In an outrageous setting of priorities in the National Security Agency (NSA) spying scandal, Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) has implicitly placed the feelings of foreign heads of state above the constitutional rights of Americans.
Responding to anger, complaints, and pressure from powerful German Chancellor Angela Merkel about revelations that NSA had intercepted her cell phone calls, Ms. Feinstein raised the question of overreach by the agency and the need for reform. Feinstein said that tapping the private phones of close allies has much more political liability than probably intelligence viability, and I think we ought to look at it carefully. Adding to the pressure were complaints by the friendly governments of France, Mexico, and Brazil about NSAs massive spying in their countries.
Edward Snowden, who revealed NSA spying, wants clemency for provoking a debate on the extent of U.S. spying but should not get it, because such surveillance is the snooping NSA should be doingon foreign countries, friendly or hostile. All countries spy on each, no matter if they are friend or foe, and all countries know it happens, despite the anguished crocodile tears of Merkel and the rest. Some good has come from Snowdens revelations of NSA spying, but this is not it; against an oath he took to the US government, he has revealed to these foreign targets of US spying how it is being done, so that they can take countermeasures to foil it in the future.
Yet as damning as these revelations are for Snowdens place in history, his whistle blowing about NSAs collection of meta-data (time, parties, and duration) on the phone calls of all Americans and use of an unconstitutionally low standard to monitor the contents of some of them should actually give him an overall net positive evaluation. In a republic, foreign threats, even terrorism, should not be used as an excuse for US spy agencies to be turned on Americans, the people they are supposed to be protecting from harm by spyingon foreigners. However, since World War II, the American republic has been eroded by allowing the foreign policy tailfor example, combating Soviet communism and now fighting terrorismto wag the republics dog. Anti-communist and anti-terrorist hysteria have caused US spy agencies to convert from protecting US citizens to targeting them.
And Senator Feinsteinwho, as chairwoman of the Intelligence Committee, is supposed to oversee and rein in spy agenciesis leading this charge in the wrong direction. Having been thoroughly co-opted by the agencies she is overseeingnot an uncommon problem in Washingtonshe is responding to pressure from allied governments to rein in US spying on foreign leaders and governments while at the same time proposing an unconstitutional law that shields existing NSA spying on Americans! Apparently, the apathetic American people dont form as effective a pressure group on Feinstein as do Merkel and other foreign allies.
And unfortunately, there is no branch of the US government that is sticking up for Americans constitutional rights either. Congress, the executive branch, and even the courtsespecially the rubber-stamp Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Courtall maintain that a clear violation of the text of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution is quite legal. The Fourth Amendment reads:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
As this provision clearly states, to collect an Americans personal phone records, the executive branch must obtain a judicially approved warrant based on probable cause that a crime has been committed. Furthermore, the amendment requires that searches be specificto avoid general fishing expeditions by the government, as the British originally perpetrated on the American colonists. NSAs collecting of the records of phone calls of all Americans is a general search, and it is impossible that the US government has probable cause to believe all Americans are guilty of terrorism. And when examining the actual contents of some Americans calls, the NSA is using a standard much lower than probable cause.
Thus, Dianne Feinstein advocates the shielding of foreign leaders, who arent covered by the US Constitution, from legal US spying, but she cares little about protecting American citizens, who are supposed to be safeguarded, instead of victimized, by US government spying!