person with the right answer; not the paid informant
who tells you what he thinks you want to hear so he can keep
getting paid."
In 2002-2003, the "intelligence community" ignored such wisdom.
Instead, CIA Case Officers posed loaded questions to dubious
Iraqi exiles with hidden agendas. Schemers posed as "hot
sources," like the infamous Curveball, a low-level and larcenous
clerk in an Iraqi chemical factory who defected to Germany.
Curveball assured eager-to-hear-it Bush officials that Saddam
Hussein possessed nuclear weapons. German intelligence said his
information "lacked credibility," but Bush used his
"information" in public speeches.
Faced with this kind of spurious "human intelligence," some
"intelligence pros" retreated into the data of signal
intercepts. Ironically, as the high tech NSA super sleuths
searched for mathematical formulas to track terrorists' phone
calls, they failed to detect terrorists who "had set up shop
literally under [NSA's] nose."
The hijackers of American 77 plotted from Laurel, Maryland,
NSA's neighbor. NSA employees and terrorists "exercised in some
of the same health clubs and shopped in the same grocery
stores." After the hijackers left their Motel to go to Dulles
Airport to capture American 77, "they crossed paths with many of
the electronic spies who were turning into Fort Meade, home of
the NSA, to begin another day hunting for terrorists." (James
Bamford, Washington Post, June 2, 2002)
During the period just before 9/11, NSA workers might as well
have gone on vacation, like the President who wasn't there.
Absent before and immediately after the 9/11 attacks and on
vacation when Hurricane Katrina struck, Bush still excels at
distracting the public - with dramatic photo ops.
His staff reached new depths when they set false contexts for
discussing "leaks of intelligence" to obscure the fact that the
government was illegally wiretapping citizens - instead of
collecting meaningful intelligence.
Indeed, General Michael Hayden, the NSA chief, did not convince
Bush to postpone his pre 9/11 vacation. Subsequently, however,
he advised W to approve a constitutionally questionable
wiretapping plan. Technological fixation along with classifying
millions of documents seems to absorb those charged with
discovering threats.
Rather than infiltrating hostile groups with declared intentions
to attack, the $40 billion a year "intelligence community"
eavesdropped on millions of civilians who had no violent
intentions.
Phone intercepts masquerading as "vital raw intelligence,"
became a political ruse. Congress now debates whether "war on
terrorism" justifies warrant-less intercepts, which presumes
that eavesdropping will provide terrorism "experts" with
material to protect the nation. As if!
No Member of Congress has asked: "Why doesn't the intelligence
community [a term that debases both words] use its intelligence
and ask people who know something?"
Billions of dollars get spent on spy satellite photography and
signal intercepts, but little effort goes into sharing with
decision makers the views of scholars who actually know about
Muslim terrorists. Instead of reading insightful articles and
books on the subject, NSA and CIA mavens rely on technology and
biased sources to pierce the nether world of terrorism.
Weeks before the mid January 1979 fall of the Iranian Shah, Fred
Halliday published a paper After the Shah, (Institute for Policy
Studies) and a book (Iran: Dictatorship and Development Penguin
1979). He predicted the demise of the U.S.-backed Monarchy, and
its replacement by a repressive theocracy.
Rather than consulting brilliant scholars like Halliday,
however, top CIA spooks used paid informants and useless
intercepts. So, instead of anticipating the Shah's demise,
Washington felt shock when theocratic revolutionaries deposed
their man in Teheran and took U.S. officials hostage.
By 1991, Bush I pronounced his "New World Order," an exercise in
hubris. Numero uno doesn't have to talk to scholars like
Halliday, who had also done significant research on the
anti-regime religious Saudi zealots. So, the military erected
bases in Saudi Arabia in order to conduct operations against
Iraq and other "disobedient" Gulf nations - near the holy cities
of Mecca and Medina. This act affronted Osama bin Laden and
like-minded believers as did the bombings that killed thousands
of Iraqis and destroyed that country's infrastructure. U.S.
policy also continued to support Israeli repression of
Palestinian rights.
By 1993, the data gatherers should have sounded an alarm.
Kuwaiti-born Ramzi Yousef, one of the planners of the first
World Trade Center bombing, mailed letters to New York
newspapers before the attack. Yousef claimed he would attack the
financial hub if the U.S. did not meet his demands: End U.S. aid
and diplomatic relations with Israel; a U.S. promise to stop
interfering in "the Middle East countries (sic) interior
affairs." (Steve Coll, Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the
CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to
September 10, 2001)
In August 1998, bombers hit U.S. embassies in Tanzania and
Kenya. In 2000, saboteurs hit the USS Cole in Persian Gulf
waters. Didn't the "intelligence community" expect more
violence? The FBI and CIA had also discovered that suspected
violent agents had entered the United States and enrolled in
jumbo jet flying school. These aspiring pilots, however, showed
no interest in takeoffs and landings. On August 6, 2001,
National Security Adviser Rice received a Presidential Daily
Briefing citing FBI analysis indicating "patterns of suspicious
activity in this country consistent with preparations for
hijackings or other types of attacks, including recent
surveillance of federal buildings in New York."
For her negligence, Bush promoted Rice to Secretary of State.
So, why shouldn't the ineffective Hayden become head of another
federal agency? At his confirmation hearings, Senators didn't
ask Hayden why NSA failed to act promptly on the September 10
"tomorrow is zero hour" intercept. Senators praised Hayden as
they had the hapless George Tenet and the incompetent Porter
Goss, who made the CIA into an intelligence joke. Tenet promised
Bush that finding WMD in Iraq would be a "slam dunk." Goss'
behavior led some of the most experienced analysts to resign.
Bush has set a pattern for mediocrity. Tom Ridge, former
Homeland Security head, introduced M&M color-coding of crisis
alerts. Another prime example was FEMA head during the Katrina
Hurricane debacle Michael "You did a heck of a job Brownie"
Brown.
On constitutional safeguards, Hayden seems to follow another
Administration heavy. Elliot Abrams, Deputy National Security
Adviser, wrote in his autobiography (Undue Process: A Story of
How Political Differences are Turned into Crimes) that he taught
his children that his lying to Congress was justified by a
higher morality. Under Hayden, the NSA refused to grant Justice
Department lawyers the necessary security clearance to probe its
warrant-less eavesdropping program. Justice's Office of
Professional Responsibility told Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-NY)
they were closing their inquiry because NSA had refused to give
their lawyers the necessary clearances to investigate.
Bush had informed some members of Congress from both Parties
that warrant-less phone intercepts would yield "vital
intelligence." He referred to a post 9/11 Congressional
resolution to fight Al-Qaeda that he claimed transcended the
Fourth Amendment. Spying on citizens belonged to the President's
inherent powers to fight wars that Congress did not declare.
Constitutional law?
The Members did nothing after Bush informed them of his plan to
violate the law. In fact, shrewd terrorists could switch cell
phones daily, communicate by other means and constantly change
locations. To find them, ask those who know. Don't eavesdrop on
those who don't and justify it by appealing to "national
security."
The wire tap ploy extended to ABC News, New York Times and
Washington Post reporters. After all, since these journalists
discovered the CIA's secret prisons in Romania and Poland, they
must have good sources. Look how Karl Rove framed the issue: tap
phones of those who reported on kidnapping, illegal spying and
torture to find the leakers, rather than discuss the illegal
policies. As Rove faces indictment for his role in obstructing
justice in leaking former covert CIA op Valerie Plame's name,
his mastery of mis-framing issues continues to confound Congress
- to Bush's advantage and the detriment of Democrats and Truth.
Don't look for Hayden to offer intelligent counsel, like "change
Middle East policy," as a route to diminishing the terrorist
threat. But do expect him to build files on Americans as his ilk
has done in the past.
--------
Landau is an Institute for Policy Studies Fellow.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/060106A.shtml
----------------------------
The Police State Road Map, March 2005 edition. Revised and
updated. Read FREE on-line or download PDF file.
michael@policestateplanning.com
http://www.policestateplanning.com/
Why indeed did WTC collapse?
http://www.policestateplanning.com/scholars911.htm
World Net Daily is something like NASCAR, unknown to most New
Yorkers but wildly popular in the heartland. Alexa, the Internet
tracking service, ranks WND (worldnetdaily.com) as the No. 1
Internet site for conservative news, with more online readers
than either National Review or The Weekly Standard. The site has
considerable Christian advertising and readership and, since its
1997 founding by Farah, a Christian of Arab-American heritage,
WND has offered a drumbeat for Israel that previously earned
Farah a journalism award from the right-wing Zionist
Organization of America. Farah also writes a syndicated column
for the Jerusalem Post, among others, and has co-authored a book
with Rush Limbaugh. His Zionist and conservative credentials are
impeccable.
http://www.thejewishweek.com/news/newscontent.php3?artid=12516&print=yes