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All That is Given Up in the Name of Security
By Sibel Edmonds & William Weaver
National Security Whistleblowers Coalition
July 31, 2006
Two days ago we made available to the public news that one of our
members, Russell Tice, a former NSA Senior Analyst, had been served
with a subpoena asking him to appear before a federal grand jury
regarding the criminal investigation of recent disclosures which
involved NSA warrantless eavesdropping. Our announcement was
followed up in both the main and alternative media, and started heated
discussions among online activists.
We have received e-mails and letters from people who expressed their
support and solidarity with Mr. Tice and other patriotic public
servants who have chosen to place our nation, its Constitution, its
liberty, thus its public’s right to know, above their future security,
careers and livelihood.
We have also received e-mails from individuals who argued against the
public’s right to know when it comes to issues such as NSA warrantless
eavesdropping or mass collection of citizens’ financial and other
personal data by various intelligence and defense related
agencies. They unite in their argument that any measure to
protect us from the terrorists is welcomed and justified.
One individual wrote: “so what if they are listening to our
conversations. I have nothing to hide, so I don’t mind the
government eavesdropping on my phone conversations. Only those
engaged in evil deeds would worry about the government placing them
under surveillance.” But how far can one let the government go
based on this rationale? This issue is well articulated in
Federalist, No. 51, “You must first enable the government to
control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control
itself.” How do we oblige our government to control itself?
You may ask how NSA eavesdropping affects you when you have
nothing to hide. Let us try to explain why you should
worry. Even if, as the government claims, this program is only
looking for “terrorist activity,” still all your conversations
have to be processed; have to be linked to other calls and sources of
“possible” terrorist activity. All it takes is an innocent
phone call to a friend, who has placed a call to a friend or relative,
who has legitimate business or personal contacts in a foreign country
where there may be “suspected terrorists.”
You have just become a potential target of government investigation
– you may be a terrorist supporter, or even a terrorist.
Remember “Six Degrees of Separation” (the theory that anyone on
earth can be connected to any other person on the planet through a
chain of acquaintances with no more than five intermediaries)? The NSA
program can easily mistakenly connect you to a terrorist.
Furthermore, since the program is being conducted without
judicial oversight and under no recognized process there is nothing to
restrict how the information obtained under the program is being used.
But let us take things from the widely shared point of view of the
individual quoted above; the view that there is nothing for honest
people to fear from warrantless, presidentially-ordered
surveillance. What other invasions of rights would such
acquiescence to government authority inevitably lead to?
Our government will argue its right to break into your house and search
it without warrant based on some tip, intelligence, or information that
is considered classified, which you have no right or clearance to know
about. It will argue that the search and the secrecy are
necessary for reasons of “national security” and within the
“inherent powers” of the executive branch, therefore not requiring
congressional authorization or judicial oversight.
What is next in the name of national security? Will our
government call out to all citizens in particular communities to turn
in their weapons to law enforcement agencies? Perhaps it will
cite the following reason for such call: “We already know that several
Al Qaeda cells reside in the affected communities. Our
intelligence agencies have received credible information concerning
these cells’ intention to break into Americans’ homes to obtain
firearms, since they do not want to risk detection by purchasing
firearms from the market.”
Would our compliant citizen quoted above be more than happy to give up
his right under the Second Amendment for possible security promised to
him by his government? When the agents show up at his door asking
for his legally registered Colt, what will he do?
There are those well-meaning “conservative” Americans who have been
lead to believe that our nation’s security is somehow damaged when an
employee of one of our “security” agencies comes forward to shed
light on activities by our government that may be illegal, may be
un-constitutional, and may be a danger to the nation’s security.
These Americans have accepted too easily the government’s propaganda
sold to them shrewdly packaged in a wrapping of fear of terror – that
if you expose any government action, however misguided or un-
constitutional, then you are jeopardizing our security; you are aiding
the terrorists. This quote from Benjamin Franklin sums it up
well: “They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little
temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.”
What price our imagined security? If we now would allow the NSA
to listen in to our most private conversations without objection, then
when next the knock comes on our door, or our door is knocked
down, in the interest of “national security” what will we
say? Will we say “come on in and search me, my house and my
family; after all, it is in the interest of ‘national security’ and we
have nothing to hide”?
Generations of Americans have fought and died so that we can today
enjoy the precious fruits of their struggles – the right to our
privacy, the right to our freedom from government intrusion, the right
to our freedom of speech, the right to “life, liberty and the pursuit
of happiness,” the right to simply be left alone. Are we to become the generation that loses those freedoms, not only for
ourselves, but for the generations that follow? And will it be us
who lets it happen because of some misplaced belief that government
“oppression” equals
“national security”?
Since when did true conservatives agree to surrender their individual
rights under the Constitution for the sake of some imagined temporary
security? Since when have we become so afraid of some foreign
terrorists that we shiver and hide under a blanket of imagined security
offered up by those in power who feed on our fears?
Since when have we forgotten the messages of the Founding Fathers, who
understood so clearly that the greatest danger to our liberties is an
oppressive government, not outside foreign forces? We should
never fear those who are brave enough to speak out, but we should fear
greatly those who would silence them.
We like to believe our nation is one that prizes individual liberty and
freedom from authoritarian restraint, the dictates of hierarchy, or
governmental limits. Throughout its history our nation’s soul has
been based on anti-authoritarianism and fear of a large, tyrannical
government. Our notion of liberty has been built upon a
philosophy of limited government with the highest value placed on
preservation of individual rights.
Our nation’s political thought found its roots in the writings of John
Locke, who stressed an insistence on imposing limits on authority, on
governmental authority, in order to further individual rights and
liberty. No wonder both liberal and republican traditions,
although each in its own way and style, pride themselves in their
eternal quest for ‘limited government’.
Our entire system of government and its institutions is grounded in an
insistence that tyranny be combated and that individual liberty be
protected from a potentially tyrannical government. The result is
a suspicion of authority and an emphasis on limited government.
Samuel Huntington, a well-known conservative Republican, states in
American Politics: The Promise of Disharmony: “The distinctive aspect
of the American Creed is its antigovernment character. Opposition
to power, and suspicion of government as the most dangerous embodiment
of power, are the central themes of American political thought.”
After 9/11 our president came out and warned us: “the terrorists are
resolved to change the way of our lives. They hate our freedom
and our way of life here.” Well Mr. President, we have come
a long way since that
awful day. Our way of privacy in communicating on the phone and
through our computers, our way of detaining and prosecuting people, our
way of trusting our records with our librarians, our way of reading and
discussing dissent, our way of treating our ally nations, our way of
making it from the airport gates to the airplanes… simply, our way of
life, has surely changed drastically in five years.
But, Mr. President, we don’t have the terrorists to blame for
this. We only have you and our three branches of government to
blame.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Sibel
Edmonds is the founder and director of National Security Whistleblowers
Coalition (NSWBC). Ms. Edmonds worked as a language specialist
for the FBI. During her work with the bureau, she discovered and
reported serious acts of security breaches, cover-ups, and intentional
blocking of intelligence that had national security implications.
After she reported these acts to FBI management, she was retaliated
against by the FBI and ultimately fired in March 2002. Since that
time, court proceedings on her case have been blocked by the
assertion of “State Secret Privilege”; the Congress of the United
States has been gagged and prevented from any discussion of her case
through retroactive re-classification by the Department of
Justice. Ms. Edmonds is fluent in Turkish, Farsi and Azerbaijani;
and has a MA in Public Policy and International Commerce from George
Mason University, and a BA in Criminal Justice and Psychology from
George Washington University. PEN American Center awarded Ms.
Edmonds the 2006 PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award.
Professor William Weaver is the senior advisor and a board member of
National Security Whistleblowers Coalition. Mr. Weaver served in
U.S. Army signals intelligence for eight years in Berlin and Augsburg,
Germany, in the late 1970s and 1980s. He subsequently received
his law degree and Ph.D. in politics from the University of Virginia,
where he was on the editorial board of the Virginia Law Review.
He is presently an Associate Professor of political science and an
Associate in the Center for Law and Border Studies at the University of
Texas at El Paso. He specializes in executive branch secrecy
policy, governmental abuse, and law and bureaucracy. His articles
have appeared in American Political Science Review, Political
Science Quarterly, Virginia Law Review, Journal of Business
Ethics, Organization and other journals. With co-author Robert
Pallitto, his book Presidential Secrecy and the Law is forthcoming from
Johns Hopkins University Press in the spring of 2007. His views
and positions arising from his affiliation with the NSWBC do not
reflect the sentiments of, or constitute an endorsement by, the
University of Texas at El Paso.
National Security Whistleblowers Coalition, founded in August 2004, is
an independent and nonpartisan alliance of whistleblowers who have come
forward to address our nation’s security weaknesses; to inform
authorities of security vulnerabilities in our intelligence agencies,
at nuclear power plants and weapon facilities, in airports, and at our
nation’s borders and ports; to uncover government waste, fraud, abuse,
and in some cases criminal conduct. The NSWBC is dedicated to
aiding national security whistleblowers through a variety of methods,
including advocacy of governmental and legal reform, educating the
public concerning whistleblowing activity, provision of comfort and
fellowship to national security whistleblowers suffering retaliation
and other harms, and working with other public interest organizations
to affect goals defined in the NSWBC mission statement. For more
on NSWBC visit www.nswbc.org
© Copyright 2006, National Security Whistleblowers Coalition.
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