Domestic Defense
Could proposed new intelligence-gathering powers for the Pentagon lead to
spying on U.S. citizens? The question is being asked as the White House
considers new roles for the military inside America's borders.
WEB EXCLUSIVE
By Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball
Newsweek
Updated: 7:02 p.m. ET Oct. 5, 2005
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9602401/site/newsweek/

Oct. 5, 2005 - The Pentagon would be granted new powers to conduct
undercover intelligence gathering inside the United States‹and then withhold
any information about it from the public‹under a series of little noticed
provisions now winding their way through Congress.

Citing in part the need for ³greater latitude² in the war on terror, the
Senate Intelligence Committee recently approved broad-ranging legislation
that gives the Defense Department a long sought and potentially crucial
waiver: it would permit its intelligence agents, such as those working for
the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), to covertly approach and cultivate
³U.S. persons² and even recruit them as informants‹without disclosing they
are doing so on behalf of the U.S. government. The Senate committee¹s action
comes as President George W. Bush has talked of expanding military
involvement in civil affairs, such as efforts to control pandemic disease
outbreaks.

The provision was included in last year¹s version of the same bill, but was
knocked out after its details were reported by NEWSWEEK and critics charged
it could lead to ³spying² on U.S. citizens. But late last month, with no
public hearings or debate, a similar amendment was put back into the same
authorization bill‹an annual measure governing U.S. intelligence agencies‹at
the request of the Pentagon. A copy of the 104-page committee bill, which
has yet to be voted on by the full Senate, did not become public until last
week. 

At the same time, the Senate intelligence panel also included in the bill
two other potentially controversial amendments‹one that would allow the
Pentagon and other U.S. intelligence agencies greater access to federal
government databases on U.S. citizens, and another granting the DIA new
exemptions from disclosing any ³operational files² under the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA). ³What they are doing is expanding the Defense
Department¹s domestic intelligence activities in secret‹with no public
discussion,² said Kate Martin, director of the Center for National Security
Studies, a civil-liberties group that is often critical of government
actions in the fight against terrorism.

But Don Black, a DIA spokesman, said Wednesday that the new provisions were
limited in scope and would only give the DIA the same investigative powers
as the FBI and CIA‹powers that are crucial to the agency¹s expanded mission
in tracking the terrorist threat. ³We¹re not trying to do investigations of
people inside the United States,² he said. ³What we¹re trying to do is
follow leads about terrorist activities.²

The proposed new powers governing the Pentagon¹s intelligence operations
comes at a time when there is already internal debate within Washington over
proposals to expand domestic Defense Department activities‹in part because
of the outcry over the botched response by other U.S. government agencies to
the Hurricane Katrina disaster. President Bush ratcheted the debate up
Tuesday during his press conference when he suggested for the first time
that the U.S. military might be used to quarantine members of the public in
the event of an outbreak of the avian flu. ³And who best to be able to
effect a quarantine?² Bush asked during his press conference. ³One option is
the use of a military that¹s able to plan and move. And so that¹s why I put
it on the table.²

But the move to expand Pentagon intelligence activities inside the United
States carries special resonance‹in part because of embarrassing disclosures
about the U.S. military engaging in domestic spying during the 1960s and
1970s. Revelations that the U.S. military had penetrated and spied on
antiwar protestors led to tight new restrictions imposed by Congress. One of
the chief restrictions is a legal requirement that the DIA or any other
Defense Department intelligence agency conform to the provisions of the
Privacy Act, a Watergate-era law that requires government officials seeking
information from a U.S. resident to disclose who they are and what they want
the information for.

Ever since the September 11 terror attacks, which gave the Pentagon expanded
new counterterrorism authority, DIA officials have maintained that this
restriction (which does not apply to the FBI or the CIA) has severely
hampered its ability to approach U.S. residents and recruit them as
informants. Many of the agency¹s potential targets are members of ethnic
communities inside the United States‹such as Pakistanis or Arabs with close
relatives in the Middle East. Such persons may often travel overseas, either
for business, family or educational reasons and may have contacts with
friends or relatives who have been tied to terrorist groups or hostile
foreign government officials‹making them tempting targets for recruitment as
DIA informants, the agency argues.

DIA officials also say the provision approved by the Senate Intelligence
Committee has important protections against abuses: any approaches to U.S.
residents must be specifically approved by the director of DIA, coordinated
with the FBI and could not be used to gather information about the ³domestic
activities of any United States person.² One senior DIA official, who asked
not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter, said the
agency only contemplates using the provision in a limited number of cases
where the potential foreign intelligence information is ³significant.²

³This isn¹t for run-of-the-mill stuff,² said the senior DIA official. ³We¹ve
tried to write in these protections so this will be used only in limited
circumstances where we can¹t do it any other way.²

But Martin, the civil-liberties advocate, said the DIA recruitment provision
must be looked at in the context of two other measures tucked into the
Senate intelligence authorization bill. One of them specifically grants the
DIA a blanket exemption from having to search any of its ³operational files²
when it receives a FOIA request. There is already such a FOIA exemption for
CIA operational files. But Martin contended that some of the DIA¹s
activities that are currently not covert would be covered by the new
exemption, thereby extending a greater cone of secrecy around the agency.
(The senior DIA official said the agency was ³wasting time, energy and
manpower² conducting FOIA requests for agency files that, at the end of the
day, don¹t get released anyway because they involve classified information.)

Another little-noticed provision of the bill would create a four-year pilot
program that would allow U.S. intelligence agencies to have access to data
collected about U.S. residents by other government agencies and covered by
the Privacy Act. The FBI can already obtain many such records‹such as pilot
licenses or Transportation Department licenses for driving hazardous-waste
materials or other government permits and applications‹for law-enforcement
purposes. The new Senate intelligence provision would allow U.S.
intelligence agencies, such as the CIA and the DIA, or "parent" agencies
such as the Pentagon itself, to collect such information deemed by the
agency director to be useful in intelligence gathering related to
international terrorism or weapons of mass destruction. No court order would
be required for the information to be shared.

Hurricane, Flu Outbreak Defense
The notion that the military should play a greater role in other civil
matters‹by quarantining part of the country affected by an
infectious-disease outbreak, for example‹was raised by President Bush
himself in a White House news conference Tuesday. A questioner pointed out
to the president that Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt had
said that emergency services and local governments were not prepared to
handle such an outbreak. The questioner asked whether, in light of the
government¹s recent problems responding to hurricanes, this was why Bush was
considering using ³defense assets² to respond to a deadly flu epidemic.

Bush said an avian flu outbreak would present him with ³difficult²
decisions, including whether or not to quarantine affected parts of the
country. Bush said he put "on the table" the option of using the military so
Congress could examine such a proposal. "Congress needs to take a look at
circumstances that may need to vest the capacity of the president [to
respond to that kind of catastrophe].²

Dr. Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster
Preparedness at Columbia University¹s Mailman School of Public Health, says
that the military has almost certainly had contingency plans for years for
dealing with pandemics but that to his recollection such plans had not been
publicly discussed by presidents or other top government officials. Redlener
says that the clumsy response of government agencies at all levels to recent
hurricanes has bolstered his belief that in the case of major catastrophes
it might be appropriate to get the military involved in a substantial way at
an early stage because of its capabilities to move men and materiel to a
disaster scene in a rapid and orderly fashion.

However, Redlener gives several reasons why it would be ³unworkable² to use
the military to try to limit the spread of a pandemic such as avian flu. For
a start, he says, such a pathogen spreads rapidly and it would be difficult
if not impossible to contain it to a particular geographical area. Moreover,
the use of the military to enforce such a quarantine would, in Redlener¹s
view, smack of martial law and set up potentially violent confrontations
between armed troops trying to enforce a quarantine and U.S. citizens used
to moving freely around the country. Such deployment of the military would
³cause extraordinary disruption from the societal point of view² with
³highly unpredictable² consequences, he said.
© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.

© 2005 MSNBC.com

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9602401/site/newsweek/



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