In lieu of a Sunday Discussion Group, I thought it best to jump right into the big news coming out of the Bush administration. Apparently, in carefully-placed leaks to the NYT and the WaPo, the Bush gang has a new defense to protect Attorney General Alberto Gonzales from perjury charges. Not surprisingly, it’s a weak and wholly unpersuasive defense.
Just to provide the context, remember that Gonzales testified in an open hearing that “there has not been any serious disagreement about the program that the president has confirmed.” At the same time, Robert Mueller and James Comey, among others, have said there was considerable disagreement, which nearly prompted mass resignations. It’s one of several reasons Senate Dems want a special prosecutor to investigate Gonzales on perjury.
According to the new leak(s), the disagreement wasn’t over Bush’s legally-dubious surveillance program; the disagreement was over Bush’s legally-dubious data-mining program.
A 2004 dispute over the National Security Agency’s secret surveillance program that led top Justice Department officials to threaten resignation involved computer searches through massive electronic databases, according to current and former officials briefed on the program. […]
The N.S.A.’s data mining has previously been reported. But the disclosure that concerns about it figured in the March 2004 debate helps to clarify the clash this week between Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales and senators who accused him of misleading Congress and called for a perjury investigation.
The confrontation in 2004 led to a showdown in the hospital room of then Attorney General John Ashcroft, where Mr. Gonzales, the White House counsel at the time, and Andrew H. Card Jr., then the White House chief of staff, tried to get the ailing Mr. Ashcroft to reauthorize the N.S.A. program.
If the dispute chiefly involved data mining, rather than eavesdropping, Mr. Gonzales’ defenders may maintain that his narrowly crafted answers, while legalistic, were technically correct.
The NYT piece gives the most favorable White House spin imaginable, but the news hardly exonerates the Attorney General. In fact, it’s incredibly weak.
First, because data mining was part of the NSA program, and Gonzales swore there was no “serious disagreement” over the program, it’s a tough sell.
Second, Anonymous Liberal explained that the defense doesn’t even match the controversy particularly well.
For this defense to even arguably work, it has to be true that Comey and Goldsmith’s objections were limited to data-mining activities and in no way pertained to any of the activities the President confirmed in December of 2005. But this graf from the Post piece seems to undercut that claim:
“One source familiar with the NSA program said yesterday that there were widespread concerns inside the intelligence community in 2003 and 2004 over how much Internet and telephone data mining could occur, as well as about the NSA’s direct intercepts of communications without court approval.” (emphasis added)
That last part, the concern over warrantless direct intercepts, certainly seems to relate to the activities the President disclosed. Moreover, if prior reporting is to be believed, Comey and Goldsmith’s concerns had to do with the legal justification for operating outside of FISA. If that’s true, then their concerns were not limited to data-mining, but applied to virtually everything the Bush administration was doing.
And third, Josh Marshall notes that the story seems to be missing pertinent information, as if the White House leaked the part they thought would help Gonzales, but kept the more damaging details secret.
As you can see, we now have the first hint of what was at the center of the Ashcroft hospital room showdown. According to the New York Times, what the White House calls the ‘terrorist surveillance [i.e., warrantless wiretap] program’ originally included some sort of largescale data mining.
I don’t doubt that this is true as far as it goes. But this must only scratch the surface because, frankly, at least as presented, this just doesn’t account for the depth of the controversy or the fact that so many law-and-order DOJ types were willing to resign over what was happening. Something’s missing. […]
[R]emember that the White House has been willing to go to the public and make a positive argument for certain surveillance procedures (notably evasion of the FISA Court strictures) which appear to be illegal on their face. This must be much more serious and apparently something all but the most ravenous Bush authoritarians would never accept. It is supposedly no longer even happening and hasn’t been for a few years. So disclosing it could not jeopardize a program. The only reason that suggests itself is that the political and legal consequences of disclosure are too grave to allow.
Or, to make a long story short, the new leak from the Bush gang doesn’t get anyone off the hook. The A.G. still lied, the White House still engaged in a legally dubious surveillance effort. Today’s news is an important development, but it’s an easily-cleared speed-bump on the road to the truth.