Wednesday, June 19, 2013

No Real Oversight By Congress!



Thursday, June 20th, 2013
Baton Rouge, Louisiana

CONGRESS-THE REAL CULPRET IN SECURITY LEAK PROBE!

In the coming 2014 congressional elections, there should be one major issue put front and center. Why aren't incumbents doing their job?  We send them to Washington for the purpose of overseeing this massive federal bureaucracy, and ensure that it is being run properly.  We expect them to pass necessary laws, and then be sure there is proper monitoring to see these laws are carried out.  Nothing points out more radically the failure of Congress to properly monitor the executive branch then they wholesale release of the entire surveillance system that is supposed to be overseen by the NSA (National Security Administration.)

Every single member of congress should be livid at the incompetence of those running the NSA.  This top secret federal agency, that is supposed to competently gather up the reams of data that will protect us from the bad guys, have proven to be inept at running its own operation.  Why would they just turn over the keys of our most sensitive data to a 29-year-old high school dropout?  That’s the real scandal.  The maladroit and ineffectual handling of America’s secrets (the word Klutzy comes to mind) makes us wonder if our federal spy network is being run by the Keystone Cops!

Edward Snowden, the whistleblower in the center of this firestorm, dropped out of high school, was forced to leave the military, and developed his  “top secret” information access wizardry by taking a few computer classes at a community college to try and get his high school diploma.  And he failed to get it.  He couldn’t complete the courses.  So he gets a job at the NSA as a security guard.  The next thing you know, he is hired by one of the NSA’s big private contractors, Booz Allen Hamilton, that receives hundreds of millions of dollars from the NSA.  In fact, over 70% of the national intelligence budget is now spent on private companies such as Booz Allen, Northrop Grumman and the Boeing subsidiary Narus.

So this high school dropout is making $200,000 a year by a private contractor and given an open door to the nation’s national security database.  He was not prepped and prepared by the FBI, the CIA or the State Department.  He’s just an IT guy and not a very good one at that. Simply put, he had no background in anything related to national security.  Yet working for a private contractor, with apparently little or no oversight by the NSA, Snowden is allowed to spread America’s intelligence gathering system to the entire world.

The Guardian newspaper, that initially broke this spy scandal by interviewing Snowden, reported that the NSA let him see  “everything.”  “He was accorded the NSA's top security clearance, which allowed him to see and to download the agency’s most sensitive documents.  But he didn’t just know about the NSA surveillance systems – he says he had the ability to use them. “I, sitting at my desk, certainly had the authority to wiretap anyone from you or your accountant to a federal judge to even the president if I had a personal email.”

He told the Washington Post that: "The NSA has built an infrastructure that allows it to intercept almost everything. With this capability, the vast majority of human communications are automatically ingested without targeting. If I wanted to see your emails or your wife’s phone, all I have to do is use intercepts. I can get your emails, passwords, phone records, credit cards.”

OK, so the NSA blew it.  There incompetence allowed this underling to compromise America’s security network.  They obviously were way to lax about monitoring all these private contractors that were receiving multi-million contracts from the NSA.  So where are the check and balances?  Who is watching the watchers?  Easy answer here.  It’s those folks that you rarely see until election time, and then are everywhere seeking your vote.  It’s our senators and our congressmen.  That’s their job. That’s what we send these people up to the nation’s capitol to do.  See that a system is put into place, and monitor it regularly to assure you and I that the system is working.

Many members of Congress expressed outrage. So to tone down the firestorm,  a briefing was scheduled for the entire U.S. Senate to ask questions, and probe more into the breakdown in classified security programs.   All the top security folks were there. The FBI, the Justice Department, the national security agency, and even the FISA court that is supposed to oversee this whole group of the so-called protectors.  The hearing was scheduled for this past Thursday afternoon. Of the hundred US senators, only 47 of them showed up.  The rest were apparently bee lining home for the Fourth of July weekend.

In my home state of Louisiana, there was mixed reaction from the congressional delegation over lax security oversight.  Fifth District Congressman Rodney Alexander was forthright in complaining that the government had over stepped its boundaries. “Congress is just as much to blame for giving the government the legal leeway to collect sweeping information.”  He deserves credit in calling for much more stringent oversight.

Senator Mary Landrieu, who chairs the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security, seems fairly oblivious to the security leaks and reluctant to take any firm stand.  “I've been following the story like everyone else," Landrieu said, “and have mixed feelings because my constituents are happy wthat the federal government has been aggressive and breaking up some terrorist plots.”  She went on to say:  “On the other hand, there’s some concern about an invasion of privacy, so I’m just going to listen.”   Landrieu apparently espouses the old political line that “I have friends on one side of the issue, and friends on the other side, so I’m just going to stand up for my friends.”

Unfortunately, too many members of congress have become cheerleaders for the intelligence community rather than aggressively asserting their constitutional role of being a watchdog over the federal bureaucracy.  Americans want to be safe and they want to be assured that that their representatives are giving them the best bang for their buck.

When it comes to insisting on an efficient monitoring of the nation’s security system, the NSA has dropped the ball.  But so have members of congress.  They should forget the short workweeks and get back to the job their constitutents elected them to do.  That means being an aggressive watchdog, asking tough questions and protecting both our security and our freedom.

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“Government’s first duty is to protect people, not run their lives.”
Ronald Reagan

Peace and Justice

Jim Brown

Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide.  You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.  You can also hear Jim’s nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till 11:00 am, central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.









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