Its been shown all over the news media:  last year, NSA Director James 
Clapper was asked point blank by senator Ron Wyden of Oregon testifying in front 
of a senate committee if the United States was collecting information wholesale 
on American citizens ("tens of millions or hundreds of millions of Americans" 
was the way it was asked).  Clapper answered "no". Then added, "not wittingly" 
as if it could ever be in the realm of possibility that the NSA could gather 
information on hundreds of millions of Americans by accident.
Clapper today  tries to defend what is nothing less than out and out 
perjury in front of a congressional committee by saying he answered in "the 
least untruthful manner possible".
That's not good enough. Clapper's answer was completely untruthful. 
From the beginning of the creation of the country 
it's been a point made over and over  by the Founders and those who followed that this is a country of laws not 
men. And the 14th amendment to the constitution says all laws must be applied 
equally to everyone.
Clapper lied to the senate committee, a congressional committee that 
represents the citizens of the United States. It is not good enough to say there 
were secret national security issues involved that could not or should not be 
made public. There are  remedies for that. Its called Executive Session. 
Congress often goes into Executive session or closed session when having 
certain witnesses testify about national security matters that in the national 
interest are best kept from the public at large. But not from members of congress. Clapper could have found some 
way to say that if they wanted to ask question regarding intelligence gathering 
of any kind by the NSA since one question can lead to another, its best to ask those 
questions in executive session.
Clapper didn't. Clapper decided right then and there that the best course 
of action was to lie, to perjure himself before the people's representatives,a 
committee that had legal oversight over what Clapper and the NSA was doing, 
 rather than  do what he was required to do by law which was tell the 
truth.
The irony and the hypocrisy is that Clapper, who broke U.S. laws by lying 
to congress now has his defenders in congress and in the news media who are the 
same people attacking Snowden for breaking U.S. laws and calling him a traitor 
for breaking those laws.
We are now hearing people like Jeff Toobin, Peter King, Dianne 
Feinstein and others in and out of the news media call Snowden a criminal 
because he took an oath and violated it.  But so did Clapper. Which makes him as 
much of a law breaker as Snowden. 
The argument against Snowden made by many including King and Toobin was 
that Snowden had other avenues without having to go to the press, things like 
going to the Inspector General and/or members of congress. But Clapper had other 
avenues too besides committing perjury. He could have asked for an executive or closed 
session.
It should become a question of national debate as much as the surveillence program itself as to whether the country wants to accept the hypocrisy of Rep. Peter King and others who share his opinion, who said of Clapper's 
perjury in an interview with Anderson Cooper, "he was in an unwinnable position answering the question". Didn't 
Snowden think he was in an unwinnable position in his feeling that the NSA 
surveillance went over the line? And wasn't Snowden aware that the head of the agency at the heart of his concerns had openly committed perjury to a congressional committee with impunity and seemingly without concern for personal consequences on the very question and issue Snowden was concerned about? What kind of confidence would that give Snowden that his concerns would be taken seriously? And as pointed out before, Clapper had other avenues open to him besides perjury. As chair of a congressional committee King knows that better than anyone.
 These same people pontificating about what Snowden should have done instead 
of going to the press,  ( it should be noted that congress has passed laws that 
specifically do NOT give whistle blower protetion to a non-government employee like 
Snowden),   have nothing to say about what Clapper should have done when 
questioned under oath. Like request executive session instead of choosing 
perjury. 
In the end, by his perjury Clapper probably reaped what he sowed by Snowden going to the press ( and the foreign press at that) rather than go through channels.
If Clapper isn't indicted for perjury, if the laws are not going to apply 
to him the same way they'd be applied to anyone else lying to congress, then it all becomes a 
mockery of the law, which in some ways, is the issue involving  the Obama administration 
and the NSA in the first place over the wide net gathering of information on every citizen. Even more than 
that, Clapper's perjury gives people more reason than ever not to trust that people like 
Clapper, the person in charge of the NSA wont violate other laws in the future as well.
Its not enough to say Clapper's lie was well intentioned. Snowden's 
disclosures were, as far as he was concerned, well intentioned also. Snowden has 
been called a criminal by Peter King and others because he took an oath and then 
violated that oath. So did Clapper. Clapper took an oath to tell the truth and 
perjured himself to a congressional oversight committee whose function was to 
make sure government agencies and the president himself does not go beyond 
the bounds of the law or the constitution. A  case can be made that as far as 
Americans' freedoms are concerned, what Clapper did was a far worse  crime than 
anything Snowden did. In fact that there is no evidence that anything Snowden 
revealed has damaged the country at all.  
 Senator Dianne Feinstein sounding like a member of the Nixon Administration  called what Snowden did treason,  as did John Boehner, the kind of over reaching, almost preposterous  statement that seems to coincide with the over reaching NSA collection of  information of which she approves.  Re Mike Rogers added his name to the ignorance. It shows once again that we have members of congress who don't have a clue as to what the law really is and who just throw words around for political effect with the same recklessness with which they accuse Snowden since treason has a very specific and narrow definition which is something only applied to someone aiding an enemy with whom the United States is at war. That we have members of congress who are also known as lawmakers who have no idea what the law actually is is verges on the political slapstick. And it is starting to look like Snowden has exposed more than what the NSA was doing -- it's exposing ignorance and hypocrisy in congress and in the media.
Rep. Peter King sounded like he just woke up from a ten year sleep when asked what 
damage Snowden's disclosures caused. He said, incredibly, "now Al-Qaeda knows we 
are spying on them and monitoring their phone calls."
Really? Now they know?  Like they didn't know this for the last 12 
years? 
The only people who didn't know what the NSA was doing with their phone 
records were the barbers and tailors and lawyers and cab drivers and farmers and 
social workers and teachers and clearly many members of congress  in places like Iowa, New York, California, Nebraska, and 
Mississippi,  not Al-Qaeda. They knew.
All this is not to say Clapper is a bad man. Or evil. It is to say he broke the law. And Clapper needs to be held accountable for that like any other citizen. Otherwise the entire 
rule of law, and the laws that supposedly underpin the activities of the NSA in 
the first place and any trust in these government officials to follow the law will lose all credibility. If they haven't already.

 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 

1 comment:
Sign a petition to the White House and take action on Clapper today! Petition at whitehouse.gov
Tweet, forward and share this link!
Post a Comment