POLICE STATE / MILITARY - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
NSA: Free Speech is a Weapon of Mass Destruction |
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by Kurt Nimmo Another Day in the Empire Entered into the database on Wednesday, January 11th, 2006 @ 13:51:26 MST |
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As further evidence the Bushcons are not interested in snooping “al-Qaeda,”
and in fact there is no “al-Qaeda” threat in America, consider revelations
that the NSA snooped the Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore, a Quaker peace group.
“The National Security Agency has been spying on a Baltimore anti-war
group, according to documents released during litigation, going so far as to
document the inflating of protesters’ balloons, and intended to deploy
units trained to detect weapons of mass destruction,” reports the Raw
Story. “According to the documents, the Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore,
a Quaker-linked peace group, has been monitored by the NSA working with the
Baltimore Intelligence Unit of the Baltimore City Police Department.”
Of course, it is completely absurd that the NSA and the Baltimore police would
actually believe a small group of Quakers have weapons of mass destruction,
that is unless they believe the Bill of Rights is a weapon of mass destruction.
Last year, Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore “sent a letter to Lt. Gen.
Michael V. Hayden, the director of the National Security Agency, requesting
a meeting,” a press release
reveals. “The letter raised three major concerns: 1] the agency’s
involvement in Justice Department plans to monitor and gather data about US
citizens; 2] its role in the war against Iraq; and 3] the eavesdropping on the
diplomatic delegations from several United Nations Security Council nations
[first reported March 2, 2003 in the London-based Observer]. Since there was
no response to the letter, fourteen Pledge members went to the spy agency on
Oct. 4, 2003 to seek a meeting with the director. Some forty security operatives
blocked access to the visitor’s parking lot. After some dialogue about
the Constitutional right of citizens to petition government officials, Marilyn
Carlisle, Cindy Farquhar, Jay Gillen, Max Obuszewski and Levanah Ruthschild
were arrested and charged with trespass. Later the antiwar activists were also
charged with a failure to obey a lawful order.” In short, the NSA went
after the activist group because they insisted the Bill of Rights means what
it says. The Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore press release continues: Thus the Agency perceives Constitutionally-protected speech as some kind
of threat. It is believed the NSA is monitoring the activities of the Pledge,
which would explain the massive police presence on Oct. 4. This may be an
attempt to intimidate those who question Agency operations…. At trial,
scheduled for May 27, the defendants intend to bring out the NSA’s intimate
involvement in the duplicitous efforts to promote war with Iraq. They expect
to be found not guilty of both charges. All five Pledge members who were arrested
at the NSA on Oct. 4, 2003 continue to be involved in risk-arrest actions
protesting the war and the occupation. It should not be surprising the NSA and the Straussian neocons in control of
the Bush White House and the Pentagon consider free speech a weapon of mass
destruction and also consider a small group of Quakers a threat to national
security (or a threat to their ability to invade and occupy small countries).
Indeed, the “NSA’s intimate involvement in the duplicitous efforts”
were used “to promote war with Iraq.” As declassified NSA documents
reveal, “the Tonkin Gulf [so-called incident] confirms what historians
have long argued: that there was no second attack on U.S. ships in Tonkin on
August 4, 1964. According to National Security Archive research fellow John
Prados, ‘the American people have long deserved to know the full truth
about the Gulf of Tonkin incident. The National Security Agency is to be commended
for releasing this piece of the puzzle. The parallels between the faulty intelligence
on Tonkin Gulf and the manipulated intelligence used to justify the Iraq War
make it all the more worthwhile to re-examine the events of August 1964 in light
of new evidence,’” according to the National
Security Archive. “President Johnson and Secretary of Defense McNamara
treated Agency SIGINT reports as vital evidence of a second attack and used
this claim to support retaliatory air strikes and to buttress the administration’s
request for a Congressional resolution that would give the White House freedom
of action in Vietnam.” This “freedom of action” resulted in
the death of around three million Vietnamese and 58,000 Americans. As an example of the super-secret snoop organization’s respect for the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights, consider the following: “The largest
U.S. spy agency warned the incoming Bush administration in its ‘Transition
2001' report that the Information Age required rethinking the policies and authorities
that kept the National Security Agency in compliance with the Constitution’s
4th Amendment prohibition on ‘unreasonable searches and seizures’
without warrant and ‘probable cause,’ according to an updated briefing
book of declassified NSA documents,” writes Jeffrey
Richelson, senior fellow of the National Security Archive at George Washington
University. “The NSA told the Bush transition team that the ‘analog
world of point-to-point communications carried along discrete, dedicated voice
channels’ is being replaced by communications that are ‘mostly digital,
carry billions of bits of data, and contain voice, data and multimedia,’
and therefore, ’senior leadership must understand that today’s and
tomorrow’s mission will demand a powerful, permanent presence on a global
telecommunications network that will host the “protected” communications
of Americans as well as targeted communications of adversaries.’”
In other words, the NSA was telling the in-coming Bushites they have no respect
for the founding document of this country and “adversaries” are
both foreign and domestic (and as the Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore case reveals,
mostly domestic). Meanwhile, in order to lower the heat focused on the NSA in the wake of the
revelations Bush used the snoop agency as his own personal enemies monitoring
network, the “National Security Agency’s inspector general has opened
an investigation into the agency’s eavesdropping without warrants in the
United States,” according to the Washington
Post. “The Pentagon’s acting inspector general, Thomas Gimble,
wrote that his counterpart at the NSA ‘is already actively reviewing aspects
of that program’ and has ‘considerable expertise in the oversight
of electronic surveillance,’ according to the letter sent to House Democrats
who have requested official investigations of the NSA program.” Gimble’s letter appears to confirm that an internal investigation into
the NSA’s domestic eavesdropping program, authorized in a secret order
by President Bush after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, is under way. The Justice
Department has opened a separate criminal investigation into the recent leak
of the highly classified program’s existence. Of course, this will be about as useful as a bucket milking unit on a bull.
The NSA works closely with the Department of Defense and is generally directed
by a military officer—in other words, Thomas Gimble’s “investigation”
will be something like the Mafia investigating improprieties in its prostitution
or drug pushing operations. As an indication that any “investigation”
will be about as useful as the aforementioned milking unit, consider the remarks
of the NSA’s inspector general, Joel F. Brenner, who declared “that
suggestions that any eavesdropping had been conducted for ‘domestic political
purposes’ is false,” according to the New
York Times. In other words, according to this factotum, when the NSA snooped
the Pledge of Resistance-Baltimore it had nothing to do with politics. If you
believe this, I have a bridge I want to sell you in Brooklyn. In fact, the NSA has long snooped Americans for political reasons and, as reported
in December, it “conducted much broader surveillance of e-mails and phone
calls without court orders than the Bush administration has acknowledged,”
with plenty of help from your local telecom corporation. “The story [published
in the New York Times] quoted a former technology manager at a major telecommunications
firm as saying that companies have been storing information on calling patterns
since the Sept. 11 attacks, and giving it to the federal government. Neither
the manager nor the company he worked for was identified.” But don’t expect anybody to be held responsible because the NSA “destroyed
the names of thousands of Americans and US companies it collected on its own
volition following 9/11, because the agency feared it would be taken to task
by lawmakers for conducting unlawful surveillance on United States citizens
without authorization from a court, according to a little known report published
in October 2001 and intelligence officials familiar with the NSA’s operations,”
writes Jason Leopold. “NSA lawyers told the agency that the surveillance
was illegal and that it could not share the data it collected with the CIA or
other intelligence agencies.” Once again, if you believe this—the
NSA destroyed many terabytes of perfectly good data and didn’t pass it
on to its right hand, the CIA and other snoop agencies—then I have a second
bridge to sell you in Brooklyn. It should be assumed from the start the NSA, CIA, DIA, FBI, etc., have
long engaged in illegal and unconstitutional snooping against the American people,
who are after all their primary target, not the phantom “al-Qaeda”
or any number of CIA created terrorists. In a police state, the enemy is the
people, who may rise up at any moment and throw off their shackles. Unfortunately,
the vast majority of Americans do not realize they are clasped in shackles and
if they do, most think there must be a good reason for it. |