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NSA Had Domestic Call Monitoring Before 9/11?

MarkusQ writes "Bloomberg is reporting that, according to documents filed in the breach of privacy suit on behalf of Verizon and BellSouth, the NSA asked AT&T to set up its domestic call monitoring site seven months before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. Could it be that they were intending to monitor domestic calls (and internet traffic) all along, and the 'Global War on Terror' was just a convenient excuse when they got caught?" From the article: "...an unnamed former employee of the AT&T unit provided them with evidence that the NSA approached the carrier with the proposed plan. Afran said he has seen the worker's log book and independently confirmed the source's participation in the project. He declined to identify the employee."

9 of 479 comments (clear)

  1. Why? by izerop143 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Alright so besides the point that call monitoring is unconstitutional, if they had it 7 months before 9/11, then why did 9/11 still happen?

    --
    Idiot or not, you're still an idiot.
  2. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Much as it is tempting to espouse wild conspiracy theories, the fact of the matter is governments will always seek as much power as possible, and rarely cede it once gained. However innocent and well-intentioned these moves are, there is always the danger that future governments will abuse them to set up some kind of tyranny. It's not surprising the administration was seeking to do this before September 11th occurred - it's just another way to gain control over people's lives. And you are right, immediately after the twin towers were destroyed, I remember people in power stressing this had nothing to do with Saddam Hussein. Funny how that story changed over time.

  3. No, I'm sure our government had a good reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny


        I have NO doubt that our government was just doing the prudent thing. 9/11 is proof that it was necessary. You guys are just too cynical.

  4. Re:Illegal? by Homology · · Score: 5, Informative

    > Illegal according to what law? You know that when they are attacking other countries they are not required to obey the laws in that country.

    Invading another country, when not in self-defense, is a war crime ("supreme crime"),
    by the Geneva conventions, and USA has signed those and are bound by them. War crimes
    carries the death penality in USA. As an invader you are also required to follow
    local laws, with some exceptions. Of course, the invader may make new laws, but they
    may be illegal as well. Instituting new laws in order to loot Iraq is not legal, and
    you might have noticed oil companies reluctance to invest there...

    Notice how the Bush Administration tries to avoid beeing persecuted for war crimes:

    http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID =10038

  5. There just went a portion of Bush's legal defense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    President Bush's major legal defense for the NSA call database was that the resolution passed by Congress on September 14, 2001 authorizing military force against those that caused 9/11 and organizations that aided those that caused 9/11 was a declaration of war. When the Democrats voted for that resolution, and then the resolution to go to war with Iraq, both times they enacted the President's war powers embedded by statute in FISA.

    Check FISA at Cornell University and you see statutes giving the President to use pen registers and trap and trace devices. If you didn't know, those things constitute the technology used to record numbers a phone has been dialing, and numbers that have called a phone. They also give the President the power to search and seize without a warrant and to use electronic surveillance without a warrant. Here is the exact statute. There are three identical sections with "electronic surveillance," "pen register or trap and trace device," and "search and seizure" being replaced by the other in each one.

    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the President, through the Attorney General, may authorize the use of a pen register or trap and trace device without a court order under this subchapter to acquire foreign intelligence information for a period not to exceed 15 calendar days following a declaration of war by Congress.

    Even then, the statute may be interpreted many ways. "for a period not to exceed 15 calendar days" could mean that the authorization must be repeated every 15 days, that individual authorizations may last no longer than 15 days, that the power lasts 15 days once the President has used it, that the power may only be used for 15 days after Congress has declared war, or any number of interpretations, many more plausible than others.

    It depends on to what extent your judicial interpretation philosophy incorporates "originalism," thinking about what Congress intended, "starre decisis," looking at prior court decisions, and "strict constructionism," which limits judicial interpretation to the meanings of the actual words and phrases used in law, and not on other sources or inferences.

    There was a huge debate over whether the authorizations of military force constituted declarations of war for the reasons given above. The Democrats, they say, did not mean to give the President war powers and thought that the authorizations did not constitute declarations of war because they had been used as a means of allowing deployment of armed forces without giving the president war powers since at least the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which allowed an "escalation of military forces" in the Vietnam War. The Republicans mock them for this, and the debate was even brought up in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld if you watch the oral arguements on C-SPAN like I did.

    For all this, how much has this of President Bush's arguements been brought up in the mainstream media? I have seen 2 paragraphs in an Associated Press article and nothing more. Regardless of the debate being all worthless now that he is discovered perhaps to have begun the program before 9/11, the debate is something I feel needs to be known. Just don't berate the Democrats for wanting to debate whether the Iraq War's a war. If the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution had been a declaration of war giving Richard Nixon wiretapping powers, the Supreme Court would not have ruled against him in East District of Michigan v. Nixon.

    A statute in FISA does not make a difference in constitutional law. President Bush wants the statutes to make legal what he does with no regard to the Constitution, but when statutes prohibit his actions, he can cite constitutional authority. If it's legally a war, he'd say it's the first case, and if it's not he'd say it's the other.

    This apparent legal paradox has arisen in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld---if he's a POW he's under the Geneva Convention, and if not he's a criminal entitled to a trial. The Bush administration argues he's not a POW because he was not fighting for an organized g

  6. LoL. Can you people even remember last week? by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I like how people keep saying "in the months before 9/11". As if these programs were instituted by der furher the day he was inaugurated. The truth is that these programs have been going on for years but none of you cared.

    1. Carnivore first hit slashdot during the Clinton Administration. The oldest reference I found on slashdot is about Earthlink refusing to install it in 2000 - which means it had been in development for several years before that.

    2. The legendary "Echelon" - the NSA program for monitoring all telecom traffic has been bandied about for many years - Slashdot posted several articles about it in May of 1999 but the news about it first broke in 1998. The program itself is probably 50 years old.

  7. Re:Illegal? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    What Kofi Annan says is pretty meaningless since he has no real power

    In some parts of the world, leaders lead from a position of moral authority, not from the threat of force.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  8. uh, what? by foreverdisillusioned · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ok, so since that was entirely domestic this program wouldn't have helped there, but you get the point).

    Well, since this is /. I'm too lazy to RTFA, but the headline says "domestic call monitoring". Why would you then conclude that it would be ineffective against domestic terrorism but effective against international terrorism?

    Anyway, 'terrorism' (both domestic and Islamic) weren't a significant problem before 9-11 and they aren't a significant problem today, despite what the 6 o'clock news wants you to believe. Murder takes the lives of many more people (as in several orders of magnitude) per year. Suicide takes 4x more than murder, and car accidents take over 5x more. Heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer, and smoking-related respitory diseases together claim over 200x the lives that murder claims (which is itself claims several orders of magnitude more lives than terrorism.)

    In terms of human lives, terrorism in America isn't even a blip on the radar. It certainly doesn't justify the expenditure of trillions of dollars on wars and "Homeland Security", nor does it justify the wholesale slaughter of our freedoms and even if it did a domestic call tracking program would do jack shit. Despite what the pundits want you to believe, there is no vast centralized network of terrorists. They have no need to keep in constant contact with each other over long distances, and ruthlessly and indiscriminately monitoring law-abiding American citizens (incidentally, none of the 9-11 terrorists were American citizens) will give us nothing but another step towards a police state.

  9. Mathematically, it does not work. by khasim · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Yeah, because before 9-11, terrorism was completely unknown in the United States.
    Whether it was known or not is irrelevent. The question is: Will random spying prevent future attacks?

    And the answer is "no". Any system will have "false positives", "false negatives", "true positives" and "true negatives".

    The "false negatives" mean you miss a plot. As long as the false negative rate is above a certain percentage of the actual plots, it will work.

    More problematic is the "false positive" rate. This is when a non-plot is identified as a plot. Innocent people are investigated. This takes time / money / effort.

    Given that there is an upper limit on the time / money / effort available, the government will waste resources chasing false leads.

    People who do not understand that will look at the extreme rarity of "terrorist attacks" in the US (try to name 5 attacks in the US in the last 100 years without using Google) and conclude that the time / money / effort spent was successful.

    However, looking at the budget, you will see that our government is BORROWING the money.

    We are going bankrupt in an attempt to chase down a threat that kills fewer people every year than car accidents.

    And we are surrending the Rights that our forefathers were willing to give THEIR lives for.