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Obama's Black Widow

Thanks to Bush and Obama, the National Security Agency now knows more about you

Barack Obama will be in charge of the biggest domestic and international spying operation in history. Its prime engine is the National Security Agency (NSA)—located and guarded at Fort Meade, Maryland, about 10 miles northeast of Washington, D.C. A brief glimpse of its ever-expanding capacity was provided on October 26 by The Baltimore Sun's national security correspondent, David Wood: "The NSA's colossal Cray supercomputer, code-named the 'Black Widow,' scans millions of domestic and international phone calls and e-mails every hour. . . . The Black Widow, performing hundreds of trillions of calculations per second, searches through and reassembles key words and patterns, across many languages."

In July, George W. Bush signed into law the FISA Amendments Act of 2008, which gives the NSA even more power to look for patterns that suggest terrorism links in Americans' telephone and Internet communications.

The ACLU immediately filed a lawsuit on free speech and privacy grounds. The new Bush law provides farcical judicial supervision over the NSA and other government trackers and databasers. Although Senator Barack Obama voted for this law, dig this from the ACLU: "The government [is now permitted] to conduct intrusive surveillance without ever telling a court who it intends to spy on, what phone lines and e-mail addresses it intends to monitor, where its surveillance targets are located, why it's conducting the surveillance or whether it suspects any party to the communication of wrongdoing."

This gives the word "dragnet" an especially chilling new meaning.

The ACLU's Jameel Jaffer, director of its National Security Project, adds that the new statute, warming the cold hearts of the NSA, "implicates all kinds of communications that have nothing to do with terrorism or criminal activity of any kind."

Why did Obama vote for this eye-that-never-blinks? He's a bright, informed guy, but he wasn't yet the President-Elect. The cool pragmatist wanted to indicate he wasn't radically unmindful of national security—and that his previous vow to filibuster such a bill may have been a lapse in judgment. It was.

What particularly outraged civil libertarians across the political divide was that the FISA Amendments Act gave immunity to the telecommunications corporations—which, for seven years, have been a vital part of the Bush administration's secret wiretapping program—thereby dismissing the many court cases brought by citizens suing those companies for violating their individual constitutional liberties. This gives AT&T, Verizon, and the rest a hearty signal to go on pimping for the government.

That's OK with the Obama administration? Please tell us, Mr. President.

Some of us began to see how deeply and intricately the telecoms were involved in the NSA's spying when—as part of an Electronic Frontier Foundation lawsuit—it was revealed by a former AT&T technician, Mark Klein, that he had found a secret AT&T room in which the NSA was tapping into the telecom giant's fiber-optic cables. On National Public Radio on November 7, 2007, he disclosed: "It's not just AT&T's traffic going through these cables, because these cables connected AT&T's network with other networks like Sprint, Qwest [the one firm that refused to play ball with the government], Global Crossing, UUNet, etc."

What you should know is that these fruitful cables go through "a splitter" that, as Klein describes, "just copies the entire data without any selection going on. So it's a complete copy of the data stream."

Under the new FISA Amendments Act, there are no limits on where this stream of data can be disseminated. As in the past, but now with "legal" protection under the 2008 statute, your suspicious "patterns" can go to the FBI, Homeland Security, the CIA, and state and local police that are also involved in "fusion centers" with the FBI.

Consider the enormous and bottomless databases that the government—and its NSA—can have a ball with. In James Bamford's The Shadow Factory (Doubleday)—a new book that leads you as far as anyone has gone into the bowels of the NSA—he notes: "For decades, AT&T and much of the rest of the telecommunications industry have had a very secret, very cozy relationship with the NSA." In AT&T's case, he points out, "its international voice service carried more than 18 billion minutes per year, reaching 240 countries, linking 400 carriers, and offering remote access via 19,500 points of presence in 149 countries around the globe."

Voilá! Also, he notes: "Much of those communications passed through that secret AT&T room that Klein found on Folsom Street in downtown San Francisco."

There's a lot more to come that we don't know about. Yet. In The Shadow Factory, James Bamford quotes Bush's Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell as saying that this wiretapping program was and is "only one program of many highly secret programs approved by Bush following the attacks on 9/11" (emphasis added). McConnell also said of the NSA's nonstop wiretapping: "This is the only aspect of those various activities whose existence has officially been acknowledged."

Come on, Mike. Bush acknowledged the NSA's flagrant contempt of the First and Fourth amendments only after The New York Times broke the story in December 2005. When the Times executive editor, Bill Keller, first decided to hold the explosive story for a year, General Michael Hayden—the former head of the NSA who is currently running the CIA—was relieved because he didn't want the news to get out that "most international communications pass through [these telecommunications] 'switching,' " Bamford reports. It would blow the cover off those corporate communicators. Now, AT&T, Verizon, et al., don't have to worry, thanks to the new law.

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  • M 02/05/2009 7:43:00 AM

    I will believe in Obama when he levels out the playing field. Let top government officials, who earn far more than the everyday citizen, live on social security like everyone else. Let's see if these people will do the right thing. Further, the Fairtax is a pretty interesting concept. Look into it folks. Bring on the Libertarian Party. Long overdue!

  • annie 01/27/2009 3:35:00 PM

    look up echelon, ipto, operation cloverleaf, rex 84, strangedaysstrangeskies. the spying is the tip of the iceberg. if you would dissent in the face of the north american union and new world order agenda: they know it. the center for global research explains the who, what and why of all this. with love, annie, the tracked and harassed sheep

  • Boan Ng 01/24/2009 4:30:00 AM

    Hey Nat: did you clear this with Jameel?

  • eva 01/10/2009 4:10:00 PM

    I've earned my apathy to all of this, I've protested and demonstrated against the actions of the outgoing administration on multiple occasions. If the people of this country continue to remain silent, for me it will simply be: Change I WILL believe in. Why? Because I am not lifting another finger for a bunch of irredeemable monkeys. Electing Obama was a good start on the path to redemption, the next step may be to condemn him if things keep going this way and it turns out he wasn't merely trying to remain electable against the national security state propaganda of the GOP. I'm convinced that organized divisions of federal, state, and local authorities might soon be able to use these data gathering resources coupled with psychological algorithms and other advanced and hands-on approaches to create something the Pentagon could utilize for dominance on the domestic front, so that their imperial aims are not threatened by any form of organized resistance from the "homeland". But for now I'm all for it. My Apathy and Materialistic disposition is well earned.

  • Eva 01/10/2009 3:50:00 PM

    When Obama was campaigning against other democrats to become the nominee he was doing town-hall style meetings and assuring people that he would restore their constitutionally protected rights once in office, and he agreed that the Bush administration policies violated privacy. Telecom Immunity wasn't the essence of the problem and the wiretapping bill did restore FISA...or so I thought. The information in this article is news to me. I thought that Obama might fix these things and when running against McCain that he was only trying to politically maneuver himself in a way that would make him largely immune to the "national security-state" propaganda of the GOP. In light of all of this, how can I or anyone else be blamed for voting for Obama? I certainly would never go along with the sick-minded "anti-government free trade/neoliberal privatization ideology" touted by republicans who can't seem to understand the way the world works, and I see the same things underneath the surface rhetoric of the moderates, the majority of democrat senators, they just happen to be paying more lip service to the working-class. The only truly reliable sources of info out there that I know of are independent media like Democracy Now, TheRealNews, INN World Report, HuffPo, websites like this, etc. Still, there is a possibility that Obama was merely trying to remain electable. The scariest part about The Black Widow/Cray supercomputer world is that it has all of these other groups in it-- it goes all the way down; even our local law enforcement is involved in this Orwellian reality. I'm convinced that organized divisions of federal, state, and local authorities might soon be able to use these resources coupled with psychological algorithms and other advanced and hands-on approaches to create something the Pentagon could utilize for dominance on the domestic front, so that their imperial aims are not threatened by any form of organized resistance from the "homeland". War, Globalization, Police State... Orwellian to the extreme. New World Order? I recommend ignoring the sentiments of backwards conservatives altogether even if they too realize that things aren't all right, because all they're going to do is try to pull you in with revisionist language that speaks of non-existent vast socialist left-wing conspiracies in their tunnel vision of "the big government, socialist, atheist/satanic baby killers vs. the small government, privatizing, values based patriots". I mean, wtf? You should be proud of your vote for Obama. He should be given a chance. This is a serious issue to be resolved by people with serious influence and leadership skills. "In 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared December 15 to be Bill of Rights Day, commemorating the 150th anniversary of the ratification of the Bill of Rights" I think it would be reasonable to begin putting more pressure on the Obama administration immediately, and maybe after they are in office for 6 months demand an answer, and if that doesn't work, maybe the significance of Bill of Rights Day can be used to motivate a mass protest and demonstration for that day. "The Ninth and Tenth Amendments, taken together, mean that the federal government has only the authority granted to it, while the people are presumed to have any right or power not specifically forbidden to them. The Bill of Rights as a whole is dedicated to describing certain key rights of the people that the government is categorically forbidden to remove, abridge, or infringe. The Bill of Rights clearly places the people in charge of their own lives, and the government within strict limits - the very opposite of the situation we have allowed to develop today. " "Essentially, Hamilton and other Federalists believed in the British system of common law which did not define or quantify natural rights. They believed that adding a Bill of Rights to the Constitution would limit their rights to those listed in the Constitution. This is the primary reason the Ninth Amendment was included." "Thomas Jefferson, at the time serving as Ambassador to France, wrote to Madison advocating a Bill of Rights: "Half a loaf is better than no bread. If we cannot secure all our rights, let us secure what we can." What I've done with this post is basically just shared my perspective on things.. my humble "little guy" outsider's view of what things are really like in the world. I was being a little too idealistic with the patriotic jargon, though, because I've already been there and done that and I'm not lifting another finger to protest or demonstrate against the abuses of our government until I see that the public is actually interested in participating in an effort I've already made on multiple occasions. I'll sit back and watch my fellow Americans surrender their freedoms and do nothing, because I no longer have any faith in them. I renounce my citizenship. My experience in life so far of this country (the people I've known and have become acquainted with or have observed) tells me it's just not redeemable at this time. Same goes for the other societies, including non-western ones. As for Obama, I think that even if he turns out to be a bad president, that electing him was a good start for Americans to redeem themselves. The next step might be to either support him or to protest his actions, depending on what his administration brings to the table. I don't have to protest him, though. I have EARNED my apathy/blind support. If there comes a time when the American people should rise up against the incoming administration but they instead decide to continue acting like they did during the outgoing administration's reign I will just keep defending Obama. If that were to occur and they were to choose to continue to largely ignore the erosion of the Republic, for me it will be: Change I WILL believe in! See you in hell.

  • Dan 01/08/2009 11:11:00 PM

    Nat, I've been reading your columns for years. I would love them without qualification if you were as sensitive to the depredations of the left on our liberties as you were of the right. The state which giveth also taketh away; you can't separate the power of the state to provide for all our "needs" from the power of the state to take away our freedom in the process. Corporations are no more than the Darth Vader to the big-government Sith Emperor; the visible henchman. That's regardless of which party sits in the Oval Office. The fact is we have a conversation amongs our fellows for presumed helplessness and thus dependency on the state, and a demand for disempowerment of the people to speak or be armed or pursue their own happiness as a consequence, because only government can be trusted with power in this paradigm. That conversation inevitably results in a police state. Only the police have arms, only the state can have secrets, only the establishment can have power. Sheep need a shepherd, and it's become taboo to be a ram in our culture and has been for some time now. And sometimes the encouragement to such slavish popular duplicity ni that dynamic has come from your columns. I think you gh aoughtta consider that.

  • Chuck 01/08/2009 10:59:00 PM

    The funniest thing of all is that the NSA was created by a presidential decree from Harry Truman. If you read the memorandum that created the NSA you'll see quite quickly that they were going to be allowed to do what ever they wanted, whenever they wanted to do it. It's extremely funny to see all the liberals gnashing their teeth about this stuff when we are talking about a government agency that was CREATED by a Democrat. Now Obama and his little henchman Rahm (who has voted for every domestic spying bill that's come along, as well as providing his full support for the war, the Wall Street thugs, and never met a financial support bill for Israel he didn't vote for) are showing their true colors . . . suckers one and all.

  • JasonSieckmann 01/08/2009 5:36:00 PM

    why don't we stop pretending that this guy is really a good guy that just happens to carry over bad things? You'll see in a year; the love affair will be over, the economy will be crunched, and your freedoms will be slowly disintegration. Government hates not having control. It's the reason regulation doesn't work; and it's the reason that lobbying is NOT the way to get what you want. Just look at Gladio: http://mediacondom.com/?p=606

  • James 01/08/2009 5:11:00 AM

    If an Independent and Bipartisan 9/11 investigation happened why are so many still calling for one... Psh never happened.And why were so many of the 9/11 widows questions (including investigating the collapse of WTC7 and the funding for 9/11) never answered. Do your research Village Voice.

  • A. Magnus 01/08/2009 12:35:00 AM

    The Trotskyites in the Bush administration have done more to implement Joe Stalin-type control of the American people than any 'communist' ever could. Considering that Obama's clique includes many of these same Trotskyites, don't expect anything improve short of a national uprising. The state will drain the lifeblood of the people until there are no people left, then it will eat itself.

  • Libmeister 01/05/2009 6:15:00 AM

    C'mon, Nat, quit with the mock horror over all this electronic "spying." You can't be that naive. The fact of the matter is ever since World War II and particular since the Truman and Eisenhower Administrations, electronic transmissions (from telegraph to email) have been databanked by government agencies. Yet here you are railing against President Bush as if he invented the practice. Tsk, tsk, tsk. And why all the fear, isn't Obamessiah going to turn back the hands of time and relinquish any and all government agencies' ability to gather information on private citizens? Ever hear of ECHELON? I don't remember you railing about that under the Clinton Administration ... or did you? Don't think for a minute that the U.S. Government didn't have a finger in that information pie. The horses are out of the barn (and have been for some time)... deal with it. You whining about it won't change the reality. Whether liberal or conservative, libertarian or socialist, governments will always use the latest technology to secure their powerbase. And there is probably stuff we don't even know about. I wouldn't even trust you if you became POTUS since those who whine the most usually end up being the worst offender of that which they whine about! Let's just hope something like the Branch Davidian/Waco debacle times ten doesn't start happening under a future progressive/socialist/liberal regime. Interesting how those kind of fascist acts typically happen in national socialists societies. Don't forget, the NAZIS and Sov-Coms were merely two different facets of the same national socialist gem. Color me stupid but I personally trust traditional conservative administrations far more with our First Amendment and Second Amendment rights than any liberal/Democrat regime. So save the bile and venom of your pathological Bush-hatred for the coming Obama regime which will probably rarely hesitate to snoop on private citizens if it means securing the velvet gulag they've panted for all these last few decades. You have to admit, history has pretty much demonstrated that secular socialist humanists and their dream of an earthly utopia are probably the most paranoid people that have ever walked the planet, hence their latent proclivities to engage in fascist violence when it "serves the needs of the many".

  • REDBALL6 01/04/2009 10:07:00 PM

    SO you say-"The government [is now permitted] to conduct intrusive surveillance without ever telling a court who it intends to spy on, what phone lines and e-mail addresses it intends to monitor, where its surveillance targets are located, why it's conducting the surveillance or whether it suspects any party to the communication of wrongdoing." AND YOUR UPSET!? I'M UPSET YOUR UPSET, THIS AIN'T 1776, GET REAL GOOFY, WE WERE SO SMART BEFORE DEC 7 1941, AND AGAIN BEFORE 9,11. WHAT MAKES YOU THINK WE CAN DO WITHOUT THIS NOW?, FIVE ACLU LAWYERS? I THINK I'LL TAKE MY CHANCES AND THOSE OF MY FAMILY WITH THE NSA GUYS, MOST OF WHOM EAT HOT DOGS, DRIK COKES AND KNOW HOW TO COVER A SPREAD! CHEK YOUR SIX.MEATHEAD REDBALL6

  • Yaakov Watkins 01/04/2009 9:41:00 PM

    This has been technologically feasible for about 10 years. It's legal for corporate America, and nobody talks about changing that. Why not make it legal for the Feds?

  • Kent Probst 01/03/2009 7:39:00 PM

    The answer to 1984 is 1776.

  • Chrissay 01/03/2009 2:19:00 PM

    Nat Hentoff, I enjoy your articles (I referenced one of them in the earlier part of this decade on Beliefnet.com and was happily surprised when you made a brief appearance on that forum to elaborate further. I share you views about Obama; like the second poster I too voted for a third party candidate. Obama's vote on the FISA was the nail in the coffin, for any vague desire I might have had to believe the puppet Obama was bringing "change" in any good way.

  • Bob 01/03/2009 12:07:00 PM

    The sad and obvious fact of the matter is that the harridan apparent and all the other dems were not really upset with Jorge's 8 year assault on the constitution and the historic rights of Englishmen. Rather they were upset that they were not in power and pulling on the levers themselves. In other words, in principle, anybody who voted for either Barak Hussein Mugabe or Juan Sydney McMussolini is still drinking the kool aid. One is essentially a marxist, the other a fascist, ie. both are socialists. Both mainstream party clone candidates are 'big government is good for you' globalist puppets. While O is more fluent and younger, it remains to be seen if the white liberal guilt candidate of choice will be called out for what he is, an opportunist and power hungry politician. Sadly, I don't think the progressives are up to it. Just like the neocons and redstate patriots, they can't get out of the infantile Repub/Dem sandbox. As a consequence they just might they deserve their chains.

  • Jim Facs 12/26/2008 7:42:00 AM

    I didn't vote for McCain or Obama for precisely this reason. The only change Obama will bring is more thought crime legislation. I already have my "Obama lied, people died" bumpersticker printed up and ready. Look for: a war with Iran a war with Pakistan a surge in Afghanistan a new cold war with Russia (we have to justify the $24 million we give to Israel every single day. BTW, their economy is booming ...)

  • Terri 12/24/2008 9:29:00 AM

    I knew you Liberals would one day wake and see the truth about your feel-y- rights being taken away from you. You voted the worst welcome to the Machine freak of all time into office! It all about Big Brother folks. This article is the Best Christmas Present Ever.

 

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