Breaking: While Obama was pursuing the Iran nuclear deal, he wanted
to know what Israeli leaders were up to, so he accessed NSA reports.
NSA was spying on Netanyahu and other Israeli officials. The thing was,
the Israelis were talking on the phone to members of the US Congress.
Oops. So it turned out NSA was spying on Congress, as well.
But wait. This story, now being reported as a shocker, is...no surprise
at all. It's business as usual for the NSA. The shock and outrage is
fake. Who's kidding who?
The NSA is a Pentagon agency, and the Pentagon is part of the Executive
Branch of government. Of course it's been spying on the Legislative
Branch. If it weren't, it wouldn't be doing its job.
Several years ago, Ed Snowden made the following statement (ABC News
aired the video clip): "I, sitting at my [NSA] desk, certainly had the
authority to wiretap anyone, from you or your accountant to a federal
judge to even the president if I had a personal email."
There was a brief "firestorm" in the press about it, and it went down the memory hole.
Then, a year ago, there was this---FOX News, 1/9/14, by Andrew
Napolitano: "Last week, Sen. Bernie Sanders, (I-Vt.), wrote to Gen.
Keith Alexander, director of the National Security Administration (NSA),
and asked plainly whether the NSA has been or is now spying on members
of Congress or other public officials...The NSA did reply to Sanders by
stating -- in an absurd oxymoron -- that members of Congress receive the
same constitutional protections as other Americans: that is to say,
none from the NSA...The NSA's refusal to answer Sanders' question
directly is a tacit admission, because we are all well aware that the
NSA collects identifying data on and the content of virtually every
email, text message and phone call sent or received in the U.S."
Boom. Another quick explosion in the press; then, nothing.
And it wasn't just the NSA. It was the CIA, too. Read this, from the
Huffington Post, 3/11/14: "Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), a staunch
defender of government surveillance of ordinary citizens, took to the
Senate floor Tuesday with the stunning accusation that the Central
Intelligence Agency may have violated federal law to spy on
Congress...Feinstein, head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, railed
against the CIA for compromising the legislative branch's oversight role
-- a theme echoed by many of her Senate colleagues throughout the day.
The outrage was palpable among lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, and
some suggested CIA Director John Brennan should resign if the
allegations are true. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who has stuck up for
intelligence agencies in the past, declared a potential war...'This is
Richard Nixon stuff,' Graham told reporters. 'This is dangerous to the
democracy. Heads should roll, people should go to jail if it's true. If
it is, the legislative branch should declare war on the CIA.'"
Once again, outrage, then nothing. This suggests that NSA and CIA have
enough illegally-obtained, damaging information on members of Congress
to basically keep them quiet and docile---aside from occasional
outbursts.
There is more. Back in 1975, the US Senate Intelligence Committee,
headed by Frank Church, carried out an extensive investigation of US
intelligence agencies. Peter Fenn wrote about that piece of history on
9/27/13, at usnews: "Those of us who were staff members of the Church
Committee investigating intelligence agencies back in 1975, we were not
totally shocked to see the names - Jane Fonda, Tom Hayden, Martin Luther
King, Bobby Seale, Muhammad Ali and Tom Wicker, to name just a few of
the over 1,600 people [who were on an NSA watch list]. There were many
names we did not recognize - criminals, drug dealers, even old-line
suspected communists. But there were two names we never saw, because
they were never given to the Church Committee: Sens. Frank Church and
Howard Baker. New documents just made public by NSA and George
Washington University's National Security Archive now reveal that
Church, the chairman of the investigative committee and Baker, a member
of both the Watergate and Intelligence Committees, were both put on the
watch list and their communications were monitored...If NSA had revealed
such explosive information in 1975, all hell would have broken loose.
So they chose to lie. There were no whistle blowers then, no voices
within the Ford administration that revealed such secrets."
It's quite convenient that, every time one of these revelations occurs,
it's treated as a unique circumstance. A few dots may be connected, but
the overall story dies.
This latest 2015 piece about NSA rolling up members of Congress, as the
agency spied on Israeli leaders---it's not breaking; it's one instance
in a long history.
Anyone with a few brain cells working can see the pattern: the NSA and
the CIA are holding a cloud of threat over the Congress. They've
gathered many bits of information, some of which would be embarrassing,
to say the least, if they were released.
It's usually called blackmail, extortion, shakedown. Because that's what it is.
Unless you want to believe that these intelligence agencies, having
assembled large dossiers on members of Congress for decades, are benign
in their intent. They're just making sure Representatives and Senators
are keeping their daily appointments, having their dry cleaning
delivered on time, and maintaining their magazine and newspaper
subscriptions.
Yes, that must be it. The NSA and CIA are just a Jeeves service.
They're meta-butlers and meta-cooks and meta-delivery people. It's all
good. People helping people. Inter-Branch cooperation.
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