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It's Bush's call

If he wants to shield the phone firms that aided NSA eavesdropping, he must come clean about the program.

EDITORIALS: THE SATURDAY PAGE EYES AND EARS

October 13, 2007

This week, two House committees made good on a Democratic promise to approve new privacy protections for Americans innocently caught up in the eavesdropping on suspected terrorists by the National Security Agency. But President Bush is threatening to veto the legislation. He is particularly aggrieved that it wouldn't provide retroactive immunity from lawsuits for telephone companies that cooperated with his so-called Terrorist Surveillance Program.


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If Bush wants Congress to hold the telephone companies blameless, he should accept the legislation approved this week by the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees and make a full accounting of how -- and on what supposed legal basis -- the eavesdropping initiative was approved in the first place.

After the 9/11 attacks, Bush determined that U.S. intelligence agencies needed to be more aggressive in intercepting telephone calls and e-mail between suspected foreign terrorists and people in the United States. He then faced a choice: He could publicly ask Congress to remedy what he saw as shortcomings in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the 1978 law that required judicial oversight of domestic wiretapping of suspected foreign agents. Or he could act on his own, and in secret, to authorize the monitoring of electronic communications involving Americans.

Abetted by Vice President Dick Cheney, who long had resented what he regarded as congressional encroachment on executive authority, Bush made the latter choice. It was the wrong one, as even some of the president's lawyers realized (witness the now-famous 2004 confrontation in former Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft's hospital room). Only this year, after the election of a Democratic Congress, did Bush shift ground and agree to allow the program to be supervised by the secret federal court created by FISA.

This acceptance of judicial oversight proved to be short-lived. When the court found fault with aspects of the program -- reportedly ruling that FISA required the government to seek a court order for "foreign-to-foreign" communications that are routed through the United States -- Bush pressed Congress to do much more than close what everyone agreed was a loophole created by advances in technology.

The sorry result was a temporary law approved in August that took the FISA court out of the business of monitoring the wiretapping of anyone authorities reasonably believed to be outside the country -- including Americans abroad on business or a vacation. To their credit, even Democrats who supported the temporary "FISA fix" -- such as California's Sen. Dianne Feinstein -- vowed that Congress would revisit FISA when it returned from summer recess.

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