Whistleblower: NSA Targeted Journalists, Snooped on All U.S. Communications
By Kim Zetter January 22, 2009

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22425001/vp/28781200

Just one day after George W. Bush left office, an NSA whistleblower has 
revealed that the National Security Agency's warrantless surveillance program 
targeted U.S. journalists, and vacuumed in all domestic communications of 
Americans, including, faxes, phone calls and network traffic.

Russell Tice, a former NSA analyst, spoke on Wednesday to MSNBC host Keith 
Olbermann. Tice has acknowledged in the past being one of the anonymous sources 
that spoke with The New York Times for its 2005 story on the government's 
warrantless wiretapping program.

After that story was published, President Bush said in a statement that only 
people in the United States who were talking with terrorists overseas would 
have been targeted for surveillance.

But Tice says, in truth, the spying involved a dragnet of all communications, 
confirming what critics have long assumed.

"The National Security Agency had access to all Americans' communications," he 
said. "Faxes, phone calls and their computer communications. ... They monitored 
all communications."

Tice said the NSA analyzed metadata to determine which communication would be 
collected. Offering a hypothetical example, he said if the agency determined 
that terrorists communicate in brief, two-minute phone calls, the NSA might 
program its systems to record all such calls, invading the privacy of anyone 
prone to telephonic succinctness.

Tice was involved in only a small part of the project, that involved trying to 
"harpoon fish from an airplane."

He said he was told to monitor certain groups in order to eliminate them as 
suspects for more intense targeting. Those groups, he said, were U.S. 
journalists and news agencies. But rather than excluding the news organizations 
from monitoring, he discovered that the NSA was collecting the organizations' 
communications 24 hours a day year round. 

"It made no sense," he said.

Tice did not identify the reporters or organizations allegedly targeted.

Olbermann asked if this means there's a file somewhere containing every e-mail 
and phone conversation these reporters ever had with sources, editors and 
family members.

"If it was involved in this specific avenue of collection, it would be 
everything, yes." Tice answered.



See Also:

  a.. Bush Spy Revelations Anticipated When Obama Is Sworn In 
  b.. In Final Legal Act, Bush Appeals Spy Ruling 
  c.. Obama Promises New Era of Openness 
  d.. Is the NSA Spying on U.S. Internet Traffic? 
  e.. The NSA Is on the Line -- All of Them 
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2009/01/nsa-whistleblow.html

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