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[infowarrior] - Text of GEN Hayden remarks on NSA spying

Richard Forno
Mon, 23 Jan 2006 17:20:38 -0800

23 January 2006

Source: http://www.dni.gov/release_letter_012306.html

REMARKS BY

GENERAL MICHAEL V. HAYDEN

PRINCIPAL DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE

AND

FORMER DIRECTOR OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY

ADDRESS TO THE NATIONAL PRESS CLUB

WHAT AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE & ESPECIALLY THE NSA HAVE BEEN DOING TO DEFEND
THE NATION

NATIONAL PRESS CLUB

WASHINGTON, D.C.

10:00 A.M. EST

MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 2006

MR. HILL: Good morning. My name is Keith Hill. I'm an editor/writer with the
Bureau of National Affairs, Press Club governor and vice chair of the club's
Newsmaker Committee, and I'll be today's moderator.

Today, we have General Michael Hayden, principal deputy director of National
Intelligence with the Office of National Intelligence, who will talk about
the recent controversy surrounding the National Security Agency's
warrantless monitoring of communications of suspected al Qaeda terrorists.

General Hayden, who's been in this position since last April, is currently
the highest ranking military intelligence officer in the armed services, and
he also knows a little something about this controversy because in his
previous life he was NSA director when the NSA monitoring program began in
2000 -- 2001, sorry.

So with that, I will turn the podium over to General Hayden.

GEN. HAYDEN: Keith, thanks. Good morning. I'm happy to be here to talk a bit
about what American intelligence has been doing and especially what NSA has
been doing to defend the nation.

Now, as Keith points out, I'm here today not only as Ambassador John
Negroponte's deputy in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence,
I'm also here as the former director of the National Security Agency, a post
I took in March of 1999 and left only last spring.

Serious issues have been raised in recent weeks, and discussion of serious
issues should be based on facts. There's a lot of information out there
right now.

Some of it is, frankly, inaccurate. Much of it is just simply misunderstood.
I'm here to tell the American people what NSA has been doing and why. And
perhaps more importantly, what NSA has not been doing.

Now, admittedly, this is a little hard to do while protecting our country's
intelligence sources and methods. And, frankly, people in my line of work
generally don't like to talk about what they've done until it becomes a
subject on the History Channel. But let me make one thing very clear. As
challenging as this morning might be, this is the speech I want to give. I
much prefer being here with you today telling you about the things we have
done when there hasn't been an attack on the homeland. This is a far easier
presentation to make than the ones I had to give four years ago telling
audiences like you what we hadn't done in the days and months leading up to
the tragic events of September 11th.

Today's story isn't an easy one to tell in this kind of unclassified
environment, but it is by far the brief I prefer to present.

Now, I know we all have searing memories of the morning of September 11th. I
know I do. Making the decision to evacuate non- essential workers at NSA
while the situation was unclear; seeing the NSA counterterrorism shop in
tears while we were tacking up blackout curtains around their windows; like
many of you, making that phone call, asking my wife to find our kids, and
then hanging up the phone on her.

Another memory for me comes two days later -- that's the 13th of September
-- when I addressed the NSA workforce to lay out our mission in a new
environment. It was a short video talk; we beamed it throughout our
headquarters at Fort Meade and globally throughout our global enterprise.
Now, most of what I said was what anyone would expect. I tried to inspire:
our work was important; the nation was depending on us. I tried to comfort:
Look on the bright side, I said to them, right now a quarter billion
Americans wish they had your job, being able to go after the enemy.

I ended the talk by trying to give a little perspective. I noted that all
free peoples have had to balance the demands of liberty with the demands of
security, and historically, historically we Americans have been able to
plant our flag well down the spectrum toward liberty. Here was our
challenge, I said, and I'm quoting from that presentation: "We are going to
keep America free by making Americans feel safe again."

But to start the story with that Thursday, December 13th, is a bit
misleading. It's a little bit like coming in near the end of the first reel
of a movie. To understand that moment and that statement, you would have to
know a little bit about what had happened to the National Security Agency in
the preceding years.

Look, NSA intercepts communications, and it does so for only one purpose --
to protect the lives, the liberties and the well-being of the citizens of
the United States from those who would do us harm. By the late 1990s, that
job was becoming increasingly more difficult. The explosion of modern
communications in terms of volume, variety, velocity threatened to overwhelm
us.

The agency took a lot of criticism in those days, I know, criticism that it
was going deaf, that it was ossified in its thinking, that it had not and
could not keep up with the changes in modern communications. And all of that
was only reinforced when all of the computer systems at Fort Meade went dark
for three days in January of 2000 and we couldn't quickly or easily explain
why.

Those were really interesting times. As we were being criticized for being
incompetent and going deaf, at the same time others seemed to be claiming
that we were omniscient and we were reading your e- mails. The Washington
Post and New Yorker Magazine during that time -- I'm talking 1999 now of
2000 -- they wrote, incorrectly, that -- and I'm quoting -- "NSA has turned
from eavesdropping on the communists to eavesdropping on businesses and
private citizens."

And that -- and I'm quoting again -- "NSA has the ability to extend its
eavesdropping network without limits." We are also referred to as a, quote,
"global spying network that can eavesdrop on every single phone call, fax or
e-mail anywhere on the planet."

I used those quotes in a speech I gave at American University in February of
2000. The great urban legend out there then was something called "Echelon"
and the false accusation that NSA was using its capabilities to advance
American corporate interests -- signals intelligence for General Motors, or
something like that. You know, with these kinds of charges, the turf back
then feels a bit familiar now. How could we prove a negative -- that we
weren't doing certain things -- without revealing the appropriate things we
were doing that kept America safe? You see, NSA had, NSA has an existential
problem. In order to protect American lives and liberties, it has to be two
things: powerful in its capabilities, and secretive in its methods. And we
exist in a political culture that distrusts two things most of all: power
and secrecy.

Modern communications didn't make this any easier. Gone were the days when
signals of interest -- that's what NSA calls the things they want to copy --
gone were the days when signals of interest went along some dedicated
microwave link between strategic rocket forces headquarters in Moscow and
some ICBM in western Siberia. By the late '90s, what NSA calls targeted
communications -- things like al Qaeda communications -- coexisted out there
in a great global web with your phone calls and my e-mails. NSA needed the
power to pick out the one, and the discipline to leave the others alone.

So, this question of security and liberty wasn't a new one for us in
September of 2001. We've always had this question: How do we balance the
legitimate need for foreign intelligence with our responsibility to protect
individual privacy rights?

It's a question drilled into every employee of NSA from day one, and it
shapes every decision about how NSA operates.

September 11th didn't change that. But it did change some things. This
ability to intercept communication -- we commonly refer to it as Signals
Intelligence or SIGINT. SIGINT is a complex business, with operational and
technological and legal imperatives often intersecting and overlapping.
There's routinely some freedom of action -- within the law -- to adjust
operations. After the attacks, I exercised some options I've always had that
collectively better prepared us to defend the homeland.

Look, let me talk for a minute about this, okay? Because a big gap in the
current understanding, a big gap in the current debate is what's standard?
What is it that NSA does routinely? Where we set the threshold, for example,
for what constitutes inherent foreign intelligence value? That's what we're
directed to collect. That's what we're required to limit ourselves to --
inherent foreign intelligence value. Where we set that threshold, for
example, in reports involving a U.S. person shapes how we do our job, shapes
how we collect, shapes how we report. The American SIGINT system, in the
normal course of foreign intelligence activities, inevitably captures this
kind of information, information to, from or about what we call a U.S.
person. And by the way, "U.S. person" routinely includes anyone in the
United States, citizen or not.

So, for example, because they were in the United States -- and we did not
know anything more -- Mohamed Atta and his fellow 18 hijackers would have
been presumed to have been protected persons, U.S. persons, by NSA prior to
9/11.

Inherent foreign intelligence value is one of the metrics we must use. Let
me repeat that: Inherent foreign intelligence value is one of the metrics we
must use to ensure that we conform to the Fourth Amendment's reasonable
standard when it comes to protecting the privacy of these kinds of people.
If the U.S. person information isn't relevant, the data is suppressed. It's
a technical term we use; we call it "minimized." The individual is not even
mentioned. Or if he or she is, he or she is referred to as "U.S. Person
Number One" or "U.S. Person Number Two." Now, inherent intelligence value.
If the U.S. person is actually the named terrorist, well, that could be a
different matter. The standard by which we decided that, the standard of
what was relevant and valuable, and therefore, what was reasonable, would
understandably change, I think, as smoke billowed from two American cities
and a Pennsylvania farm field. And we acted accordingly.

To somewhat oversimplify this, this question of inherent intelligence value,
just by way of illustration, to just use an example, we all had a different
view of Zacarias Moussaoui's computer hard drive after the attacks than we
did before.

Look, this is not unlike things that happened in other areas. Prior to
September 11th, airline passengers were screened in one way. After September
11th, we changed how we screen passengers. In the same way, okay, although
prior to September 11th certain communications weren't considered valuable
intelligence, it became immediately clear after September 11th that
intercepting and reporting these same communications were in fact critical
to defending the homeland. Now let me make this point. These decisions were
easily within my authorities as the director of NSA under and executive
order; known as Executive Order 12333, that was signed in 1981, an executive
order that has governed NSA for nearly a quarter century.

Now, let me summarize. In the days after 9/11, NSA was using its authorities
and its judgment to appropriately respond to the most catastrophic attack on
the homeland in the history of the nation. That shouldn't be a headline, but
as near as I can tell, these actions on my part have created some of the
noise in recent press coverage. Let me be clear on this point -- except that
they involved NSA, these programs were not related -- these programs were
not related -- to the authorization that the president has recently spoken
about. Back then, September 2001, I asked to update the Congress on what NSA
had been doing, and I briefed the entire House Intelligence Committee on the
1st of October on what we had done under our previously existing
authorities.

Now, as another part of our adjustment, we also turned on the spigot of NSA
reporting to FBI in, frankly, an unprecedented way. We found that we were
giving them too much data in too raw form. We recognized it almost
immediately, a question of weeks, and we made all of the appropriate
adjustments. Now, this flow of data to the FBI has also become part of the
current background noise, and despite reports in the press of thousands of
tips a month, our reporting has not even approached that kind of pace. You
know, I actually find this a little odd. After all the findings of the 9/11
commission and other bodies about the failure to share intelligence, I'm up
here feeling like I have to explain pushing data to those who might be able
to use it. And of course, it's the nature of intelligence that many tips
lead nowhere, but you have to go down some blind alleys to find the tips
that pay off.

Now, beyond the authorities that I exercised under the standing executive
order, as the war on terror has moved forward, we have aggressively used
FISA warrants. The act and the court have provided us with important tools,
and we make full use of them. Published numbers show us using the court at
record rates, and the results have been outstanding. But the revolution in
telecommunications technology has extended the actual impact of the FISA
regime far beyond what Congress could ever have anticipated in 1978. And I
don't think that anyone can make the claim that the FISA statute is
optimized to deal with or prevent a 9/11 or to deal with a lethal enemy who
likely already had combatants inside the United States.

I testified in open session to the House Intel Committee in April of the
year 2000. At the time, I created some looks of disbelief when I said that
if Osama bin Laden crossed the bridge from Niagara Falls, Ontario to Niagara
Falls, New York, there were provisions of U.S. law that would kick in, offer
him protections and affect how NSA could now cover him. At the time, I was
just using this as some of sort of stark hypothetical; 17 months later, this
is about life and death.

So now, we come to one additional piece of NSA authorities. These are the
activities whose existence the president confirmed several weeks ago. That
authorization was based on an intelligence community assessment of a serious
and continuing threat to the homeland. The lawfulness of the actual
authorization was reviewed by lawyers at the Department of Justice and the
White House and was approved by the attorney general.

Now, you're looking at me up here, and I'm in a military uniform, and
frankly, there's a certain sense of sufficiency here -- authorized by the
president, duly ordered, its lawfulness attested to by the attorney general
and its content briefed to the congressional leadership.

But we all have personal responsibility, and in the end, NSA would have to
implement this, and every operational decision the agency makes is made with
the full involvement of its legal office. NSA professional career lawyers --
and the agency has a bunch of them -- have a well-deserved reputation.
They're good, they know the law, and they don't let the agency take many
close pitches.

And so even though I knew the program had been reviewed by the White House
and by DOJ, by the Department of Justice, I asked the three most senior and
experienced lawyers in NSA: Our enemy in the global war on terrorism doesn't
divide the United States from the rest of the world, the global
telecommunications system doesn't make that distinction either, our laws do
and should; how did these activities square with these facts?

They reported back to me. They supported the lawfulness of this program.
Supported, not acquiesced. This was very important to me. A veteran NSA
lawyer, one of the three I asked, told me that a correspondent had suggested
to him recently that all of the lawyers connected with this program have
been very careful from the outset because they knew there would be a day of
reckoning. The NSA lawyer replied to him that that had not been the case.
NSA had been so careful, he said -- and I'm using his words now here -- NSA
had been so careful because in this very focused, limited program, NSA had
to ensure that it dealt with privacy interests in an appropriate manner.

In other words, our lawyers weren't careful out of fear; they were careful
out of a heartfelt, principled view that NSA operations had to e consistent
with bedrock legal protections.

In early October 2001, I gathered key members of the NSA workforce in our
conference room and I introduced our new operational authority to them. With
the historic culture of NSA being what it was and is, I had to do this
personally. I told them what we were going to do and why. I also told them
that we were going to carry out this program and not go one step further.
NSA's legal and operational leadership then went into the details of this
new task.

You know, the 9/11 commission criticized our ability to link things
happening in the United States with things that were happening elsewhere. In
that light, there are no communications more important to the safety of this
country than those affiliated with al Qaeda with one end in the United
States. The president's authorization allows us to track this kind of call
more comprehensively and more efficiently. The trigger is quicker and a bit
softer than it is for a FISA warrant, but the intrusion into privacy is also
limited: only international calls and only those we have a reasonable basis
to believe involve al Qaeda or one of its affiliates.

The purpose of all this is not to collect reams of intelligence, but to
detect and prevent attacks. The intelligence community has neither the time,
the resources nor the legal authority to read communications that aren't
likely to protect us, and NSA has no interest in doing so. These are
communications that we have reason to believe are al Qaeda communications, a
judgment made by American intelligence professionals, not folks like me or
political appointees, a judgment made by the American intelligence
professionals most trained to understand al Qaeda tactics, al Qaeda
communications and al Qaeda aims.

Their work is actively overseen by the most intense oversight regime in the
history of the National Security Agency. The agency's conduct of this
program is thoroughly reviewed by the NSA's general counsel and inspector
general. The program has also been reviewed by the Department of Justice for
compliance with the president's authorization. Oversight also includes an
aggressive training program to ensure that all activities are consistent
with the letter and the intent of the authorization and with the
preservation of civil liberties.

Let me talk for a few minutes also about what this program is not. It is not
a driftnet over Dearborn or Lackawanna or Freemont grabbing conversations
that we then sort out by these alleged keyword searches or data-mining tools
or other devices that so-called experts keep talking about.

This is targeted and focused. This is not about intercepting conversations
between people in the United States. This is hot pursuit of communications
entering or leaving America involving someone we believe is associated with
al Qaeda. We bring to bear all the technology we can to ensure that this is
so. And if there were ever an anomaly, and we discovered that there had been
an inadvertent intercept of a domestic-to-domestic call, that intercept
would be destroyed and not reported. But the incident, what we call
inadvertent collection, would be recorded and reported. But that's a normal
NSA procedure. It's been our procedure for the last quarter century. And as
always, as we always do when dealing with U.S. person information, as I said
earlier, U.S. identities are expunged when they're not essential to
understanding the intelligence value of any report. Again, that's a normal
NSA procedure.

So let me make this clear. When you're talking to your daughter at state
college, this program cannot intercept your conversations. And when she
takes a semester abroad to complete her Arabic studies, this program will
not intercept your communications.

Let me emphasize one more thing that this program is not -- and, look, I
know how hard it is to write a headline that's accurate and short and
grabbing. But we really should shoot for all three -- accurate, short and
grabbing. I don't think domestic spying makes it. One end of any call
targeted under this program is always outside the United States. I've flown
a lot in this country, and I've taken literally hundreds of domestic
flights. I have never boarded a domestic flight in the United States of
America and landed in Waziristan. In the same way -- and I'm speaking
illustratively here now, this is just an example -- if NSA had intercepted
al Qaeda Ops Chief Khalid Shaikh Mohammed in Karachi talking to Mohamed Atta
in Laurel, Maryland, in say, July of 2001 -- if NSA had done that, and the
results had been made public, I'm convinced that the crawler on all the 7 by
24 news networks would not have been "NSA domestic spying."

Had this program been in effect prior to 9/11, it is my professional
judgment that we would have detected some of the 9/11 al Qaeda operatives in
the United States, and we would have identified them as such.

I've said earlier that this program's been successful. Clearly not every
lead pans out from this or any other source, but this program has given us
information that we would not otherwise had been able to get. It's
impossible for me to talk about this any more in a public way without
alerting our enemies to our tactics or what we have learned. I can't give
details without increasing the danger to Americans. On one level, believe
me, I wish that I could. But I can't.

Our enemy has made his intentions clear. He's declared war on us. Since
September 11th, al Qaeda and its affiliates have continued to announce their
intention, continued to act on their clearly stated goal of attacking
America. They have succeeded against our friends in London, Madrid, Bali,
Amman, Istanbul and elsewhere. They desperately want to succeed against us.

The 9/11 commission told us -- and I'm quoting them now -- "Bin Laden, and
Islamist terrorists mean exactly what they say. To them, America is the
fount of all evil, the head of the snake, and it must be converted or
destroyed." Bin Laden reminded us of this intention as recently as last
Thursday.

The people at NSA, and the rest of the intelligence community, are committed
to defend us against this evil and to do it in a way consistent with our
values. We know that we can only do our job if we have the trust of the
American people, and we can only have your trust if we are careful about how
we use our tools and our resources. That sense of care is part of the fabric
of the community I represent. It helps define who we are.

I recently went out to Fort Meade to talk to the workforce involved in this
program. They know what they have contributed, and they know the care with
which it has been done. Even in today's heated environment, the only concern
they expressed to me was continuing their work in the defense of the nation,
and continuing to do so in a manner that honors the law and the
Constitution. As I was talking with them -- we were in the office spaces
there, typical office spaces anywhere in the world -- I looked out over
their heads -- and this is the workforce that deals with the program the
president discussed several weeks ago -- I looked out over their heads to
see a large sign fixed to one of those pillars that go up through our
operations building that breaks up the office space. That sign is visible
from almost anywhere in this large area. It's yellow with bold black letters
on it. The title is readable from 50 feet: What constitutes a U.S. person?
And that title was followed by a detailed explanation of the criteria. That
has always been the fundamental tenet of privacy for NSA. And here it was in
the center of a room guiding the actions of a workforce determined to
prevent another attack on the United States. Security and liberty. The
people at NSA know what their job is. I know what my job is too. I learned a
lot from NSA and its culture during my six years there. But I come from a
culture too. I've been a military officer for nearly 37 years, and from the
start, I've taken an oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the
United States. I would never violate that Constitution nor would I abuse the
rights of the American people. As the director, I was the one responsible to
ensure that this program was limited in its scope and disciplined in its
application.

American intelligence, and especially American SIGINT, signals intelligence,
is the frontline of defense in dramatically changed circumstances,
circumstances in which if we fail to do our job well and completely, more
Americans will almost certainly die. The speed of operations, the
ruthlessness of the enemy, the pace of modern communications have called on
us to do things and to do them in ways never before required. We've worked
hard to find innovative ways to protect the American people and the
liberties we hold dear. And in doing so, we have not forgotten who we are
either.

Thank you. I'll be happy to take your questions.

MR. HILL: We have microphones on either end of the room, so if you can go to
a microphone, and then choose people from there.

All right, we will start with you.

QUESTION: Yes, Wayne Madsen, syndicated columnist. General, how do you
explain the fact that there were several rare spectacles of whistleblowers
coming forward at NSA, especially after 9/11, something that hasn't really
happened in the past, who have complained about violations of FISA and
United States Signals Intelligence Directive 18, which implements the law at
the agency?

GEN. HAYDEN: I talked to the NSA staff on Friday. The NSA inspector general
reports to me, as of last Friday, from the inception of this program through
last Friday night, not a single employee of the National Security Agency has
addressed a concern about this program to the NSA IG. I should also add that
no member of the NSA workforce who has been asked to be included in this
program has responded to that request with anything except enthusiasm. I
don't know what you're talking about.

QUESTION: General Hayden, the FISA law says that the NSA can do intercepts
as long as you go to the court within 72 hours to get a warrant.

I understood you to say that you are aggressively using FISA but selectively
doing so. Why are you not able to go to FISA as the law requires in all
cases? And if the law is outdated, why haven't you asked Congress to update
it?

GEN. HAYDEN: Lots of questions contained there. Let me try them one at a
time.

First of all, I need to get a statement of fact out here, all right? NSA
cannot -- under the FISA statute, NSA cannot put someone on coverage and go
ahead and play for 72 hours while it gets a note saying it was okay. All
right? The attorney general is the one who approves emergency FISA coverage,
and the attorney general's standard for approving FISA coverage is a body of
evidence equal to that which he would present to the court. So it's not like
you can throw it on for 72 hours.

I've talked in other circumstances -- I've talked this morning -- about how
we've made very aggressive use of FISA. If you look at NSA reporting under
this program -- you know, without giving you the X or Y axis on the graph --
NSA reporting under this program has been substantial but consistent. This
is NSA counterterrorism reporting. Substantial but consistent. NSA reporting
under FISA has gone like that. FISA has been a remarkably successful tool.
We use it very aggressively.

In the instances where this program applies, FISA does not give us the
operational effect that the authorities that the president has given us give
us. Look. I can't -- and I understand it's going to be an incomplete answer,
and I can't give you all the fine print as to why, but let me just kind of
reverse the answer just a bit. If FISA worked just as well, why wouldn't I
use FISA? To save typing? No. There is an operational impact here, and I
have two paths in front of me, both of them lawful, one FISA, one the
presidential -- the president's authorization. And we go down this path
because our operational judgment is it is much more effective. So we do it
for that reason. I think I've got -- I think I've covered all the ones you
raised.

QUESTION: Quick follow-up. Are you saying that the sheer volume of
warrantless eavesdropping has made FISA inoperative?

GEN. HAYDEN: No. I'm saying that the characteristics we need to do what this
program's designed to do -- to detect and prevent -- make FISA a less useful
tool. It's a wonderful tool, it's done wonderful things for the nation in
terms of fighting the war on terror, but in this particular challenge, this
particular aspect -- detect and prevent attacks -- what we're doing now is
operationally more relevant, operationally more effective.

QUESTION: Sam Husseini from IPA Media. You just now spoke of, quote, "two
paths," but of course the FISA statute itself says that it will be the
exclusive means by which electronic surveillance may be pursued. Are you
not, therefore, violating the law?

GEN. HAYDEN: That's probably a question I should deflect to the Department
of Justice, but as I said in my comments, I have an order whose lawfulness
has been attested to by the attorney general, an order whose lawfulness has
been attested to by NSA lawyers who do this for a living. No, we're not
violating the law.

QUESTION: You cited before the congressional powers of the president.

Are you -- are you asserting inherent so-called constitutional powers that a
-- to use the term that came up in the Alito hearings -- "a unitary
executive" has to violate the law when he deems fit?

GEN. HAYDEN: I'm not asserting anything. I'm asserting that NSA is doing its
job.

QUESTION: General, first, thank you for your comments. And I think you
somewhat answered this in your response, and this goes to the culture and
just to the average American. Let me just say this -- that domestic spying
and the faith communities are outraged. Churches in Iowa, churches in
Nebraska, mosques across the board are just outraged by the fact that our
country could be spying on us. You made a point that the young lady at State
Penn shouldn't have to worry, but we're worried that our country has begun
to spy on us. We understand the need for terrorism and the need to deal with
that, but what assurances -- and how can you answer this question, what can
make Americans feel safe? How can the faith community feel safe that their
country is not spying on them for any reason?

GEN. HAYDEN: Reverend, thanks for the question, and I'm part of the faith
community too. And I've laid it out as well I could in my remarks here as to
how limited and focused this program is, what its purpose is, that its been
productive. We are not out there -- and again, let me use a phrase I used in
the comments -- this isn't a drift net out there where we're soaking up
everyone's communications. We are going after very specific communications
that our professional judgment tells us we have reason to believe are those
associated with people who want to kill Americans. That's what we're doing.

And I realize the challenge the we have. I mentioned earlier the existential
issue that NSA has well before this program, that it's got to be powerful if
it's going to protect us, and it's also got to be secretive if it's going to
protect us. And that creates a tremendous dilemma. I understand that.

I'm disappointed I guess that perhaps the default response for some is to
assume the worst. I'm trying to communicate to you that the people who are
doing this, okay, go shopping in Glen Burnie and their kids play soccer in
Laurel, and they know the law. They know American privacy better than the
average American, and they're dedicated to it. So I guess the message I'd
ask you to take back to your communities is the same one I take back to
mine. This is focused. It's targeted. It's very carefully done. You
shouldn't worry.

QUESTION: Just know, General, that the faith communities will take that
back, but the faith communities are scared. Where does this stop?

QUESTION: Justine Redman with CNN. How was national security harmed by The
New York Times reporting on this program? Don't the bad guys already assume 
that they're being monitored anyway, and shouldn't Americans, you know, bear 
in mind that they might be at any time?

GEN. HAYDEN: You know, we've had this question asked several times. Public 
discussion of how we determine al Qaeda intentions, I just -- I can't see 
how that can do anything but harm the security of the nation. And I know 
people say, "Oh, they know they're being monitored." Well, you know, they 
don't always act like they know they're being monitored. But if you want to 
shove it in their face constantly, it's bound to have an impact.

And so to -- I understand, as the Reverend's question just raised, you know, 
there are issues here that the American people are deeply concerned with. 
But constant revelations and speculation and connecting the dots in ways 
that I find unimaginable, and laying that out there for our enemy to see 
cannot help but diminish our ability to detect and prevent attacks.

QUESTION: My name is Travis Morales. And we've read numerous reports in the 
Times and other papers about massive spying by the NSA on millions of 
people, along with reports of rendition, torture, et cetera. And I attended 
Congressman Conyers' hearings on Friday where a gentleman came from South 
Florida talking about military intelligence went and infiltrated his Quaker 
peace group, and that this -- they later saw the documents detailing that.

And my question -- I guess I have two questions for you. One is, as a 
participant in a group called, "The World Can't Wait: Drive Out the Bush 
Regime," which is organizing for people to drown out Bush's lies during the 
State of the Union, and to gather on February 4th demanding that Bush step 
down, my question is this: Are you or the NSA -- and when I say you, I mean 
the NSA in its entirety -- is it intercepting our e-mail communications, 
listening to our telephone conversations, et cetera? Because as Bush has 
said, you're either against us or you're with us, and they have asserted 
that whatever the president wants to do in time of war, whether it's holding 
people without charges or writing memos justifying torture, they can do 
that.

My second question is this -- related to that. I publicly challenge you and 
the NSA to an open debate, a public open debate that people can gather and 
listen to your responses, a debate on this warrantless wiretapping and 
spying on millions of people that have gone on across this country, because 
as the Reverend said, millions and millions of people are outraged. That is 
why people are talking impeachment, that is why people are demanding that 
Bush step down, because of this massive spying, the torture, the rendition, 
and everything else. So I challenge you to a public and open debate on these 
questions.

GEN. HAYDEN: What was the question?

(Laughter.)

QUESTION: Will you openly and publicly debate us -- myself -- in a forum 
that's open to the public, not restricted, on the NSA spying scandal and 
defend what has been said, and respond to the numerous reports about the NSA 
spying on millions of people? That is one question. And the second question 
is: Are you spying on or intercepting our communications, e-mails and 
telephone conversations of those of us who are organizing The World Can't 
Wait to Drive Out the Bush Regime?

GEN. HAYDEN: You know, I tried to make this as clear as I could in prepared 
remarks. I said this isn't a drift net, all right? I said we're not there 
sucking up coms and then using some of these magically alleged keyword 
searches -- "Did he say 'jihad'? Let's get --" I mean, that is not -- do you 
know how much time Americans spend on the phone in international calls 
alone, okay? In 2003, our citizenry was on the phone in international calls 
alone for 200 billion minutes, okay? I mean, beyond the ethical 
considerations involved here, there are some practical considerations about 
being a drift net. This is targeted, this is focused. This is about al 
Qaeda.

The other request about a public debate -- as I mentioned at the beginning 
of my prepared remarks, this is a somewhat uncomfortable position for 
someone in my profession to be in, laying out details of the program. One 
way of describing what you have invited me to would be, "Why don't you come 
out and tell the world how you're catching al Qaeda?" And I can't do that. 
That would be professionally irresponsible.

QUESTION: No, I asked, are you targeting us and people who politically 
oppose the Bush government, the Bush administration? Not a fishing net, but 
are you targeting specifically political opponents of the Bush 
administration? Because as Vice President Gore recently said, "It is much 
worse than people realize."

QUESTION: Good morning, General Hayden. Katie Shrader with the Associated 
Press.

GEN. HAYDEN: Hi, Katie.

QUESTION: Two questions in two areas for you.

One, can you describe a little further who the targets of these collection 
are? Are you looking at individuals or are you looking at phone numbers, 
websites, e-mail addresses?

And then separately, you described two separate programs authorized after 
9/11 -- or undertaken after 9/11 -- one by you, one by President Bush. Can 
you explain how the two relate?

GEN. HAYDEN: Sure. Thanks for the -- I'm sorry, how the two relate?

QUESTION: How the two relate.

GEN. HAYDEN: Yeah, thanks.

To kind of summarize, Katie, about the program -- about the changes I did -- 
I mean, that was essentially just downshifting. I mean, it was shifting the 
weight of the agency in the direction of targets that were suddenly more 
important. And the degree of reporting we were doing on those targets 
changed -- again, all within my authorities. The relationship between what I 
did and what I briefed the entire House Select Committee on Intelligence on 
the 1st of October -- the relationship between that and what the president 
was authorized was simply that it involved NSA and it involved the war on 
terrorism. But that's the only connective tissue.

Oh, your first question. Are these individuals, are these phone numbers, are 
these e-mail accounts and so on? Hard for me to get into the specifics. I 
would just say that what it is we do is that we use our art form -- we use 
our science and our art to -- as best as we can, okay? -- specifically 
target communications we have reason to believe are associated with al 
Qaeda, and we use all of the tools, Katie, available to us to do that.

QUESTION: So you can't be any more specific than as to whether it's focused 
on individuals or phone numbers?

GEN. HAYDEN: I would love to, but I can't.

QUESTION: Okay.

QUESTION: James Rosen, McClatchy Newspapers.

General, you said that if this program had been in place before 9/11, you 
were pretty confident that you would have detected at least some of the 
hijackers' presence in the United States, maybe stopped the attack. If 
that's the case, why is this limited to communications where one person is 
overseas? Isn't it even more urgent if you've got communications within the 
United States between two people who might have al Qaeda links, and why 
aren't you pursuing that?

And a second, sort of linked, question is, on the 72 hours, if what you said 
is true, if I understood it, then I and, I think, a lot of other reporters 
have been misreporting this. Can you explain, on the 72 hours -- (inaudible) 
-- because you said it's not true, but you didn't explain why it's not true.

GEN. HAYDEN: I'm sorry. To be very clear. We throw the language out and we 
all maybe lose precision as we do it. NSA just can't go up on a number for 
72 hours while it finishes out the paperwork. The attorney general is the 
only one who can authorize what's called an emergency FISA. That's what 
we're talking about there, all right? So it's not -- my point was, that's 
not something that NSA under the FISA act can do on its own.

The first question was? I'm sorry.

QUESTION: Well, just a quick follow-up on that. I mean, can it be as quick 
as you call the attorney general, or the NSA director calls the attorney 
general, says, "We got to go up now," and he says, "Okay, fill out the 
paperwork"?

GEN. HAYDEN: The standard the attorney general must have is that he has 
sufficient evidence in front of him that he believes he can substantiate 
that in front of the FISA court.

QUESTION: Okay, and then --

GEN. HAYDEN: And the first question?

QUESTION: Okay, the first question was regarding potentially having been 
able to --

GEN. HAYDEN: Oh. Oh, yeah. I'm sorry. Yeah.

QUESTION: Why isn't it even more urgent to monitor communications of two al 
Qaeda folks within the United States?

GEN. HAYDEN: Okay. Primarily because NSA is a foreign intelligence agency, 
and this is about -- what we've talked about here today is about foreign 
intelligence. It's also about, as I tried to suggest in my comments, a 
balancing between security and liberty. And in one of the decisions that had 
been made collectively -- certainly I personally support it -- it's that one 
way we have balanced this is that we are talking about international 
communications. So it not only plays to the strength of NSA, it's an attempt 
to balance the consistent, continuing, legitimate questions of security and 
liberty. If we were to be drilled down on a specific individual to the 
degree that the judgment was we need all comms, we need domestic to 
domestic, that's the route we go through the FISA court in order to do that.

QUESTION: Thank you.

QUESTION: General, John Diamond, USA Today. Two questions, if I could. One, 
I wanted to, following up on what Katie was saying, wanted to try to make 
sure I understand something. I thought I heard you to say that the 
surveillance domestically going on under FISA has been expanding rapidly. 
That's publicly reported. At least the numbers.

GEN. HAYDEN: Right.

QUESTION: And that the quantity of the surveillance under the Presidentially 
approved program has been about a steady state. I thought I understood you 
to be suggesting that the former was numerically greater, quantitatively a 
much greater surveillance program than the Presidentially authorized one.

GEN. HAYDEN: Sorry, John. And thank you for allowing me to clarify this, all 
right? What I was talking about was effect, was product, was result. All 
right? And the presidential authorization has been a steady producer. All 
right? The point I wanted to make was, as we have moved forward on the war 
on terrorism, FISA has been increasingly effective in terms of results.

QUESTION: And then a different kind of question now on the congressional 
consultation issue. There are many things, it seems to me, that presidents 
can assert they can do without congressional approval; nevertheless, they 
seek congressional approval.

There are presidents who have consistently argued that the War Powers Act 
does not apply; that they have the power to send troops into action, et 
cetera.

GEN. HAYDEN: Right. Right. Right.

QUESTION: And yet, it's felt that for the sense of national unity, the 
correct thing to do is to go to Congress and get approval.

GEN. HAYDEN: Right.

QUESTION: You've laid out an argument today -- the urgency of the situation, 
the reasonableness, the numerous lawyers who have approved this -- would 
suggest strongly that had it been presented to Congress, Congress would have 
approved it, would have agreed with the reasonableness of it. And there's a 
suggestion that by not going to Congress, except to merely inform a very 
limited number of members, the unspoken message was: We don't feel we could 
have gotten the approval. The other potential message is that the secret 
would have leaked out, which seems to be a disturbing message, if that's 
what you're saying, that the committee, the oversight committee, the 
intelligence oversight committee can't keep a secret.

Sorry for the long-winded --

GEN. HAYDEN: Yeah, let me take a run, though.

We did brief Congress, John, as you know. It's been announced more than a 
dozen times. I've been the briefer. Every time that's happened, I've been 
there. And my intent there, in ways less restricted than I've had to operate 
here, was to make sure that the people in the room fully understood what had 
been authorized and what we have been doing.

One additional aspect that I would suggest to you I think is very important, 
is that -- and I will take no view on the, you know, political step of going 
to the Congress for an amendment of the FISA Act, and so on, and so forth. 
But I will offer you an operational point, and the operational point is 
this; if we had done that, if we will do that, if we were to do that, I 
would hope we would do it in such a way that the legitimate debate and 
legitimate discussions of that step do not betray to the enemy the tactics, 
techniques and procedures that we are now using to detect them.

QUESTION: Hi, General. I'm Leigh Ann Caldwell with Pacifica Radio. You said 
that you used your top counsel in the planning process to tell you if this 
was legal and appropriate back in 2001. What exactly did your counsel tell 
you that it was within guidelines and within the law, constitutional law?

GEN. HAYDEN: I think my counsel, if he were here, would be whispering 
something about privileged lawyer-client language.

I can tell you in general, all right? And we talked about this in a bit more 
detail. They came back rather emphatically -- I did it to three, and I did 
it to three separately and serially so it wasn't a group answer. And all 
three came back saying that they believed this was lawful; that it was a 
lawful order that had been authorized by the president, that it was within 
his authorities to authorize this activity.

QUESTION: Well, a follow-up. There's been lawsuits saying that it violates 
the First and the Fourth Amendment. And wasn't that before the Patriot Act 
was expanded to give the President more powers -- or was passed to give the 
President more expanded powers?

GEN. HAYDEN: I honestly don't know. I'm not sure of the sequencing.

QUESTION: Okay. But you can't say what laws --

GEN. HAYDEN: The arguments that they use?

QUESTION: Yeah.

GEN. HAYDEN: No, they don't -- these guys are expert on the FISA Act. 
They're expert on something called USSID 18, which is kind of our library of 
instructions of how to conduct SIGINT and protect privacy. They're also 
really expert on the Constitution, and they're really expert on the Fourth 
Amendment. And so when I talked to them, I mean, I said there was an air of 
sufficiency with what I'd been given, but this was personal, and these are 
men that I had worked with. These are men who had said, no, you can't do 
that; no, we advise against doing that. In previous events, you know, the 
proceeding two-and-a-half-three years, I had been director, and so you know, 
they weren't freebies. They just didn't hand out hall passes for anything 
that might have been operationally effective or some things the agency might 
have wanted to do. They were hard. They were tough.

And so on a personal basis to me, when the three of them came back and said 
it's good to go, it meant a lot to me, and it meant a lot to the agency too, 
because as I said, the agency had to implement this, and the agency does 
everything -- everything -- with a lawyer looking over their shoulder. We 
know -- we know what this is. This is electronic surveillance for a foreign 
intelligence purpose. We know what the Constitution says, and so it's done 
very, very carefully. And I was very heartened that I got that response from 
the senior legal team we have.

QUESTION: And was it necessary to get any more info from the DOJ, or was it 
-- was your legal counsel all that you needed?

GEN. HAYDEN: I had -- this was personal. This was after -- or simultaneous 
with DOJ and White House averring to the lawfulness of the program.

QUESTION: Okay. Thank you.

QUESTION: Yes, General. Muso Slayman with Al Mustaf Balarabi. Does NSA now, 
currently, listen to conversation from overseas to U.S. citizen traveling 
abroad or diplomats that stationed abroad? The other question -- I want to 
quote you -- you said, you listen to individual or to the calls "that we 
believe associated with al Qaeda," and you mentioned the issue of focus many 
times. Now, how you reach the level of believing? I mean, give us just an 
indication without divulging any secrets here how it's determined, because 
in the Arab and Muslim community -- Arab American and Muslim American in 
United States -- bin Laden was not able to recruit any one of them, but they 
feel that they are being profiled, under threat, under constant harassment, 
et cetera, et cetera. So is it open season on the Arab American and Muslim 
American in United States that any conversation, that it is believed to be 
associated with al Qaeda?

GEN. HAYDEN: Thank you very much for asking that question. That gives me an 
opportunity. That's why I was almost -- so emphatic in my prepared remarks 
about this not being a drift net over parts of the United States, and then 
we sort through by key words or some other things.

This is not this at all. If we are intercepting a communication, it is 
because we have reason to believe that one or both communicants are 
affiliated with al Qaeda. That's our criteria.

QUESTION: Why they are not already in jail, General?

GEN. HAYDEN: Well, in some cases the communicant affiliated with al Qaeda is 
not in the United States.

Now, you asked earlier about the -- how confident are you. This is both art 
and science. We use every tool available to us. We have the best people at 
the National Security Agency and the best technology of the National 
Security Agency on this effort. You know, I don't want to be overly dramatic 
here, I really don't. We use signals intelligence for a lot of things. We 
use signals intelligence to support America's armed forces. The tools and 
techniques and tactics and procedures we use to determine "Is this an al 
Qaeda communication?" are the same tools, techniques, tactics and procedures 
we use to tell America's armed forces that you can go ahead and put a 
500-pound bomb on that target. It's the same art and science. So this is not 
done -- what I'm saying is, this is not done idly.

QUESTION: Okay, just the first part of my question --

MR. HILL: Excuse me --

QUESTION: I'm not -- yeah, I'm following it up. The first part of my 
question.

MR. HILL: Okay, I have to cut you off here.

We have time for two more questions. And if you can keep them fairly brief, 
we'd appreciate it.

First you, then the gentleman in the red.

QUESTION: Yeah, but --

MR. HILL: I'm sorry.

QUESTION: The first question that I asked --

MR. HILL: Excuse me. I'm sorry --

QUESTION: -- about U.S. citizen abroad.

MR. HILL: All right. Go ahead.

GEN. HAYDEN: I'm sorry, I didn't -- I apologize, I didn't understand the 
question, the first question. I'm sorry.

QUESTION: Jim Bamford. Good seeing you here in the Press Club, General,

GEN. HAYDEN: Hey, Jim.

QUESTION: Hope we see more of you here.

Just to clarify sort of what's been said, from what I've heard you say today 
and an earlier press conference, the change from going around the FISA law 
was to -- one of them was to lower the standard from what they call for, 
which is basically probable cause to a reasonable basis; and then to take it 
away from a federal court judge, the FISA court judge, and hand it over to a 
shift supervisor at NSA. Is that what we're talking about here -- just for 
clarification?

GEN. HAYDEN: You got most of it right. The people who make the judgment, and 
the one you just referred to, there are only a handful of people at NSA who 
can make that decision. They're all senior executives, they are all 
counterterrorism and al Qaeda experts. So I -- even though I -- you're 
actually quoting me back, Jim, saying, "shift supervisor." To be more 
precise in what you just described, the person who makes that decision, a 
very small handful, senior executive. So in military terms, a senior colonel 
or general officer equivalent; and in professional terms, the people who 
know more about this than anyone else.

QUESTION: Well, no, that wasn't the real question. The question I was 
asking, though, was since you lowered the standard, doesn't that decrease 
the protections of the U.S. citizens? And number two, if you could give us 
some idea of the genesis of this. Did you come up with the idea? Did 
somebody in the White House come up with the idea? Where did the idea 
originate from?

Thank you.

GEN. HAYDEN: Let me just take the first one, Jim. And I'm not going to talk 
about the process by which the president arrived at his decision.

I think you've accurately described the criteria under which this operates, 
and I think I at least tried to accurately describe a changed circumstance, 
threat to the nation, and why this approach -- limited, focused -- has been 
effective.

MR. HILL: Final question.

QUESTION: Jonathan Landay with Knight Ridder. I'd like to stay on the same 
issue, and that had to do with the standard by which you use to target your 
wiretaps. I'm no lawyer, but my understanding is that the Fourth Amendment 
of the Constitution specifies that you must have probable cause to be able 
to do a search that does not violate an American's right against unlawful 
searches and seizures. Do you use --

GEN. HAYDEN: No, actually -- the Fourth Amendment actually protects all of 
us against unreasonable search and seizure.

QUESTION: But the --

GEN. HAYDEN: That's what it says.

QUESTION: But the measure is probable cause, I believe.

GEN. HAYDEN: The amendment says unreasonable search and seizure.

QUESTION: But does it not say probable --

GEN. HAYDEN: No. The amendment says --

QUESTION: The court standard, the legal standard --

GEN. HAYDEN: -- unreasonable search and seizure.

QUESTION: The legal standard is probable cause, General. You used the terms 
just a few minutes ago, "We reasonably believe." And a FISA court, my 
understanding is, would not give you a warrant if you went before them and 
say "we reasonably believe"; you have to go to the FISA court, or the 
attorney general has to go to the FISA court and say, "we have probable 
cause." And so what many people believe -- and I'd like you to respond to 
this -- is that what you've actually done is crafted a detour around the 
FISA court by creating a new standard of "reasonably believe" in place in 
probable cause because the FISA court will not give you a warrant based on 
reasonable belief, you have to show probable cause. Could you respond to 
that, please?

GEN. HAYDEN: Sure. I didn't craft the authorization. I am responding to a 
lawful order. All right? The attorney general has averred to the lawfulness 
of the order.

Just to be very clear -- and believe me, if there's any amendment to the 
Constitution that employees of the National Security Agency are familiar 
with, it's the Fourth. And it is a reasonableness standard in the Fourth 
Amendment. And so what you've raised to me -- and I'm not a lawyer, and 
don't want to become one -- what you've raised to me is, in terms of quoting 
the Fourth Amendment, is an issue of the Constitution. The constitutional 
standard is "reasonable." And we believe -- I am convinced that we are 
lawful because what it is we're doing is reasonable.

QUESTION: (Off mike.)

MR. HILL: I'm sorry.

Thank you very much, General Hayden.

And with that, this proceeding is over. Thank you.

[END.]




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