In Latest NSA Spying Scandal, World Learns Obama Lied Again; Congress Furious it Was Spied On

Tyler Durden's picture

In January 2014, during the scandalous aftermath of Edward Snowden’s NSA snooping revelations, one which revealed the US had been spying on its closest allies for years, Obama banned U.S. eavesdropping on leaders of close friends and allies and promised he would begin reining in the vast collection of Americans’ phone data in a series of limited reforms.

Below are the key highlights from his January 17, 2014 speech:

Our capabilities help protect not only our nation, but our friends and our allies, as well.  But our efforts will only be effective if ordinary citizens in other countries have confidence that the United States respects their privacy, too.  And the leaders of our close friends and allies deserve to know that if I want to know what they think about an issue, I’ll pick up the phone and call them, rather than turning to surveillance.  In other words, just as we balance security and privacy at home, our global leadership demands that we balance our security requirements against our need to maintain the trust and cooperation among people and leaders around the world.

 

The bottom line is that people around the world, regardless of their nationality, should know that the United States is not spying on ordinary people who don’t threaten our national security, and that we take their privacy concerns into account in our policies and procedures.  This applies to foreign leaders as well.

The president lied, and the privacy concerns of “people around the world” have clearly never once been taken into account in Obama’s policies and procedures.

Just three days prior, on January 14 2014, Vermont Senator and current Democratic presidential candidate, Bernie Sanders had written an email to then NSA Chief Keith Alexander asking if the NSA has or is currently spying “on members of Congress or other American elected officials.” The letter went on to define spying as including “gathering metadata on calls made from official or personal phones, content from websites visited or emails sent, or collecting any other data from a third party not made available to the general public in the regular course of business.”

The response: the National Security Agency’s director, responding to questions from independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, says the government is not spying on Congress…. “Nothing NSA does can fairly be characterized as ‘spying on members of Congress or other American elected officials.” Alexander wrote in the letter, dated Friday and released Tuesday.

The former NSA head also lied.

We know this because in the latest WSJ report on the NSA’s spying scandal from this evening, we find that even though Obama announced two years he would curtail eavesdropping on friendly heads of state, the spying continues and “behind the scenes, the White House decided to keep certain allies under close watch. Topping the list was Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.”

The spying, or rather counterespionage, was in order to facilitate the US-Iran nuclear negotiations and deal which took place this summer over Netanyahu’s firm objection to scuttle any lifting of the Iran embargo (an embargo which Iran had skirted for years by importing billions of dollars worth of gold from Turkey via Dubai).

That in itself would not be quite so scandalous considering the frosty diplomatic relations between the two nations in recent years, if it didn’t also involve the direct and indirect spying by the NSA and the executive branch, on members of Congress.

The National Security Agency’s targeting of Israeli leaders and officials also swept up the contents of some of their private conversations with U.S. lawmakers and American-Jewish groups. That raised fears—an “Oh-s— moment,” one senior U.S. official said—that the executive branch would be accused of spying on Congress.

 

White House officials believed the intercepted information could be valuable to counter Mr. Netanyahu’s campaign. They also recognized that asking for it was politically risky. So, wary of a paper trail stemming from a request, the White House let the NSA decide what to share and what to withhold, officials said. “We didn’t say, ‘Do it,’ ” a senior U.S. official said. “We didn’t say, ‘Don’t do it.’ ”

 

* * *

 

The NSA reports allowed administration officials to peer inside Israeli efforts to turn Congress against the deal. Mr. Dermer was described as coaching unnamed U.S. organizations—which officials could tell from the context were Jewish-American groups—on lines of argument to use with lawmakers, and Israeli officials were reported pressing lawmakers to oppose the deal.

Which explains why for the past two years the Obama administration, which knew this moment was inevitable, has been maintaining an attitude of abject incompetence, claiming it had no idea anything like this happened. In fact, as the Bezos Post reported in late 2013, “Obama didn’t know about surveillance of U.S.-allied world leaders until summer” of 2013. That too was a lie. Quote the WSJ:

After Mr. Obama’s 2008 presidential election, U.S. intelligence officials gave his national-security team a one-page questionnaire on priorities. Included on the form was a box directing intelligence agencies to focus on “leadership intentions,” a category that relies on electronic spying to monitor world leaders. The NSA was so proficient at monitoring heads of state that it was common for the agency to deliver a visiting leader’s talking points to the president in advance. “Who’s going to look at that box and say, ‘No, I don’t want to know what world leaders are saying,’ ” a former Obama administration official said.

There is much more in the full WSJ article, but here are the salient points: Obama lied, again, and despite profuse promises that the NSA’s espionage machinery would be limited, nothing changed. It is safe to assume that nothing has changed to this day despite further lies from the administration to the contrary.

One thing that is different this time, however, from all previous administration lies is that now Congress may have no choice but to retaliate against the executive branch’s illegal snooping. Ironically, none other than Former Chairman House Intelligence Committee, Pete Hoekstra, a person who had been most vocal in his support of the NSA’s spying on the American people, is most appalled as his recent tweet reveals.

NSA and Obama officials need to be investigated and prosecuted if any truth to WSJ reports. NSA loses all credibility. Scary.

As for the official White House National Security Council, the response is “no comment”:

“We are not going to comment on any specific alleged intelligence activities,” says @NSCPress in response to @wsj report on surveillance.

This may well be because Obama was on the golf course in Hawaii when the WSJ article hit.

Finally, while all of the above is at this point largely expected if anything, what is surprising is that as the WSJ notes, among the “allies” excluded from the protected list, were “Recep Tayyip Erdogan, president of NATO ally Turkey, which allowed the NSA to spy on their communications at the discretion of top officials.”

In other words the Obama administration has been fully aware Turkey has been providing not only training, weapons and supplies to ISIS, it is also Turkey, and especially people from Erdogan’s own family, who served as the source of financial support for the CIA-created Islamic State, whose only purpose from the beginning was to topple Bashar al Assad.

Actually scratch that: did we say “surprising”? We meant precisely the opposite.


 

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11 Comments
flash
flash
December 30, 2015 7:35 am

All politicians lies. It’s a damn profession built on lies.

Hollow man
Hollow man
December 30, 2015 7:39 am

Which no one will challenge in any real way.

The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
December 30, 2015 7:46 am

Couldn’t have happened to a nicer group of criminals…

flash
flash
December 30, 2015 9:13 am

But then again, who’s watching the watchers watching Cuck Congress fuck US up the ass with national foreign policy formulated in Israel?

http://voxday.blogspot.com/2015/06/transcript-available.html

VOX: Speaking of the US, I am curious to know what the general opinion in Israel is of the American neocons who, like you said, have been trying to overthrow Assad. They have overturned the Ukrainian government, the Libyan government, the Iraqi government, etc. What is the general view of the neocons in Israel?

MVC: Oh, we love them. The Israelis are very happy to fight the Arabs and the Iranians with American blood. During the first Gulf War, Israel was then under Yitzhak Shamir and did whatever it could to encourage an American invasion of Iraq. I wouldn’t say that this was decisive but they tried. It was the same when the Americans invaded Iraq for the second time. It was the same when Americans clashed with Iran over nuclear weapons. Each time you can see this very consistently. You can see the Israeli Right and, to some extent, even the Left say okay, this is lovely, we are going to let the Americans put the chestnuts in the fire for us.

Myself, I must say, that I dislike this policy very much. But certainly most Israelis like it. They like to be on the side of the strong as I see it. They push America as much as they can into these ventures. Just today I saw a famous t-shirt that says “Don’t worry America, Israel is behind you.” I also know that some Americans, like Pat Buchanan, have been writing that these lousy Israelis have been trying to use American for their own purposes and have unfortunately they have succeeded. So, personally I am not happy about this policy. I think that it may well one day act as a boomerang.

VOX: Do you think it is bad for Israel to be dependent in that way?

MVC: Yes, because, as we say in Hebrew, “the one who’s got the money has the say.” It’s bad in several ways, it is bad in the sense that we are tilting too much in the Republican direction. That is a bad thing in my view. It’s not bipartisan. There is a danger that one day support for Israel will probably fade and people will say enough of this. They will say Israelis are exploiting us with American-Jewish help. They are exploiting us for their own purposes. Let them go and fight their own wars. I have been warned more than once by my American friends that this is one day going to happen. It hasn’t happened yet but it is going to happen one day and it worries me. Frankly, it worries me.

VOX: Yeah, you don’t want to use your allies on a war that you don’t need and then not have their support when you actually need it.

MVC: Exactly.

Anonymous
Anonymous
December 30, 2015 10:05 am

Anyone with free access to all that NSA data -not to mention all the other sources- can get anyone to do whatever they want them to do.

Why do you think certain key Congressthings, Judges and assorted agency chieftains suddenly make decisions of critical importance on some issues that is entirely out of line with their history and their character?

No one is actually who they portray themselves to be, presenting a public image that they need to have people believe in, and most people will go to almost any length to keep who they truly are outside of their public persona a private secret.

suzanna
suzanna
December 30, 2015 11:34 am

MVC: Oh, we love them. The Israelis are very happy to fight the Arabs and the Iranians with American blood. During the first Gulf War, Israel was then under Yitzhak Shamir and did whatever it could to encourage an American invasion of Iraq. I wouldn’t say that this was decisive but they tried. It was the same when the Americans invaded Iraq for the second time. It was the same when Americans clashed with Iran over nuclear weapons. Each time you can see this very consistently. You can see the Israeli Right and, to some extent, even the Left say okay, this is lovely, we are going to let the Americans put the chestnuts in the fire for us.

enough said

suzanna
suzanna
December 30, 2015 11:37 am

sorry flash, I went straight to the link

it is okay to repeat that one response, no?

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
December 30, 2015 8:06 pm

Truth is, this spying has been going on forever. It’s much more robust now due to the tech, but looking into JFK’s murder I found references to spying on chief justice Warren used by the LBJ admin to blackmail Warren to accept the commission chair. After Warren turned LBJ down twice in no uncertain terms, LBJ pulled the rabbit out of the hat…..something about “what happened in Mexico”. Mention of that (whatever it was), turned him around quickly and he accepted.

And, sorry gotta say it once more; any of you leaning toward Trump need to realize he has stated his opinion that Snowden is a traitor and deserves to hang for his deeds. I can’t even imagine the horrible consequences of the NSA under a Trump admin.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
December 31, 2015 1:16 am

Any “fury” being expressed by our congresscritters is purely for show. You’d have to be the most pig ignorant dumb ass on the planet to believe you aren’t being spied on. The total surveillance state is in place and it wasn’t put in place to idle in neutral.

The thing to really fear is when they finally figure out how to distill all that data on demand.

M.I.A.
M.I.A.
December 31, 2015 3:33 am

IS They already have it. Google has recently supplied the NSA with their search engine technology.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
December 31, 2015 3:55 am

MIA, I’ll believe that when the mass roundups begin. It’s just a matter of time though.