Domestic
spying is a cultural construct that is used, especially among civil libertarians
and the media, to refer to internally directed surveillance programs initiated
by a variety of formal agencies of social control and intelligence. In
the current U.S. context, domestic spying primarily refers to the debate
that erupted following several revelations about surveillance programs
set up, without court approval or congressional oversight, to aid in the
fight against terrorism. Although the debate on domestic spying is recent,
internal surveillance programs have considerable historical antecedents.
Domestic Surveillance
Programs
U.S. domestic surveillance
programs date back to the 1930s, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt secretly
ordered the Bureau of Investigation (renamed Federal Bureau of Investigation
in 1935) to investigate the American Nazi movement. On September 6, 1939,
three days after the British and French declaration of war on Nazi Germany,
Roosevelt formally placed the FBI in charge of all surveillance activities
relating to espionage, sabotage, subversive activities, and violations
of U.S. neutrality laws. During World War II, the FBI was responsible for
all domestic intelligence work and foreign intelligence in South America,
while the Office of Strategic Services was the leading intelligence agency
for all other regions.
Domestic surveillance in
the United States remained primarily in the hands of the FBI after the
war. Most distinct amongst these efforts was the Bureau’s COINTELPRO or
counterintelligence programs from the 1950s onwards that acted against
Communist groups and a wide range of other organizations, including leftist
groups, civil rights organizations, and the Ku Klux Klan. In the early
1970s, COINTELPRO was formally abolished, leading to passage of the Federal
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) in 1978, which permits electronic
surveillance within the United States on foreign agents and international
terrorists on the condition that a judge in a specialized FISA court issues
a warrant.
Presently, several partly
interacting and overlapping surveillance agencies handle domestic intelligence
duties, including the FBI, the National Security Agency (NSA), the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), the Office of the Director of National Intelligence,
and various federal and local law enforcement agencies.
In the current context of
counter-terrorism, domestic spying debates erupted following several revelations
reported in the popular media about domestic surveillance programs, conducted
by the National Security Agency, that were secretly authorized by the President
following the terrorist attacks of September 11. In addition to these NSA
surveillance programs, debate also raged over the expanded opportunities
afforded to the U.S. intelligence and law enforcement community under provisions
of the PATRIOT Act, a federal bill passed in 2001, which broadened police
powers against terrorism. In November 2005, the Washington Post disclosed
a rapidly growing practice of domestic spying under the provisions of by
the PATRIOT Act by the FBI seeking information on the basis of so-called
‘national security letters.’ Such letters enable the FBI to secretly review
the private telephone and financial records of suspected foreign agents.
However, the letters program also included U.S. citizens and residents
who were not suspected of any wrongdoing.
Most important in the recent
debate on domestic spying, the New York Times on December 16, 2005 reported
on a secret domestic surveillance program conducted by the NSA. This so-called
Terrorist Surveillance Program, initiated in early 2002 on the secret authorization
of President Bush, allows the NSA to intercept, without a court-approved
warrant, communications that involve one overseas and one domestic party
or at least one party suspected of holding ties to al-Qaeda or an affiliated
terrorist group.
The response to this revelation
was intense. In January 2006, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
and the Center for Constitutional Rights filed lawsuits, arguing that the
NSA eavesdropping program violated Americans’ civil rights. That same month,
the Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a class-action lawsuit against
the telephone company AT&T, accusing it of providing the NSA with unfettered
access to customer phone calls and internet communications in violation
of the Fourth Amendment, as well as federal wiretap and communication laws.
On a political level, two Senate Judiciary hearings held in February 2006
discussed the status of the NSA program. Another revelation about contemporary
domestic surveillance programs came when the newspaper USA Today reported
in May 2006 that the NSA had kept logs of billions of domestic calls, a
program that began, without court approval, soon after 9/11.
The Domestic Spying Debate
The debate on domestic spying
contains important considerations of both a legal and normative nature.
From the legal viewpoint, the Bush administration insisted that it had
the power to authorize the wiretapping program under both the U.S. Constitution
and the congressional resolution of the Authorization of Military Force
that authorized use of wartime powers against those responsible for the
9/11 terrorist attacks. The constitutional powers of the U.S. President
as commander-in-chief would allow President Bush to pursue, without explicit
congressional permission, any enemy operating inside the U.S. Additionally,
the wartime powers of the President would allow him to bypass the courts
to spy on Americans without warrants, a Presidential power that not even
Congress can restrict, as the President not only has the authority but
also the duty to protect the nation. It is further argued that the Congressional
resolution on the Authorization of Military Force that passed shortly after
9/11 also granted the President the right to use all ‘necessary and appropriate
force,’ thereby effectively suspending the FISA requirements which are
considered outdated and inappropriate in view of the contemporary war on
terror. When President Bush in a televised address admitted that he had
authorized domestic, warrant-less monitoring of calls involving an overseas
party, he defended his actions as crucial to national security.
Opponents argue that the
President’s expansion of executive power violates constitutionally framed
mandates for judicial and congressional oversight. Congress and the courts
have a constitutional right and obligation to provide a check against extra-legal
activities in the executive branch. The uncovered domestic spying programs,
they claim, violate Fourth-Amendment protections against illegal search
and seizure. The Supreme Court has likewise held that most surveillance
by government agencies must be based on a judicial finding of probable
cause of criminal wrongdoing.
Other arguments against domestic
spying invoke concerns over two specific federal acts. First, critics say
the program violates provisions of the 1978 FISA Act which requires warrants.
The PATRIOT Act only allows for the collection of data for up to 72 hours
before a warrant must be requested from the courts, and the Authorization
of Military Force resolution does not give the President the power to bypass
this law. Second, because only eight members of the House and Senate were
briefed about relevant developments, the NSA program violates the National
Security Act of 1947 which requires that intelligence oversight committees
of Congress be kept informed of U.S. intelligence activities. Absent such
congressional approval, prosecutions of captured terrorists may be jeopardized
by defendants’ claims that the evidence against them was collected illegally.
In August 2006, a U.S. District Court ruled the NSA surveillance program
to be unconstitutional. At this writing, an appeal is still pending.
Underlying the legal debate
on domestic spying are conflicting positions about its normativity. On
the one hand, proponents suggest that special surveillance programs are
necessary because of the severity and nature of the current terrorist threat
and, moreover, that they have effectively prevented other terrorist attacks
on U.S. soil. Under present-day circumstances, they claim, most Americans
would agree that some of their rights have to be sacrificed in order to
preserve national security. On the other hand, opponents argue measures
implemented against terrorist groups should not curb civil rights, which
are an essential part of a free and open society. Making exceptions on
constitutional restrictions on presidential power in the area of counter-terrorism
might lead to wrongly justify other special provisions, such as on the
use of torture and the indefinite detention of citizens. Modernizing the
rules of counter-terrorism surveillance in the United States could allow
for the use of new means but only within proper limits that prevent innocent
citizens from being investigated.
Given the continued anxieties
over the terrorist threat and the likewise persistent concerns over civil
rights, the debate on domestic spying is likely to stay in the public consciousness
for some time in the foreseeable future.
See also
Civil Rights; PATRIOT Act;
Police; Terrorism; Terrorism, Counter-Terrorism Approaches; Surveillance
Further Readings
-
Keller, William W. 1989. The
Liberals and J. Edgar Hoover: Rise and Fall of a Domestic Intelligence
State. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
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Morgan, Richard E. 1980. Domestic
Intelligence: Monitoring Dissent in America. Austin, TX: University of
Texas Press.
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Posner, Richard A. 2005. Remaking
Domestic Intelligence. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press.
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Risen, James. 2006. State of
War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration. New York:
The Free Press.
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Wong, Katherine. 2006. “The
NSA Terrorist Surveillance Program.” Harvard Journal on Legislation 43:
517-534.