http://www.townhall.com/Common/Print.aspx
 
'John Doe' Telecoms
By Frank J. Gaffney, Jr.
Tuesday, February 19, 2008



We interrupt this congressional recess to bring you an announcement: While
the House of Representatives is vacationing this week, terrorists are
probably communicating about plots to kill Americans without fear that their
plans will be intercepted by U.S. intelligence. 


If one or more of those mortal plots are, as a result, successfully
executed, we won't need an independent 9/11-style commission to assign
blame. The buck will stop squarely at the desk of Speaker Nancy Pelosi who
refused to allow a vote on a permanent renewal of the Protect America Act
(PAA). 


That legislation provides, in effect, authority for the Commander-in-Chief
to monitor our adversaries' battlefield communications - something
successive Presidents have routinely done since the founding of the
republic. Unfortunately, in the current, ongoing War for the Free World, the
battlefield is global and the enemy's signals are conveyed by a bewildering
array of media not anticipated back in 1978 when Congress first imposed
significant, but relatively modest restrictions on how and when American
signals intercepts could take place. 


To be clear, I believe such authority is inherent in the President's powers
under our Constitution. Unfortunately, a federal court found otherwise last
year. This led first to a mad scramble to enact the Protect America Act in
Fall 2007 and then, as that temporary, six-month legislation was ready to
expire last weekend, to a continuing test of wills between the Democratic
House leadership and President Bush. Incredibly, the House left town without
scheduling a vote to reenact the PAA on a permanent basis. 


Prominent among the stated justifications for this dereliction of duty by
the House of Representatives is the fact that the Senate version of the
reenactment of the PAA - which was passed recently with broad bipartisan
support - included a provision anathema to the lower chamber's Democratic
leadership: It offered immunity from litigation for private
telecommunications companies whose help in collecting signals intelligence
was indispensable in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. 


Sadly, this dereliction is not an isolated incident. In 2007, the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) - an organization identified by the
Justice Department as a Muslim Brotherhood front organization and an
un-indicted co-conspirator in a terrorism financing case - threatened to sue
several individuals identified to date only as "John Does." These Americans
responded, as did the telecoms, to a request for help by their government.
They reported worrisome and provocative behavior on the part of a group of
"Flying Imams" prior to a flight from Minneapolis to Arizona in 2006. 


Congress and the public reacted vociferously when word got out concerning
CAIR's threats to those who fulfilled the oft-stated request by
law-enforcement agencies across America to the effect that, "If you see
something, say something." Within days, it became clear that substantial
majorities in both the House and Senate favored relief for the John Does. 


Then as now, though, Nancy Pelosi and other, like-minded House leaders used
their positions to try to prevent enactment of the needed legislation. In
the case of the John Does, however, the outcry to protect the country and
those who heed official appeals for help toward that end became simply
irresistible. At the instigation of Reps. Peter King and Pete Hoekstra and
Sens. Joe Lieberman and Jon Kyl, the obstructionists were forced to allow a
vote that overwhelmingly repudiated the nay-sayers. 


Speaker Pelosi has evidently learned nothing in the intervening months about
either the national security implications or the politics of obstructionism
in the service of trial lawyers and at the expense of the common defense.
All other things being equal, it seems likely that she will be rolled once
again when Congress reconvenes in another week. 


After all, as the Director of National Intelligence, Vice Admiral Mike
McConnell observed on the Fox Sunday Morning program last weekend: "We
cannot do this mission without help and support from the private
sector..[I]f you think about the private sector global communications, many
people think the government operates that. Ninety-eight percent of it is
owned and operated by the private sector." Therefore, cooperation of the
telecoms with U.S. intelligence is not simply nice to have; it is essential.



The problem is that, even if Mrs. Pelosi is forced to relent relatively
soon, our intelligence agencies' "situational awareness" of terrorist
activities may suffer lasting harm. As Andrew McCarthy, one of the
prosecutors in the trials regarding the first attack on the World Trade
Center in 1993, put it in a recent blog posting at National Review Online: 


".Every day we don't fix this problem, the problem - the investigative leads
you don't get, the connections you don't make, the things you don't learn
but which you should know - metastasizes. Intelligence is dynamic: you can't
stop collecting for a day, a week, a month or more and then figure you are
picking up right where you left off. What you have lost tends to stay lost."



America can ill afford in time of war for the House Speaker to play games
with legislation designed to ensure that patriots - be they individual John
Does, telecommunications companies or other corporations - are not penalized
for doing their civic duty. We can only pray that, by the time she gets
around to doing hers, our enemies have not advanced undetected the plots
that will put still more of us at risk. 

 



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