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NSA targeting civillians: Spying: Giving Out U.S. Names
The National Security
Agency is not supposed to target Americans; when a U.S. citizen's name comes
up in an NSA "intercept," the agency routinely minimizes dissemination
of the info by masking the name before it distributes the report to other
U.S. agencies. But it's now clear the agency disseminates thousands of U.S.
names. U.N. ambassador nominee John Bolton told a Senate confirmation hearing
he had requested that U.S. names be unmasked from NSA intercepts on a handful
of occasions; the State Department said he had made 10 such requests since
2001, and that the department as a whole had made 400 similar requests over
the same period. But evidence is emerging that NSA regularly supplies uncensored
intercepts, including named Americans, to other agencies far more often
than even many top intel officials knew.
According to information obtained by NEWSWEEK, since January 2004 NSA receivedand
fulfilledbetween 3,000 and 3, 500 requests from other agencies to
supply the names of U.S. citizens and officials (and citizens of other countries
that help NSA eavesdrop around the world, including Britain, Canada and
Australia) that initially were deleted from raw intercept reports. Sources
say the number of names disclosed by NSA to other agencies during this period
is more than 10,000. About one third of such disclosures were made to officials
at the policymaking level; most of the rest were disclosed to other intel
agencies and, perhaps surprisingly, only a small proportion to law-enforcement
agencies. Civil libertarians expressed dismay at the numbers. An official
familiar with NSA procedures insisted the agency maintains careful logs
of all requests for U.S. names and doles out such info only after agency
officials are satisfied "that the requester needs the information [and
that it's] necessary to understand the foreign intelligence or assess its
importance."