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It’s treated as almost a ho-hum subject by the corporate media:
Bush allowed the NSA “without court approval” to spy on Americans,
according to the Los
Angeles Times. “For several years after the presidential order was
signed in 2002, the intelligence agency monitored calls and e-mails of hundreds
of people in the country to search for evidence of terrorist activity,”
that is to say they “monitored” Americans who have disagreements
with the government, since there aren’t any terrorists (outside of the
White House and the Pentagon) in the United States. “It said the previously
undisclosed decision to permit some eavesdropping inside the country without
court approval represented a major shift in U.S. intelligence gathering. The
NSA, based at Ft. Meade, Md., is authorized to monitor communications on foreign
soil.”
If we are to believe the Times, the NSA engages in “some eavesdropping
inside the country,” when it is a documented fact the mega-spy organization
has snooped millions of Americans for years. “In June 1970 Nixon met with
Hoover [FBI], Helms [CIA], NSA Director Admiral Noel Gaylor, and Defense Intelligence
Agency (DIA) representative Lt. Gen. Donald V. Bennett and told them he wanted
a coordinated and concentrated effort against domestic dissenters,” writes
Verne Lyon, a former CIA
undercover operative. This confab of spooks engaged in “black bag operations,”
wiretapping, and a mail-opening program, according to Lyon, and ultimately became
known as Operation CHAOS. “Given the power granted to the office of the
presidency and the unaccountability of the intelligence agencies, widespread
illegal domestic operations are certain. We as a people should remember history
and not repeat it.” Unfortunately, “as a people,” we Americans
are a somnolent lot, more interested in football games and the escapades of
Paris Hilton than remaining vigilant about the behavior of the government.
Of course, singling out the NSA is like picking between oranges and apples—it
is all fruit. As we know, since nine eleven, Rumsfeld’s military is more
or less in charge of snooping on Americans deemed a threat to national security,
that is to say a possible threat against the neocons. “On May 2, 2003,
Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz signed a memorandum directing the
military to collect and report ‘non-validated threat information’
relating to U.S. military forces, installations or missions,” writes William
M. Arkin. “His memorandum followed from the establishment of the Domestic
Threat Working Group after 9/11, the intent of which was to create a mechanism
to share low-level domestic ‘threat information’ between the military
and intelligence agencies.” The Department of Forever War has something
called Counterintelligence Field Activity (CIFA), “one of the more mysterious
Pentagon agencies … that also has authority to investigate crimes within
the United States such as treason, foreign or terrorist sabotage or even economic
espionage,” as Arkin cites Walter Pincus of the Washington Post. CIFA
“constitutes the greatest threat to U.S. civil liberties since the domestic
spying days of the 1970’s,” Arkin continues, and all it will take
is a “military gumshoe or over-zealous commander” to violate the
formerly constitutionally protected liberties of Americans. It is important
to note that the Pentagon’s CIFA is not only a “counter-intelligence”
(re counter First Amendment) operation but also considers itself the “law
enforcement arm of the Pentagon,” in other words the Posse Comitatus Act,
designed to prevent the military from engaging in domestic law enforcement,
is a dead letter.
Back in 1952, as Truman went about constructing the now ominous national security
state, the mission of the NSA was to collect intelligence on “foreign
governments,” not U.S. citizens per se. Of course, as any student of history
will tell you, government invariably considers its own citizens as the enemy
and directs massive resources into snooping activity and technology (think Echelon)
and “counter intelligence,” that is to say subverting the liberty
of the people and, in many instances, directing violence and even assassination
against opponents, as all fascists are wont to do.
Thus when the Washington
Post tells us “President Bush signed a secret order in 2002 authorizing
the National Security Agency to eavesdrop on U.S. citizens and foreign nationals
in the United States, despite previous legal prohibitions against such domestic
spying,” we can only laugh—if sardonically—because history
is replete with documented instances of the NSA doing the exact opposite, regardless
of meaningless “legal prohibitions.”
But then the Washington Post and the New York Times, the latter having “broke”
this story (because the government wants us to know they are snooping us), were
long ago folded into the CIA’s sprawling propaganda unit under Operation
Mockingbird, so it should be no surprise they would attempt to tell us there
are “legal prohibitions” when in fact various intelligence agencies—now
centralized under the Pentagon and internationalized with spook and black op
operations and outfits elsewhere in the world—are free to run wild, subverting
both indigenous political movements and foreign resistance efforts against the
neocon-neolib version of reality, which is in fact a global slavery and death
camp engineered to service a miniscule corporate and banking elite.
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