March 16, 2008...8:45 pm

Bush Weakens Espionage Oversight

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By Charlie Savage, Boston Globe (via Common Dreams)

WASHINGTON - Almost 32 years to the day after President Ford created an independent Intelligence Oversight Board made up of private citizens with top-level clearances to ferret out illegal spying activities, President Bush issued an executive order that stripped the board of much of its authority.

The White House did not say why it was necessary to change the rules governing the board when it issued Bush’s order late last month. But critics say Bush’s order is consistent with a pattern of steps by the administration that have systematically scaled back Watergate-era intelligence reforms.

“It’s quite clear that the Bush administration officials who were around in the 1970s are settling old scores now,” said Tim Sparapani, senior legislative counsel to the American Civil Liberties Union. “Here they are even preventing oversight within the executive branch. They have closed the books on the post-Watergate era.”

Ford created the board following a 1975-76 investigation by Congress into domestic spying, assassination operations, and other abuses by intelligence agencies. The probe prompted fierce battles between Congress and the Ford administration, whose top officials included Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and the current president’s father, George H. W. Bush.

To blunt proposals for new laws imposing greater congressional oversight of intelligence matters, Ford enacted his own reforms with an executive order that went into effect on March 1, 1976. Among them, he created the Intelligence Oversight Board to serve as a watchdog over spying agencies.

“I believe [the changes] will eliminate abuses and questionable activities on the part of the foreign intelligence agencies while at the same time permitting them to get on with their vital work of gathering and assessing information,” Ford told Congress.

The board’s investigations and reports have been mostly kept secret. But the Clinton administration provided a rare window into the panel’s capabilities in 1996 by publishing a board report faulting the CIA for not adequately informing Congress about putting known torturers and killers in Guatemala on its payroll.

But Bush downsized the board’s mandate to be an aggressive watchdog against such problems in an executive order issued on Feb. 29, the eve of the anniversary of the day Ford’s order took effect. The White House said the timing of the new order was “purely coincidental.”

Under the old rules, whenever the oversight board learned of intelligence activity that it believed might be “unlawful or contrary to executive order,” it had a duty to notify both the president and the attorney general. But Bush’s order deleted the board’s authority to refer matters to the Justice Department for a criminal investigation, and the new order said the board should notify the president only if other officials are not already “adequately” addressing the problem.

Bush’s order also terminated the board’s authority to oversee each intelligence agency’s general counsel and inspector general, and it erased a requirement that each inspector general file a report with the board every three months. Now only the agency directors will decide whether to report any potential lawbreaking to the panel, and they have no schedule for checking in.

Gutted the Intelligence Oversight Board like a fish. Now, if the various intelligence heads decide they need to report something on themselves (heh), they report directly to the director of national intelligence — one of their own.

This president just does what he damn well pleases, and covers his hiney with a brand-spankin’ new executive order. Assassinate al Qaeda suspects? Yeah, if we wanna. Wiretap American citizens? Any time we want. Authorize spies to ignore executive orders? You bet.

Frederick A. O. Schwarz Jr.: “What the Bush administration has systematically done is to try to limit both internal oversight - things like the Intelligence Oversight Board - and effective external oversight by the Congress,” Schwarz said, adding, “It’s profoundly disappointing if you understand American history, and it’s profoundly harmful to the United States.”

I’ve got news for you, Mr Schwartz, they aren’t trying to limit oversight — they have limited said oversight.

Disappointed? How about infuriated? Outraged? Disgusted?

Read the whole article here.

5 Comments

  • It is quite apparent that the only ones who are infuriated, outraged, and disgusted, are the ones who have absolutely no ability to correct the situation.

    I keep calling my elected officials asking them if they are going to do something before this administration makes them unemployed. Their staffers snicker and talk to me like I am a lunatic. HD-51 (and I am sure there are others) can do just that.

    Heil Hitler! Oh, wait…I mean Bush.

  • Briseadh na Faire
    March 16, 2008 at 11:12 pm

    There’s nothing a “President” can’t do, once Impeachment is off the table.

    Maybe the Ruling Elite already figure a McCain “Presidency” is in the bag. I can’t imagine them willing to had over this kind of power to either Hillery or Obama.

  • That’s why I’ve been so suspicious of the RNC running that crew of bozos. On the one hand, it looks like they’re trying to throw the election, but on the other hand, it looks like they’ve got in the bag.

  • It sure feels like something really creepy and insidious is going on. Six months ago I would have said there was no way the GOP would win this election. Now I am not so sure. I don’t know if it is by accident, by egos, or by design.

  • Bush = Hoover,
    Cheney = Hitler,
    two for the price of one!

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