Cheney Lies on Fox: Congress Told Us We Didn't Need Approval for
Spying
http://www.alternet.org/blogs/rights/114607/
Cheney’s startling claims run directly counter to accounts by House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Jay Rockefeller
In an interview with Fox News' Chris Wallace yesterday morning, Vice
President Dick Cheney defended the Bush administration's warrantless
wiretapping program and claimed that the congressional leaders
briefed
on the program wholeheartedly approved. In fact, Cheney claimed, when
the White House asked if it needed congressional approval for the
program, they unanimously agreed it did not:

CHENEY: We briefed them on the program and what we'd achieved and how
it worked and asked them should we continue the program. They were
unanimous, Republican and Democrat alike. All agreed: Absolutely
essential to continue the program. I then said, Do we need to come to
the Congress and get additional legislating authorization to continue
what we're doing? They said absolutely not. Don't do it.


Watch it:


Cheney's startling claims run directly counter to accounts by House
Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.V.
Rather than asking for congressional input, Pelosi and Rockefeller
said in 2005 that Cheney simply informed them of what was going on --
and ignored their objections:


PELOSI: The Bush Administration considered these briefings to be
notification, not a request for approval. As is my practice whenever
I
am notified about such intelligence activities, I expressed my strong
concerns during these briefings.


ROCKEFELLER: The record needs to be set clear that the administration
never afforded members briefed on the program an opportunity to
either
approve or disapprove the NSA program.


Other congressional members who attended those briefings have said
that they were told only the barest outlines of the program. House
Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Rep. Jane Harman, D-Calif., said
that the White House never disclosed that it was skirting the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act to eavesdrop on Americans without
warrants. Former Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Sen. Bob
Graham, D-Fla., said the same thing:


The assumption was that if we did that, we would do it pursuant to
the
law, the law that regulates the surveillance of national security
issues. And there was no suggestion that we were going to begin
eavesdropping on United States citizens without following the full
law. ... There was no reference made to the fact that we were going
to
use that as the subterfuge to begin unwarranted, illegal -- and I
think unconstitutional -- eavesdropping on American citizens.


What's more, Rockefeller, then vice chairman of the Intelligence
Committee, sent a handwritten letter to Cheney in 2003 to "reiterate
[his] concerns" about the wiretapping program. "I feel unable to
fully
evaluate, much less endorse these activities," he wrote.


Cheney claims to have suggested seeking congressional approval right
away. However, the White House put up a stiff fight just a few years
later, when Congress finally sought to impose oversight of the
wiretapping program. The vice president has already presented
misleading information about the dates and frequency of these
supposed
briefings; now he appears to be offering misleading descriptions of
them.



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