INTELLIGENCE
The Chairman of the Senate Cover-Up Committee
Earlier this week, the Senate Intelligence Committee,
chaired by Sen. Pat Roberts (R-KS), voted along partisan
lines to avoid a clash with President Bush over his domestic
spying program. The New York Times writes that the
intelligence committee has become "so paralyzingly partisan
that it could not even manage to do its basic job this
week." By voting down a sensible proposal offered by Sen.
John Rockefeller (D-WV) to comprehensively review the spying
program, Roberts failed once again to demonstrate he has the
leadership to conduct the required oversight of the Bush
administration. As Rockefeller said, "This committee is
basically under control of the White House." It was "no
surprise that Mr. Roberts led this retreat;" he has been
doing the "president's dirty work" repeatedly over the past
few years in his efforts to stonewall investigations into
important national security matters. The Progress Report has
compiled a comprehensive report detailing how Roberts and
his Senate Cover-Up Committee have obstructed investigations
into the Bush administration's use of pre-war Iraq
intelligence, the administration's complicity in acts of
torture against detainees, and the White House's outing of a
former CIA agent, among other issues. (Click here to see the
report.) By failing to properly investigate important
national security matters, Roberts has missed crucial
opportunities to correct the administration's misguided
policies in the war on terror.
FORMER BUSH ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL RAISED CONCERNS ABOUT
NSA PROGRAM'S LEGALITY: Coming on the heels of Roberts's
approval of the Bush administration's illegal spying
program, the Washington Post reports that a former Justice
Department official raised concerns about the program's
legality. David S. Kris, a former associate deputy attorney
general who oversaw national security issues at the Justice
Department from 2000 until he left the department in 2003,
exchanged a series of emails recently with Courtney Elwood,
a current associate counsel to Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales, in which he argued that the administration's "key
legal justifications for warrantless spying are weak and
unlikely to be endorsed by the courts." "I do not think
Congress can be said to have authorized the NSA
surveillance," Kris wrote. His objections are the latest in
a series of high-profile former Justice Department officials
known to have raised concerns about the program. Previously,
it was reported that former Deputy Attorney General James
Comey and former Attorney General John Ashcroft balked at
authorizing the warrantless wiretapping program.
ROBERTS' COMPROMISE ALLOWS ADMINISTRATION TO BREAK THE LAW:
Instead of first making a determination about the National
Security Agency (NSA) program's legality, Roberts's
compromise instead gives a green light to the Bush
administration's illegal and unconstitutional warrantless
spying on Americans. The proposal would establish a separate
panel -- composed of four Republicans and three Democrats --
within the Senate Intelligence Committee that would receive
classified briefings about the program, but would not have
authority to make any changes to it for at least 45 days.
The New York Times writes, "Faced with a president who is
almost certainly breaking the law, the Senate sets up a
panel to watch him do it and calls that control." According
to the Roberts legislation, for 45 days, the NSA would
continue to spy on phone calls and email messages of U.S.
citizens if it had probable cause to believe one part to the
communication was affiliated with terrorism. "The finding of
probable cause would not be reviewed by any court." After 45
days, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales would be required to
seek a warrant from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court or explain under oath to the special intelligence
panel why he could not seek a warrant. The proposal would
not place any limit, however, on how many times the
eavesdropping could be renewed. "Aside from the civil
liberties dimension, there's an invitation here to the
president to go on indefinitely with warrantless
surveillance," said William C. Banks, a law professor at
Syracuse University.
FAILURE TO INVESTIGATE IRAQ: In June 2003, as revelations
about the Bush administration's manipulation of faulty Iraq
intelligence began to emerge, Roberts announced he would
conduct a "thorough review" of what the administration knew
before it went to war. Roberts said the committee would look
into "whether public statements and reports and testimony
regarding Iraq by U.S. Government officials made between the
Gulf War period and the commencement of Operation Iraqi
Freedom were substantiated by intelligence information."
While it took Roberts's committee just over one year to
investigate and release Phase I of its report detailing the
intelligence community's failings, the American public has
waiting for almost three years for a completion of Phase II,
which will look specifically at President Bush and Vice
President Cheney's failings, among others. After Phase I was
completed, Roberts pledged that Phase II was his "priority,"
adding "it will get done." By March 2005, just eight months
later, Roberts changed his tune, stating that Phase II had
been placed on the "back burner" and was a "monumental waste
of time." After Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) forced the
Senate into closed session in November 2005 to urge action
on the investigation, Roberts again pledged to finish the
report soon. But shortly thereafter, three intelligence
committee members said Roberts refused to pursue "additional
interviews and documents" needed to fully answer the
"critical questions surrounding the use of intelligence in
the months leading up to the war."
MORE STONEWALLING: Despite evidence that the CIA approved
harsh interrogation techniques (including "waterboarding")
against detainees at CIA-run facilities in Afghanistan and
employed the practice of outsourcing torture to other
countries, Roberts refused to investigate. The LA Times
reported in March 2005: "Declaring that the CIA is 'not
torturing detainees,' the Republican chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee said...that he saw no reason for the
panel to investigate allegations that the agency abused
prisoners or transferred them to countries that engage in
torture." When allegations began to heat up about the White
House's involvement in outing former CIA covert operative
Valerie Plame, Roberts pledged to hold hearings on the
matter. "We intend to have a hearing," Roberts said. "And I
think it would be a good idea to visit with her." But, just
a short while later, Roberts declared there would be no
investigation. "Senate intelligence has to be nonpartisan,"
he said. Also, refusing to compromise with members of his
own committee, Roberts failed to pass the Intelligence
Authorization bill this year on the Senate floor for the
first time in nearly 30 years. In its final report, the
bipartisan 9/11 Commission concluded that Congress needed to
strengthen "congressional oversight to improve quality and
accountability." But Roberts hardly knows the meaning of
oversight. "It's 'oversight' when we know enough to ask our
own questions," Rockefeller said. "It is 'undersight' when
[officials in the White House] tell us what they want us to
know."
ROBERTS SILENT WHILE INTEL AGENCIES CRUMBLE: Roberts has
also been a silent voice when it comes to reforming and
strengthening the CIA. Over the past year, a series of
high-level departures have hampered the CIA, including the
departures of the director of the Counter Terrorism Center,
the second in command of the clandestine unit, two other
directors of operations, and the chief of the Bin Laden
unit. Roberts has also been silent as allegations have
surfaced that the number three CIA official may have been
involved in a bribery scheme. These reports, combined with
information that National Intelligence Director John
Negroponte spends three hours a day relaxing at a private
club in Washington, D.C, begs the question about why Roberts
has not been a stronger voice on the management issues
involving our intelligence agencies.
Under the Radar
ETHICS -- CUNNINGHAM CO-CONSPIRATOR HAD LINKS TO IRAN GROUP,
PAID BY WHITE HOUSE: TPM Muckracker notes that in 2004, the
White House was doling out money to Mitchell Wade -- who has
pled guilty as Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham's co-conspirator
and faces several years in prison -- for an Iran
regime-change organization. Wade, former head of MZM, Inc.,
"registered as the 'registered agent' for an outfit called
the 'Iranian Democratization Foundation'" on April 5, 2004.
Records show that the Executive Office of the President paid
out three contracts worth $254,437 for unspecified
"intelligence services" to MZM, Inc. in 2004. The White
House has refused to comment on these contracts and TPM
notes that "a cursory check has turned up no other filings
for Wade's nonprofit: no employer ID number, 990 filing, or
anything else. Nexis shows no mention of the group in any
news coverage." Roll Call reports that the Defense
Department missed its chance to "forestall one of the worst
bribery cases ever involving a sitting Member of Congress"
in 2000, when it began a criminal investigation into the
former congressman's co-conspirator #1, defense contractor
Brent Wilkes. The U.S. attorney's office in San Diego
decided not to bring charges in the 2000 case.
HUMAN RIGHTS -- DO AS I SAY NOT AS I DO: A new State
Department report on Human Rights Practices criticizes the
United Arab Emirates for policies relating to the detention
of terrorist suspects that are less extreme than those of
the Bush administration. The UAE law, according to the State
Department report, "allows public prosecutors to hold
suspects in terrorism-related cases without charge for 6
months...once a suspect is charged, terrorism cases are
handled by the Supreme Court, which may extend the detention
period indefinitely." The UAE law provides suspects far more
rights than they would receive in the United States. Its law
guarantees that, after a period of time, the suspect must be
charged and must receive judicial review. A United States
anti-terrorism law passed in 2001 (The Authorization for Use
of Military Force) allows the president to detain terrorism
suspects indefinitely without charge any person he
determines to be related to terrorist activity. Another law
passed in 2005 (Detainee Treatment Act) means these
terrorism suspects have no ability to appeal against their
detention unless and until they are convicted in specially
created military courts, however, the president is under no
obligation to ever bring these suspects before any court.
HEALTH -- RIGHT-WING WEAKENS FOOD SAFETY: A Center for
Disease Control and Prevention report found the federal
government "declined to alert the public about suspect
ground beef or request a recall after a 2004 salmonella
outbreak that sickened at least 31 people nationwide."
Although the Agriculture Department had traced the source of
the salmonella to "a national supermarket chain and a single
meat processing plant," they did not ask the company to
recall the tainted meat. "No company has ever refused a
recall request." Meanwhile, the House voted yesterday to
"strip many warnings from food labels, potentially affecting
alerts about arsenic in bottled water, lead in candy and
allergy-causing sulfites, among others." The legislation
"would prevent states from adding food warnings that go
beyond federal law." Lawmakers "have family, friends and
former staff among the lobbyists for the bill" including
Abigail Blunt, wife of Rep. Roy Blunt (R-MO); Brad Card,
brother of White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card; and
former staffers of Majority Leader John Boehner (R-OH).
=====================================
Think Fast
Santorum to K Street Project: I wish I knew how to quit you.
"After saying in January that he would end his regular
meetings with lobbyists, Sen. Rick Santorum (Pa.)…has
continued to meet with many of the same lobbyists at the
same time and on the same day of the week."
House Majority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) "has traveled on
more exclusive golf outings, lobbyist-funded vacations and
fundraising excursions to luxurious destinations than he has
on return trips back to his Ohio district to visit
constituents" over the last six years, a new report shows.
"I'll be eating with my wife, and so will a lot more
senators after we pass this one." Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS)
comments on the possible consequences of a measure passed
yesterday banning lawmakers from accepting meals from
lobbyists.
Contrary to recent administration claims, the Center for
Budget and Policy Priorities found the Bush "tax cuts have
not paid for themselves, recent economic growth and revenue
growth have not been particularly strong, and revenues
remain lower than had been predicted before the tax cuts
were enacted."
Even as crews work to contain "what is now the sixth largest
oil spill ever on Alaska's North Slope" (see photos), Senate
conservatives yesterday released a budget that "tries to
resurrect a plan to drill for oil and gas in the Alaskan
wildlife refuge."
Yesterday nearly 6,000 biologists signed a letter urging
senators to preserve scientific protections in the
Endangered Species Act. Their letter was directed to the
efforts of Rep. Richard Pombo (R-CA), who has consistently
tried to "gut" the landmark law.
The State Department's newly released Human Rights Report
condemns Iraq's police for "intimidation, beatings, and
suspension by the arms or legs, as well as the reported use
of electric drills and cords and the application of electric
shocks."
Iraqi hospitals and morgues were ordered to "catalog deaths
caused by bombings or clashes with insurgents, but not by
execution-style shootings," bolstering a controversial
Washington Post report that some 1,300 Iraqis died in the
aftermath of a major Shiite shrine bombing.
46: The percentage of Americans who say they have a
"negative view" of Islam, seven points higher than after
September 11. The jump represents a win for Bin Laden, Juan
Cole writes, "since his whole enterprise was to 'sharpen the
contradictions' and provoke a clash of civilizations."
And finally: It's been a week of firsts for actress Natalie
Portman. Days after making her first foray into gangsta rap,
she visited Columbia University to deliver an "undergraduate
lecture on counterterrorism."
--
"No sage or savior has ever endorsed greed and gluttony as a
path toward social justice or personal fulfillment. These
sane and enlightened people come to us from all cultures and
all eras, sometimes knowing of each other but more often
not. Socrates and Jesus, Lao Tzu and Tolstoi, Gandhi and
Martin Buber -- no one can find in their lives and words a
jot of support for a political and economic regime that
encourages the acquisition of wealth far beyond what is
needed for the necessaries -- or even the restorative
pleasures -- of life while consigning the masses to live and
work in squalor."
-Stephen J. Fortunato, Associate Justice, Rhode Island
Supreme Court.
"Music is prophecy, its style and economic organization are
ahead of the rest of society. It makes audible the new world
that will gradually become visible."
-Jacques Attali in his seminal text "Noise"
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