Surveillance Society: Bush regime set to use new spy program in U.S.!
WASHINGTON - April 14, 2008 - The
Bush regime said yesterday that it plans to start using the nation's most
advanced spy technology for domestic purposes soon, rebuffing challenges by
House Democrats over the idea's legal authority.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff said his department will activate his department's new domestic
satellite surveillance office in stages, starting as soon as possible with
traditional scientific and homeland security activities - such as tracking
hurricane damage, monitoring climate change and creating terrain maps.
Sophisticated overhead sensor data
will be used for law enforcement once privacy and civil rights concerns are
resolved, he said. The department has previously said the program will not
intercept communications.
"There is no basis to suggest
that this process is in any way insufficient to protect the privacy and civil
liberties of Americans," Chertoff wrote to Reps. Bennie G. Thompson
(D-Miss.) and Jane Harman (D-Calif.), chairmen of the House Homeland Security
Committee and its intelligence subcommittee, respectively, in letters released
yesterday.
"I think we've fully addressed
anybody's concerns," Chertoff added in remarks last week to bloggers.
"I think the way is now clear to stand it up and go warm on it."
"I have had a firsthand experience with the
trust-me theory of law from this regime," said Harman, citing the 2005
disclosure of the National Security Agency's domestic spying program, which
included warrantless eavesdropping on calls and e-mails between people in the
United States and overseas. "I won't make the same mistake. . . . I want
to see the legal underpinnings for the whole program."