"Ms. Wilson, who was a National Security Council aide in the
administration of President Bush's father, is the first Republican on
either the House's Intelligence Committee or the Senate's to call for
a full Congressional investigation into the program, in which the
N.S.A. has been eavesdropping without warrants on the international
communications of people inside the United States believed to have
links with terrorists.
The congresswoman's discomfort with the operation appears to reflect
deepening fissures among Republicans over the program's legal basis
and political liabilities. Many Republicans have strongly backed
President Bush's power to use every tool at his disposal to fight
terrorism, but 4 of the 10 Republicans on the Senate Judiciary
Committee voiced concerns about the program at a hearing where
Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales testified on Monday."


You can bet Wilson is real concerned about the political liability
factor as she is facing a dead heat at this point for re-election.
(http://www.madridforcongress.com/node/513) and is having to deal with
charges that she speaks out against pornography but accepted $47,000
in campaign contributions from firms that profit from it. 
(http://www.citizensforethics.org/press/newsrelease.php?view=34).  Oh
well, Republicans have a 16 seat margin in the House and Boehner is
reforming lobbying rules, so one less Republican incumbent won't
matter...or will it?  Anyway, it is likely Wilson to take a hard line
against NSA, regardless of Rove's threats to blacklist Republicans who
do that because she is probably already on it from opposing other
Bushworld proposals. It is Darwin's rules after all...and impeachment
actions do
start in the House.

David Bier

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/08/politics/08nsa.html

February 8, 2006

Republican Who Oversees N.S.A. Calls for Wiretap Inquiry

By ERIC LICHTBLAU

WASHINGTON, Feb. 7 — A House Republican whose subcommittee oversees
the National Security Agency broke ranks with the White House on
Tuesday and called for a full Congressional inquiry into the Bush
administration's domestic eavesdropping program.

The lawmaker, Representative Heather A. Wilson of New Mexico,
chairwoman of the House Intelligence Subcommittee on Technical and
Tactical Intelligence, said in an interview that she had "serious
concerns" about the surveillance program. By withholding information
about its operations from many lawmakers, she said, the administration
has deepened her apprehension about whom the agency is monitoring and why.

Ms. Wilson, who was a National Security Council aide in the
administration of President Bush's father, is the first Republican on
either the House's Intelligence Committee or the Senate's to call for
a full Congressional investigation into the program, in which the
N.S.A. has been eavesdropping without warrants on the international
communications of people inside the United States believed to have
links with terrorists.

The congresswoman's discomfort with the operation appears to reflect
deepening fissures among Republicans over the program's legal basis
and political liabilities. Many Republicans have strongly backed
President Bush's power to use every tool at his disposal to fight
terrorism, but 4 of the 10 Republicans on the Senate Judiciary
Committee voiced concerns about the program at a hearing where
Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales testified on Monday.

A growing number of Republicans have called in recent days for
Congress to consider amending federal wiretap law to address the
constitutional issues raised by the N.S.A. operation.

Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, for one, said he considered
some of the administration's legal justifications for the program
"dangerous" in their implications, and he told Mr. Gonzales that he
wanted to work on new legislation that would help those tracking
terrorism "know what they can and can't do."

But the administration has said repeatedly since the program was
disclosed in December that it considers further legislation
unnecessary, believing that the president already has the legal
authority to authorize the operation.

Vice President Dick Cheney reasserted that position Tuesday in an
interview on "The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer."

Members of Congress "have the right and the responsibility to suggest
whatever they want to suggest" about changing wiretap law, Mr. Cheney
said. But "we have all the legal authority we need" already, he said,
and a public debate over changes in the law could alert Al Qaeda to
tactics used by American intelligence officials.

"It's important for us, if we're going to proceed legislatively, to
keep in mind there's a price to be paid for that, and it might well in
fact do irreparable damage to our capacity to collect information,"
Mr. Cheney said.

The administration, backed by Republican leaders in both houses, has
also resisted calls for inquiries by either Congress or an independent
investigator.

As for the politics, some Republicans say they are concerned that
prolonged public scrutiny of the surveillance program could prove a
distraction in this year's midterm Congressional elections, and the
administration has worked to contain any damage by aggressively
defending the legality of the operation. It has also limited its
Congressional briefings on the program's operational details to the
so-called Gang of Eight — each party's leaders in the Senate and the
House and on the two intelligence committees — and has agreed to full
committee briefings only on the legal justifications for the
operation, without discussing in detail how the N.S.A. conducts it.

Ms. Wilson said in the interview Tuesday that she considered the
limited Congressional briefings to be "increasingly untenable" because
they left most lawmakers knowing little about the program. She said
the House Intelligence Committee needed to conduct a "painstaking"
review, including not only classified briefings but also access to
internal documents and staff interviews with N.S.A. aides and
intelligence officials.

Ms. Wilson, a former Air Force officer who is the only female veteran
currently in Congress, has butted up against the administration
previously over controversial policy issues, including Medicare and
troop strength in Iraq. She said she realized that publicizing her
concerns over the surveillance program could harm her relations with
the administration. "The president has his duty to do, but I have mine
too, and I feel strongly about that," she said.

Asked whether the White House was concerned about support for the
program among Republicans, Dana Perino, a presidential spokeswoman,
said: "The terrorist surveillance program is critical to the safety
and protection of all Americans, and we will continue to work with
Congress. The attorney general testified at length yesterday, and he
will return to Capitol Hill twice more before the week ends."

Aides to Representative Peter Hoekstra of Michigan, who as chairman of
the full House Intelligence Committee is one of the eight lawmakers
briefed on the operations of the program, said he could not be reached
for comment on whether he would be open to a full inquiry.

Mr. Hoekstra has been a strong defender of the program and has
expressed no intention thus far to initiate a full review. In two
recent letters to the Congressional Research Service, he criticized
reports by the agency that raised questions about the legal
foundations of the N.S.A. program and the limited briefings given to
Congress. He said in one letter that it was "unwise at best and
reckless at worst" for the agency to prepare a report on classified
matters that it knew little about.

But two leading Democratic members of the intelligence committees,
Representative Jane Harman and Senator Dianne Feinstein, both of
California, wrote a letter of their own Tuesday defending the
nonpartisan research service's reports on the surveillance program and
other issues, saying its work had been "very helpful" in view of what
they deemed the minimal information provided by the administration.

Scott Shane contributed reporting for this article.





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