The Truth will prevail, But only if we Demand an Article V Convention
9-11 Inside Job and Neocons Hacked 2004
Bush Weakens Espionage Oversight
By Charlie Savage
The Boston Globe
Friday 14 March 2008
Board created by Ford loses most of its power.
Washington - Almost 32 years to the day after President Ford created
an independent Intelligence Oversight Board made up of private
citizens with top-level clearances to ferret out illegal spying
activities, President Bush issued an executive order that stripped
the board of much of its authority.
The White House did not say why it was necessary to change the rules
governing the board when it issued Bush's order late last month. But
critics say Bush's order is consistent with a pattern of steps by
the administration that have systematically scaled back
Watergate-era intelligence reforms.
"It's quite clear that the Bush administration officials who were
around in the 1970s are settling old scores now," said Tim Sparapani,
senior legislative counsel to the American Civil Liberties Union.
"Here they are even preventing oversight within the executive
branch. They have closed the books on the post-Watergate era."
Ford created the board following a 1975-76 investigation by Congress
into domestic spying, assassination operations, and other abuses by
intelligence agencies. The probe prompted fierce battles between
Congress and the Ford administration, whose top officials included
Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and the current president's father,
George H. W. Bush.
To blunt proposals for new laws imposing greater congressional
oversight of intelligence matters, Ford enacted his own reforms with
an executive order that went into effect on March 1, 1976. Among
them, he created the Intelligence Oversight Board to serve as a
watchdog over spying agencies.
"I believe [the changes] will eliminate abuses and questionable
activities on the part of the foreign intelligence agencies while at
the same time permitting them to get on with their vital work of
gathering and assessing information," Ford told Congress.
The board's investigations and reports have been mostly kept secret.
But the Clinton administration provided a rare window into the
panel's capabilities in 1996 by publishing a board report faulting
the CIA for not adequately informing Congress about putting known
torturers and killers in Guatemala on its payroll.
But Bush downsized the board's mandate to be an aggressive watchdog
against such problems in an executive order issued on Feb. 29, the
eve of the anniversary of the day Ford's order took effect. The
White House said the timing of the new order was "purely
coincidental."
Under the old rules, whenever the oversight board learned of
intelligence activity that it believed might be "unlawful or
contrary to executive order," it had a duty to notify both the
president and the attorney general. But Bush's order deleted the
board's authority to refer matters to the Justice Department for a
criminal investigation, and the new order said the board should
notify the president only if other officials are not already
"adequately" addressing the problem.
Bush's order also terminated the board's authority to oversee each
intelligence agency's general counsel and inspector general, and it
erased a requirement that each inspector general file a report with
the board every three months. Now only the agency directors will
decide whether to report any potential lawbreaking to the panel, and
they have no schedule for checking in.
Suzanne Spaulding, a former deputy counsel at the CIA who has worked
as a congressional staff member on intelligence committees for
members of both parties, said the order "really diminishes the
language that calls on the Intelligence Oversight Board to conduct
independent inquiries," leaving the panel as potentially little more
than "paper pushers."
And Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker, a former general counsel at both the
CIA and the National Security Agency who is now the dean of the
University of the Pacific law school, said it was unwise for the
Bush administration to undermine the Intelligence Oversight Board at
the same time that the administration has been pushing for fewer
restrictions on its intelligence powers.
"An organization like this gives some level of comfort that there is
an independent review capability," Parker said. "Changes like this
appear to water down an organization that contributes to the
public's confidence."
But Tony Fratto, a White House spokesman, denied that the order
reduced the authority and independence of the panel.
Fratto pointed to a federal statute that makes it a general duty of
all government officials to report lawbreaking to the Justice
Department. Because of this, he said, there is still a "widely
understood background presumption" that the board can contact the
attorney general even though Bush deleted the authority to make
criminal referrals from its list of core responsibilities.
Fratto also said the changes merely updated the board's
responsibilities after Congress in 2004 created a director of
national intelligence to run the intelligence community. The order
says the director is the person responsible for making any criminal
referrals to the Justice Department.
Still, critics contend that the director of national intelligence
cannot play the same watchdog role as the oversight board because he
is part of the intelligence world, not independent from it, and so
there may be occasions in which he has signed off on an activity
whose legality might be questioned by outsiders.
Some analysts said the order is just the latest example of actions
the administration has taken since the 2001 terrorist attacks that
have scaled back intelligence reforms enacted in the 1970s.
In his 1976 executive order, for example, Ford also banned foreign
intelligence agencies, such as the National Security Agency, from
collecting information about Americans. The Bush administration
bypassed that rule by having domestic agencies collect information
about Americans and then hand the data to the NSA, The Wall Street
Journal reported this week.
Ford's order also banned assassination. But Bush authorized the CIA
to draw up a list of Al Qaeda suspects who could be summarily
killed.
The administration decided that such targeted killings were an
exception to the rule because it was wartime.
In 1978, Congress enacted a law requiring warrants for all wiretaps
on domestic soil. But now spies are free to monitor Americans'
international calls and e-mails without court supervision if the
wiretaps are aimed at targets overseas.
In 1980, Congress enacted a law requiring that the full House and
Senate intelligence committees be briefed about most spying
activities. The Bush administration asserted that it could withhold
significant amounts of information from the committees, briefing
congressional leaders instead.
Finally, executive orders were once widely understood to be binding
unless a president revoked them, an act that would notify Congress
that the rules had changed. But the administration has decided that
Bush is free to secretly authorize spies to ignore executive orders
- including one that restricts surveillance on US citizens traveling
overseas - without rescinding them.
Some critics of the post-Watergate era have contended that its
investigations and reforms went too far. For example, Cheney, who
was Ford's chief of staff, said in December 2005 that "a lot of the
things around Watergate and Vietnam ... served to erode the
authority, I think, the president needs to be effective, especially
in a national security area."
But Frederick A. O. Schwarz Jr., the former chief counsel to the
Senate committee that undertook the 1975-76 investigation into
intelligence abuses, said that by rolling back the post-Watergate
reforms, the Bush administration had made intelligence abuses more
likely to occur.
"What the Bush administration has systematically done is to try to
limit both internal oversight - things like the Intelligence
Oversight Board - and effective external oversight by the Congress,"
Schwarz said, adding, "It's profoundly disappointing if you
understand American history, and it's profoundly harmful to the
United States.