From the Los Angeles Times
Wiretapping's true danger
History says we should worry less about
privacy and more about political spying.
By Julian Sanchez
March 16, 2008
As the battle over reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
rages in Congress, civil libertarians warn that legislation sought by
the White House could enable spying on "ordinary Americans." Others,
like Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), counter that only those with an
"irrational fear of government" believe that "our country's
intelligence analysts are more concerned with random innocent Americans
than foreign terrorists overseas."
But
focusing on the privacy of the average Joe in this way obscures the
deeper threat that warrantless wiretaps poses to a democratic society.
Without meaningful oversight, presidents and intelligence agencies can
-- and repeatedly have -- abused their surveillance authority to spy on
political enemies and dissenters.
The original FISA law was
passed in 1978 after a thorough congressional investigation headed by
Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) revealed that for decades, intelligence
analysts -- and the presidents they served -- had spied on the letters
and phone conversations of union chiefs, civil rights leaders,
journalists, antiwar activists, lobbyists, members of Congress, Supreme
Court justices -- even Eleanor Roosevelt and the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr. The Church Committee reports painstakingly documented how the
information obtained was often "collected and disseminated in order to
serve the purely political interests of an intelligence agency or the
administration, and to influence social policy and political action."
Political
abuse of electronic surveillance goes back at least as far as the
Teapot Dome scandal that roiled the Warren G. Harding administration in
the early 1920s. When Atty. Gen. Harry Daugherty stood accused of
shielding corrupt Cabinet officials, his friend FBI Director William
Burns went after Sen. Burton Wheeler, the fiery Montana progressive who
helped spearhead the investigation of the scandal. FBI agents tapped
Wheeler's phone, read his mail and broke into his office. Wheeler was
indicted on trumped-up charges by a Montana grand jury, and though he
was ultimately cleared, the FBI became more adept in later years at
exploiting private information to blackmail or ruin troublesome public
figures. (As New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer can attest, a single wiretap
is all it takes to torpedo a political career.)
In 1945, Harry
Truman had the FBI wiretap Thomas Corcoran, a member of Franklin D.
Roosevelt's "brain trust" whom Truman despised and whose influence he
resented. Following the death of Chief Justice Harlan Stone the next
year, the taps picked up Corcoran's conversations about succession with
Justice William O. Douglas. Six weeks later, having reviewed the FBI's
transcripts, Truman passed over Douglas and the other sitting justices
to select Secretary of the Treasury (and poker buddy) Fred Vinson for
the court's top spot.
"Foreign intelligence" was often used as a
pretext for gathering political intelligence. John F. Kennedy's
attorney general, brother Bobby, authorized wiretaps on lobbyists,
Agriculture Department officials and even a congressman's secretary in
hopes of discovering whether the Dominican Republic was paying bribes
to influence U.S. sugar policy. The nine-week investigation didn't turn
up evidence of money changing hands, but it did turn up plenty of
useful information about the wrangling over the sugar quota in Congress
-- information that an FBI memo concluded "contributed heavily to the
administration's success" in passing its own preferred legislation.
In
the FISA debate, Bush administration officials oppose any explicit
rules against "reverse targeting" Americans in conversations with
noncitizens, though they say they'd never do it.
But Lyndon
Johnson found the tactic useful when he wanted to know what promises
then-candidate Richard Nixon might be making to our allies in South
Vietnam through confidant Anna Chenault. FBI officials worried that
directly tapping Chenault would put the bureau "in a most untenable and
embarrassing position," so they recorded her conversations with her
Vietnamese contacts.
Johnson famously heard recordings of King's
conversations and personal liaisons with various women. Less well known
is that he received wiretap reports on King's strategy conferences with
other civil rights leaders, hoping to use the information to block
their efforts to seat several Mississippi delegates at the 1964
Democratic National Convention. Johnson even complained that it was
taking him "hours each night" to read the reports.
Few
presidents were quite as brazen as Nixon, whom the Church Committee
found had "authorized a program of wiretaps which produced for the
White House purely political or personal information unrelated to
national security." They didn't need to be, perhaps. Through programs
such as the National Security Agency's Operation Shamrock (1947 to
1975), which swept up international telegrams en masse, the government
already had a vast store of data, and presidents could easily run "name
checks" on opponents using these existing databases.
It's
probably true that ordinary citizens uninvolved in political activism
have little reason to fear being spied on, just as most Americans
seldom need to invoke their 1st Amendment right to freedom of speech.
But we understand that the 1st Amendment serves a dual role: It
protects the private right to speak your mind, but it serves an even
more important structural function, ensuring open debate about matters
of public importance. You might not care about that first function if
you don't plan to say anything controversial. But anyone who lives in a
democracy, who is subject to its laws and affected by its policies,
ought to care about the second.
Harvard University legal scholar
William Stuntz has argued that the framers of the Constitution viewed
the 4th Amendment as a mechanism for protecting political dissent. In
England, agents of the crown had ransacked the homes of pamphleteers
critical of the king -- something the founders resolved that the
American system would not countenance.
In that light, the
security-versus-privacy framing of the contemporary FISA debate seems
oddly incomplete. Your personal phone calls and e-mails may be of
limited interest to the spymasters of Langley and Ft. Meade. But if you
think an executive branch unchecked by courts won't turn its "national
security" surveillance powers to political ends -- well, it would be a
first.
Julian Sanchez is a Washington writer who studies privacy and
surveillance.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times