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from:
http://www.techlawjournal.com/encrypt/19990518.htm
<A HREF="http://www.techlawjournal.com/encrypt/19990518.htm">Story: House
Subcommittee Criticizes Administra
</A>
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Tech Law Journal
News, records, and analysis of legislation, litigation, and
regulation affecting the computer and Internet industry

House Subcommittee Criticizes Administration Opposition to SAFE Act

(May 18, 1999) The House International Economic Policy and Trade
Subcommittee held a hearing on the SAFE Act on Tuesday afternoon, May
18. Administration officials who testified in opposition to the bill
were met with tough questions, blunt criticism, and ridicule.

Related Pages
HR 850 IH, SAFE Act.Summary of Encryption Bills.Statement of Rep.
Benjamin Gilman.Statement of William Reinsch (DOC).Statement of Ronald
Lee (DOJ).
The Safety and Freedom through Encryption (SAFE) Act, HR 850 is
sponsored is Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA). The lead cosponsor is Rep. Zoe
Lofgren (D-CA). Over half of the House is also cosponsoring the bill.
The Clinton/Gore administration remains opposed.

On May 18 the House International Relations Committee's Subcommittee on
International Economic Policy and Trade held a hearing on the bill. The
first panel of witnesses included three administration representatives:
William Reinsch of the Department of Commerce, Ronald Lee of the
Department of Justice, and Barbara McNamara, of the NSA. A second panel
included supporters of the bill.

The SAFE Act, H.R. 850, has three main components. First, it affirms the
right of all Americans to use any type or strength of encryption they
choose. Second, the bill prohibits the federal government from mandating
key escrow, key recovery, or other back doors in encryption products.
Finally, the SAFE Act provides export relief to American businesses.

Reinsch stated that "with respect to H.R.850, the Administration opposes
this legislation as we did its predecessor in the last Congress."
Reinsch and the other administration representatives stated that they
want to continue export controls, and "encourage" key recovery. They
said that their reasons are crime, national security, treaty
obligations, and statutory obligations.

The administration's claim that criminals and drug dealers would use
encryption products was met with derision from subcommittee members.
Rep. William Delahunt (D-MA), who served as a prosecutor for 21 years
before being elected to Congress, admonished the administration
officials, "Let's get real." He said that "street level criminals" are
not smart enough to use encryption products.

Rep. John Cooksey (R-LA) told the administration officials that "the
sheriffs in my area are not concerned about the effects of this bill."

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA) suggested that it would not matter if drug
dealers used encryption because wiretaps of unencrypted communications
have not succeded in stopping drug trafficking. "The government for the
last twenty years has had all of this control," said Rep. Rohrabacher.
"And the drug war is a joke. You go down in any city in the United
States of America and any kid can get drugs."

When the administration officials said they opposed the bill because of
international treaty obligations under the Wassenaar agreement, Rep.
Goodlatte responded that Wassenaar is a "Swiss cheese" full of loopholes
for foreign governments. Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) described Wassenaar as
a "little dance" where foreign governments only "pretend to be
interested in preventing their companies from marketing strong
encryption worldwide. And, we fall for it, and are now in the process of
giving away what may be the world's most important industry to our
foreign competitors."

When the administration officials cited national security as a grounds
for opposing the SAFE Act, subcommittee members questioned their
national security priorities. Rep. Robert Menendez (D-NJ) criticized the
administration's invocation of national security to ban "freedom and
democracy" banners from the area of Camden Yards where the Baltimore
Orioles played the Cuban baseball team.

Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher

Rep. Rohrabacher pointed out that it was Ronald Lee's office at the
Department of Justice that had blocked the effort to get a wiretap on
the suspect in the Los Alamos Chinese espionage scandal. "The overall
conduct towards China is doing far more damage to our national
security," said Rep. Rohrabacher.

Rep. Rohrabacher accused the administration of "trying to strengthen the
government's control, not of other people hostile to the United States,
but trying to assert the government's control of ordinary Americans, and
American enterprise."

When the administration officials said that they wanted to "encourage"
but not "mandate" key recovery, Rep. Goodlatte accused the
administration of trying to "insidiously put key recovery into the
entire country."

The only member of the Subcommittee to defend the administration was
Rep. Benjamin Gilman (R-NY), the Chairman of the full House
International Relations Committee. Rep. Gilman read an opening statement
 in which he urged his colleagues "not to rush to judgement."

Rep. Gilman

"I am very concerned that the enactment of the SAFE Act would make
strong encryption all the more available to our adversaries and would
only undermine international efforts to modernize and improve
multilateral export controls under the Wassenaar Arrangement," said Rep.
Gilman.

"Unlimited proliferation of this technology only makes the street corner
drug dealer further immune from the consequences of his and others'
actions. The drug trade costs us billions each year in crime, health
care costs, lost worker productivity and destroyed families and lost
young lives. Let us not contribute to this carnage under the guise of
promoting trade and commerce."

Rep. Gilman left shortly after reading his statement, returned briefly
to toss a few softball questions to the administration officials, and
then left again.
Key Recovery
The administration representatives stated that they support key
recovery, and want to "encourage" its use. Moreover, they stated that
the administration opposes the SAFE Act because it would prevent them
from "encouraging" its use.

Reinsch stated that the administration wants "to promote the development
of strong encryption products that would allow lawful government access
to plaintext under carefully defined circumstances." He also stated that
it is "our policy to encourage the marketing of a wider variety of
"recoverable" products that may not be key recovery in a narrow sense
but which may be helpful to law enforcement."
Excerpt from HR 850 IH(a) GENERAL PROHIBITION- Neither the Federal
Government nor a State may require that, or condition any approval on a
requirement that, a key, access to a key, key recovery information, or
any other plaintext access capability be--
(1) built into computer hardware or software for any purpose;

(2) given to any other person, including a Federal Government agency or
an entity in the private sector that may be certified or approved by the
Federal Government or a State to receive it; or

(3) retained by the owner or user of an encryption key or any other
person, other than for encryption products for use by the Federal
Government or a State.

Similarly, Lee stated that the Justice Department believes in
"encouraging the use of recoverable encryption products." He also
asserted that, "Unfortunately, to the extent that this provision would
actually prohibit government from encouraging development of key
management infrastructures and other similar technologies, the provision
could preclude U.S. government agencies from complying with statutory
requirements ..."

Rep. Goodlatte focused on key recovery during the questioning of
witnesses. He asked Lee: "So you do not object to the provision in this
bill which prohibits the government from mandating key recovery or key
escrow?" Lee responded that "we are concerned that the provisions in HR
850 would inhibit the government from encouraging the use of key
recovery, key escrow, other types of plaintext available systems."

Rep. Goodlatte also sought elaboration on what the administration meant
by "encouraging the use of recoverable encryption products." He asked
Lee, "What do you mean by the word encourage?"

"The government has a number of statutory obligations to make
information available to the citizens," said Lee. "Some type of
plaintext recovery system is necessary to meet that obligation." Lee did
not define these statutory obligations, and Rep. Goodlatte eventually
stated: "there is no statutory obligation." During a long exchange with
Rep. Goodlatte, Ronald Lee spoke only vaguely and evasively about what
the administration means by "encouraging" key recovery.

Rep. Bob
Goodlatte

Rep. Goodlatte stated to Ronald Lee that "nothing in the legislation
prohibits the government from having its own key recovery system for its
its own records and purposes. But we do prohibit the government from
mandating that anybody who does business with the government, which is
virtually every business, and every citizen in the United States, from
using a system that requires a key recovery system be attached to it."

Rep. Goodlatte then criticized the administration's desire to
"encourage" key recovery. "So you would insidiously put key recovery
into the entire country by saying that if you want to do business with
the United States government you have got to have key recovery. That is
what you mean by encourage. When you say you really don't want to
mandate key recovery, but you want to encourage it by saying if you want
to do business with the government online, which everybody will be doing
in the near future, you are going to require that they have a system
that, if they do business with the government, has a key recovery
feature. Is that what you are saying?"

When Rep. Goodlatte's time for asking questions expired, Rep. Sherman
(D-CA) picked up where he left off. He focused specifically on using
Social Security checks to "encourage" key recovery.

"Will this administration ever say that," he asked Ronald Lee, "for
banks to have any deposits of the U.S. government, they must divulge the
key recovery provisions as a condition for having U.S. government
deposits.?" Lee did not answer. Rep. Sherman asked again. This time Lee
stated "the administration's policy is not to seek mandatory regulation
of key recovery." Sherman continued: "I am not talking mandatory. I am
saying, as you may know, the U.S. government sends out a awful lot of
Social Security checks. Those are being sent out by wire to banks across
this country. Will the administration ever tell banks that they must
divulge key information in order to be eligible to receive such wires of
social security deposits?"

Lee then ducked the question by saying, "I think that the wise thing to
do is defer that question to Secretary Reinsch." Reinsch, in turn,
asserted that "nobody has even thought about that." Under repeated
questioning from Rep. Sherman, Reinsch would make no statement regarding
the administration's policy on this point.
Wassenaar Agreement
The administration's representatives repeatedly cited compliance with
the Wassenaar agreement as a reason for opposing the SAFE Act. However,
Representatives rejected this argument. "The problem with the Wassenaar
agreement is that it is Swiss Cheese. It is something that is loaded
with loopholes," said Rep. Goodlatte."It can be applied differentially
in different countries, and is indeed being done so."

Rep. Sherman was more blunt. "There is, I think, no prospect of getting
Congress to give the administration or any administration, domestically,
what you are seeking internationally." He continued:

"You can't go after what you like domestically. So you want to punish
the U.S. software industry, by putting it at a disadvantage vis a vis
foreign competitors. And not surprisingly our foreign competitors and
their governments have welcomed this effort, and have engaged in a
little dance at Wassenaar, where they pretend to be interested in
preventing their companies from marketing strong encryption worldwide.
And, we fall for it, and are now in the process of giving away what may
be the world's most important industry to our foreign competitors. And
then you come to us and you show us how youthful our technology
competitors dance at Wassenaar, and give us that as a reason why we
should bludgeon our own industry, and make it more difficult for them to
compete worldwide."
Bernstein Case
Several Representatives stated that the Department of Justice should not
appeal the Ninth Circuit decision in the Bernstein case. On May 6 the
appeals court held that U.S. encryption export regulations violate First
Amendment free speech rights. See, 9th Circuit Opinion.

Ronald Lee, of the Justice Department, had this to say. "The recent
decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in
Daniel Bernstein v. United States Department of Justice and United
States Department of Commerce has not changed our view that legislation
eliminating export controls is contrary to our national interests. The
Department of Commerce and the Department of Justice are currently
reviewing the Ninth Circuit's decision in Daniel Bernstein v. United
States Department of Justice and United States Department of Commerce,
and we are considering possible avenues for further review, including
seeking a rehearing of the appeal en banc in the Ninth Circuit. In the
interim, the regulations controlling the export of encryption products
remain in full effect."

The subcommittee also heard from a panel of supporters of the SAFE Act.
•Alan Davidson, Staff Counsel, Center for Democracy and Technology.
•Jeffrey Smith, attorney, Americans for Computer Privacy.
•Ira Rubinstein, Senior Corporate Attorney for Microsoft, on behalf of
the Business Software Alliance.
•David Weiss, Software & Information Industry Association.
•Dinah PoKempner, Human Rights Watch.
•Ed Black.


Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), the Chairman of the Subcommittee,
presided over most of the hearing. The other members of the subcommittee
who participated in the hearing included Benjamin Gilman (R-NY), Douglas
Bereuter (R-NE), Richard Burr (R-NC), Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), Tom
Campbell (R-CA), Menendez (D-NJ), Brad Sherman (D-CA), and William
Delahunt (D-MA). Bob Goodlatte (R-VA) is not a member of the
subcommittee, but was permitted to sit on the panel for this hearing.


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