Trying to fact check every speech Bush delivers is too daunting a task for a humble blogger — a typical event includes far too much mendacity to bother. But since yesterday’s speech was supposed to be the president’s latest comprehensive defense of his warrantless-search program, it’s probably worth taking a moment to document the more obvious problems.
Oddly enough, for a White House intent on launching a “campaign” on the NSA program, Bush didn’t have much to say. In all, he only devoted about 500 words to the issue yesterday, and they came at the end of his prepared remarks, presented almost as an afterthought. Nevertheless, if this was the president’s best pitch, he has a problem.
* “I repeat to you, even though you hear words, ‘domestic spying,’ these are not phone calls within the United States.” — According to officials at the NSA, some of the calls were purely domestic and the agency sometimes has technical difficulties knowing where the callers are located.
* “And if [an al Qaeda affiliate is] making a phone call in the United States, it seems like to me we want to know why.” — Of course we do. Get a warrant, allow for some oversight, and this isn’t an issue.
* “I’m mindful of your civil liberties, and so I had all kinds of lawyers review the process.” — All of the lawyers that reviewed the process were the administration’s own attorneys. The checks were supposed to come from the judiciary, not the administration approving of its own efforts. For that matter, Department of Justice officials including John Ashcroft, James Comey, and Robert Mueller all balked at the programs legal foundations, but Bush went ahead with it anyway.
* “We briefed members of the United States Congress, one of whom was Senator Pat Roberts, about this program.” — Those would be the same briefings the non-partisan Congressional Research Service found to be illegal. For that matter, these are also the same briefings in which lawmakers’ concerns were ignored. White House spin notwithstanding, there was no oversight, and the “briefings” were little more than cursory, incomplete notifications to a handful lawmakers whose concerns were rendered irrelevant.
* “Predecessors of mine have used that same constitutional authority.” — No, they haven’t.
Just another day in Bushville….