Ex-official warned against testifying on
NSA programs
Bill Gertz / THE WASHINGTON TIMES |
January 13 2006
The
National Security Agency has warned a former intelligence officer that he
should not testify to Congress about accusations of illegal activity at
NSA because of the secrecy of the programs involved.
Renee
Seymour, director of NSA special access programs stated in a Jan. 9 letter
to Russ Tice that he should not testify about secret electronic intelligence
programs because members and staff of the House and Senate intelligence
committees do not have the proper security clearances for the secret intelligence.
Miss
Seymour stated that Mr. Tice has "every right" to speak to Congress
and that NSA has "no intent to infringe your rights."
However,
she stated that the programs Mr. Tice took part in were so secret that "neither
the staff nor the members of the [House intelligence committee] or [Senate
intelligence committee] are cleared to receive the information covered by
the special access programs, or SAPs."
"The
SAPs to which you refer are controlled by the Department of Defense (DoD)
and ... neither the staffs nor the members ... are cleared to receive the
intelligence covered by the SAPs," Miss Seymour stated.
Special
access programs are the most sensitive U.S. intelligence and weapons programs
and are exempt from many oversight mechanisms used to check other intelligence
agencies.
Miss
Seymour also said that Mr. Tice, who was dismissed in May, failed to notify
either the Pentagon or NSA of the improper behavior that he is charging.
As
a result, she stated that Mr. Tice must first give statements to the Defense
Department and NSA inspectors general before he provides any classified
information
to Congress from the SAPs.
Miss
Seymour also said Mr. Tice must first "obtain and follow direction"
from Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, through the inspectors general
on the proper procedures for contacting the congressional oversight committees.
Mr.
Tice said he was not part of the classified NSA program disclosed by the
New York Times last month that intercepted telephone, e-mail and other communications
involving U.S. citizens without a warrant from a special court.
However, he told ABC News on Tuesday that he was a source for the New York
Times.
"As
far as I'm concerned, as long as I don't say anything that's classified,
I'm not worried," he said. "We need to clean up the intelligence
community. We've had abuses, and they need to be addressed."
Mr.
Tice last month asked to testify to the House and Senate intelligence oversight
panels regarding what he called "probable unlawful and unconstitutional
acts" that occurred while he was a technical intelligence
specialist
with NSA and the Defense Intelligence Agency.
He
provided no details of the programs.
However,
Mr. Tice worked on special access programs related to electronic intelligence
gathering while working for the NSA and DIA, where he took part in space
systems communications, non-communications signals, electronic warfare,
satellite control, telemetry, sensors, and special capability systems.

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