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Bush: Phone Monitoring
Only Aimed at Terrorism
By Michael Bowman
11 May 2006
President Bush says the federal government's monitoring of telephone
activity is limited to instances where authorities believe terrorists
are making calls to or from the United States. Mr. Bush's comments
follow a newspaper report that major U.S. telephone companies have given
the National Security Agency records of customer telephone calls.
President
Bush says, following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the
United States, he authorized the National Security Agency to intercept
the international communications of people with known links to al-Qaida
and other terrorist groups, adding, "We want to know what they are
saying."
But, speaking from the White House before departing on a trip to the
U.S. Gulf Coast, Mr. Bush stressed that the program's sole aim is to
prevent terrorism, and said it does not violate U.S. law.
"The privacy of ordinary Americans is fiercely protected in all our
activities," said President Bush. "We are not 'mining' or 'trolling'
through the personal lives of millions of innocent Americans. Our
efforts are focused on links to al-Qaida and their known affiliates."
Mr. Bush did not confirm or deny that the government has obtained
domestic telephone records, nor did he comment on how those records
might be used to further the battle against terrorism
Earlier, the USA Today newspaper cited anonymous sources as saying that
the National Security Agency had secured records from America's largest
telephone companies, none of which are state owned. The article said the
federal government is not attempting to construct a database of all
telephone conversations within the United States, but rather looking for
calling patterns that might indicate terrorist communications.
In his remarks, President Bush said the U.S. government does not listen
to domestic phone calls without court approval, and that members of
Congress have been briefed on the program.
But several prominent Republican and Democratic legislators have
expressed surprise and dismay about the corporations surrendering their
records to federal authorities, and urged closer examination of the
practice.
A
prime defender of the government's anti-terrorism domestic surveillance
program is newly designated CIA director nominee Michael Hayden, a
former director of the National Security Agency. General Hayden is
expected to face sharp questions about the program at his Senate
confirmation hearing.
Civil rights groups have blasted the program as an infringement on
Americans' liberty and right to privacy. |