The Independent Streak

And on the Sixth Day, the Intelligence Programs Plunged Into Uncertainty

By Mike Lillis 02/22/2008 07:21PM

(Matt Mahurin)

For House Democrats, who left Washington last week without acting on legislation to expand White House spying powers, Attorney General Michael Mukasey has a few words of caution: The nation's intelligence programs, he wrote in a Feb. 22 letter (pdf here) to House Intelligence Committee Chairman Silvestre Reyes (D-Tex.), are now officially plunged into uncertainty due to your inaction.

The comments come six days after the Protect America Act (PAA) expired. That law granted the White House the power to conduct electronic surveillance on some U.S. residents without judicial oversight. It also offered legal amnesty to the phone companies that had cooperated with the warrantless wiretapping program before the PAA arrived.

A Senate-passed bill granted the White House both of those stipulations, but House leaders refused to consider the proposal last week. As a result, Mukasey wrote today, the phone companies are less cooperative, and the country is in greater peril.

"We have lost intelligence information this past week as a direct result of the uncertainty created by Congress' failure to act," reads the letter, which was also signed by Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell.

Seemingly unfazed, House Democrats -- who tried unsuccessfully last week to extend the PAA for 21 days -- are moving forward with their plan to remove the telecom immunity provision. And what of the imminent threat posed by the Democrats' inaction? "If Republicans believed that, then they should have joined us in passing the extension," said Stacey Farnen Bernards, spokeswomen for House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.).

Meanwhile, House and Senate Democrats met yesterday and today to hash out differences between the two chambers' proposals. They were alone because the Republicans didn't show up.

Don Stewart, spokesperson for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), said there's been plenty of negotiation on the topic already, and Republicans are satisfied with the bill they've got.

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Comments:

dennis
Posted 02/22/2008 09:00pm with

Having watched the Democrats caving into the Republicans at every turn, and now also in the Senate by voting to grant immunity to the telecom industry, I have no doubt that the House will cave in as well. Although the mainstream media has reported little of it, if any, the Democrats, with the exception of two or three, have protected Bush just as much as tho they were Republicans.

Americans know that the telecom industry is going to cooperate with “the war on terror” whether they have immunity or not for their past transgressions.

The immunity is to protect Bush, not the telecoms. Both political partys know it and so do the American people.

You don’t have to be a blind conservative not to see it, just an ignorant one to deny it.

dennis
Posted 02/22/2008 09:04pm with

One other comment, please. Mukasey seems to be no better at allowing truth to come out than was Alberto Gonzales.

You don’t have to be a blind conservative not to see it, just an ignorant one to deny it.

oscar
Posted 02/23/2008 08:11pm with

Perhaps even in Congress, they’re beginning to realize that any statement of any importance from this administration is simply a lie. However, I’ve thought this in the past and the lies have been swallowed, hook, line and sinker.

By the way, the word is “unfazed”, not “unphased”.

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