More Examples Of How The House Intelligence Committee Limits Oversight, Rather Than Does Oversight

from the you're-supposed-to-BE-the-oversight,-not-PREVENT-it dept

More evidence keeps surfacing showing Intelligence Committee members are simply jerking around their fellow Senate and Congress members when it comes to providing the documents needed to provide oversight for the NSA. Tony Romm's engrossing article for Politico refers to this deliberate obfuscation (tactfully) as "some limits," but adding what's been newly discovered to what we already know shows that the heads of the Intelligence Committees aren't really interested in collaborating with their colleagues to provide credible oversight.



The White House is its own problem, continually insisting (along with national intelligence officials) that everyone, both in the Congress and Senate, has had access to all pertinent briefings, rulings and other needed info -- even when it knows for a fact this information has not been disseminated. This helps the administration maintain its narrative of a well-oiled intelligence machine operating with the explicit permission of its oversight and allows the blame to be shifted elsewhere. If the American public is angry about the NSA's programs, the White House wants to aim that at legislators, rather than the NSA and administration.



If it's not Mike Rogers and Dutch Ruppersberger stashing documents or scheduling briefings at inconvenient times, it's the administration itself handing out "information" that glosses over details that should rightfully concern those charged with oversight.

One Obama administration report provided to lawmakers last year, for example, only opaquely referenced the NSA’s unlawful collection of thousands of Americans’ emails. The document, declassified this fall, didn’t mention that a secret court had rebuked the agency for its misleading statements.

The Obama administration’s communication with the Hill, however, didn’t tell the story of an agency rebuked by the FISA court in 2011 for “a substantial misrepresentation regarding the scope of a major collection program.”



Instead, lawmakers got only one paragraph about the mishap, which had been obscured with technical details about “multi-communication transactions.” Meanwhile, the administration touted the incident as a case study defending the NSA’s existing oversight mechanisms.

[M]any Hill staff sources interviewed by POLITICO noted it may not have been easy for their bosses to digest that report: Lawmakers in many cases weren’t able to bring their own legal advisers or take notes, and they had to view the document in a special part of the Capitol reserved for classified material.

The chairman of the Intelligence Committee, Rogers, and the panel’s ranking Democrat, Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, declined to say whether they even had sent a letter in 2012 informing members there had been a critical document to view. Hill sources say they don’t recall anything of the sort.

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These omissions add up. The picture being presented by the administration isn't complete and points fingers at Congress for lapses in oversight.The scathing rebuke issued in 2011 by Judge Walton concerning the NSA's repeated abuse of its domestic surveillance capabilities over the previous three years was never seen by most legislators in its entirety until its declassification in August ofyear. James Clapper has insisted lawmakers have already seen all pertinent information regarding the NSA's bulk collections, but Politico points out that this statement simply can't be true.Making matters worse is the limitations surrounding any revelations being brought to the attention of legislators. In addition to the obfuscation and stonewalling shown by the leaders of the House Intelligence Committee, legislators are hamstrung by the secrecy surrounding the documents themselves.Speaking of Rogers, we already know he withheld documents from House members shortly before voting on the Amash Amendment began and, in his latest move, sent invitations to attend an intelligence briefing to the Congressional junk mail inbox -- a briefing which was held on a Friday afternoon, long after most reps had returned to their districts. As to whether a "critical" document made its way to other members of Congress in 2012, Rogers simply isn't saying.The House Republicans held off on holding briefings untilbefore the 2012 vote on reauthorizing the FISA Amendments Act. The invitation obtained by Politico makes no mention of the administration white paper detailing the NSA's "erroneous" collection of Americans' data.On the plus side, the Senate Committee has done a better job (by comparison) at informing other senators, despite Dianne Feinstein's and Saxby Chambliss' unwavering support of the intelligence agency. But even their June 19th briefing invitation glossed over Judge Walton's 2011 rebuke of the agency's three-year run of privacy violations.In the push for further transparency and (actual) oversight, legislators are finding themselves workingboth intelligence committees -- committees that were set up tooversight, not run interference for intelligence agencies. Mike Rogers, in particular, has been completely hostile to other members of Congress, turning their attempts to gain knowledge and provide competent oversight into a " sick game of 20 questions ," requiring reps to grasp about blindly until they stumble across a relevant question intelligence officials can't dodge.Unfortunately, the many legislative efforts in the works aimed at reining in the NSA's collection capabilities will suffer from the same opacity, as concerns (mostly exaggerated) about national security will push these markup sessions behind closed doors. And once they're out of the public eye, the defenders of the surveillance state will find it much easier to pitch unsupported claims as justification for continuing "business as usual."

Filed Under: house intelligence committee, justin amash, mike rogers, nsa, nsa surveillance