[Congressional Record: June 24, 2008 (Senate)]
[Page S6006-S6007]
FISA AMENDMENTS ACT OF 2008
Mr. KYL. Mr. President, I rise today to speak in favor of the passage
of the FISA Amendments Act of 2008. This is a law that our Nation
needs. The most important change made by the pending
[[Page S6007]]
bill is to allow immediate and real-time surveillance of overseas
targets as soon as they become apparent in the course of a foreign-
intelligence investigation. FISA had never been intended to block
surveillance of such targets, but a 2007 FISA court decision
interpreted FISA to apply to even foreign-to-foreign communications
that are routed through the United States. Because of changes in
technology and U.S. dominance in the telecommunications industry, even
phone calls from Afghanistan to Pakistan could be routed through the
United States. As a result, a FISA order could be required before
communications between two suspected al-Qaida members outside the
United States could be monitored.
This system made overseas surveillance a practical impossibility in
many cases and caused valuable intelligence to be lost. Our best tool
against al-Qaida and other terrorists is intelligence; it is absolutely
critical that we gather whatever intelligence is available.
In the summer of 2007, Congress enacted a 6-month restoration of U.S.
agents' surveillance capabilities with the Protect America Act. Today--
over 4 months after the PAA expired--Congress finally acts to extend
this surveillance authority for another 4\1/2\ years. I am heartened to
note that the Attorney General and the Director of National
Intelligence both strongly support this bill and believe that it
provides them with the tools they need to gather intelligence about
America's foreign enemies.
Critically, this bill allows immediate and real-time surveillance of
foreign targets located overseas whenever the Justice Department and
the intelligence community find that, without immediate surveillance,
``intelligence important to the national security of the United States
may be lost or not timely acquired and time does not permit the
issuance'' of a court order prior to such surveillance. This provision,
in a new section 702(c)(2) of FISA, addresses the exact problem that
intelligence agencies faced in 2007. Congress expects our intelligence
agents to use every tool that is technologically available to monitor
al-Qaida and those associated with it. With this reform, we make such
surveillance possible.
I also think that it is important that, in new section 702(i), the
FISA Amendments Act allows pending surveillance certifications to be
immediately amended to allow surveillance of new targets related to or
growing out of previous surveillance. This should help to reduce the
paperwork burden of FISA, allowing our agents to focus more time on
monitoring the enemy and less on filling out forms. Also, the judicial
review authorized by this section is appropriately limited and
recognizes the intelligence community's primary role in deciding what
foreign targets to monitor. The court's role is limited to reviewing
whether certifications are procedurally proper and are accompanied by
reasonable procedures to limit potential impact on U.S. persons. Thus,
courts could block any obviously bad faith or improper use of foreign
surveillance that might affect U.S. persons, but courts will not be
second-guessing intelligence judgments, and should not be imposing
procedures or making demands that will consume intelligence resources
and divert agents from their primary mission. This limited role should
also allow the FISA Court to decide these cases very quickly,
minimizing the burden on both the intelligence community and on those
judges who are assigned to the FISA Court.
I should also note that this bill contains important provisions that
will allow all of the lawsuits against telecommunications companies to
be dismissed upon certification by the Attorney General. Foreign
intelligence surveillance is a matter that our Constitution entrusts to
the executive in consultation with Congress, not to private litigants
and the judiciary. These lawsuits all should have been dismissed
immediately; this bill will finally produce that result. Title II is a
critical part of this bill that should have been enacted long ago.
Frankly, I find it odd that much of the early criticism of this bill
has been directed at this of all provisions. Those who are opposed to
the President's efforts to monitor al-Qaida's communications after 9/11
should take their argument to the President, not to the private
companies that patriotically complied with government requests to help
this country. Monitoring of al-Qaida's electronic communications cannot
be conducted without the cooperation of private companies. The general
rule that private citizens acting in good faith to assist law
enforcement are immune from suit has deep roots and serves important
public policies. As Justice Cardozo noted in the 1928 case of
Babbington v. Yellow Taxi Corporation, the rule ensures that ``the
citizenry may be called upon to enforce the justice of the State, not
faintly and with lagging steps, but honestly and bravely and with
whatever implements and facilities are convenient and at hand.''
Finally, I should note that this bill's so-called ``exclusive means''
provision, like the similar provision in the 1978 FISA, is hortatory
verbiage that obviously yields the Constitutional authority of the
President. The FISA Court of Review, in its 2002 decision in In re
Sealed Cases, made the point:
The [Fourth Circuit in the Truong case], as did all the
other courts to have decided the issue, held that the
President did have inherent authority to conduct warrantless
searches to obtain foreign intelligence information. . . . We
take for granted that the President does have that authority
and, assuming that is so, FISA could not encroach on the
President's constitutional power.
Indeed, every administration since FISA was enacted--including the
Carter administration--has concluded that Congress cannot take away the
President's power to monitor foreign enemies of the United States
without a warrant, and that to the extent that FISA purports to do so,
it is unconstitutional. The Constitution's framers vested the executive
with primary responsibility and authority to protect the United States
from foreign attack. Section 102 repeats FISA's ``exclusive-means''
claims, yet provides in the same section of the bill, at subsection
(c), an amendment to the immunity provisions for electronic
communications service providers in 18 U.S.C. 2511(2) to require that
certifications conferring immunity identify the ``specific statutory
provision'' that allows the surveillance, but only if the certification
``for assistance to obtain foreign intelligence information is based on
statutory authority.'' This provision, in the same section making
claims of exclusive means, acknowledges that not all surveillance is
based on statutory authority, but may, instead, be based on the
executive's constitutional authority. If this nation again finds itself
under attack as it did on September 11, those in charge of our security
should not conclude from the exclusive-means language in section 102
that they may not act in any constitutionally appropriate way to
protect this country.
Finally, the ``sunset'' provision in section 403, which will repeal
the authorities in the bill at the end of 2012, is problematic. As the
Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence have said:
``[t]he Intelligence Community operates more effectively when the rules
governing our intelligence professionals' ability to track our enemies
are firmly established.'' The need to modernize FISA has been
extensively debated since 2006, including numerous hearings, briefings,
and floor debates that ``involved the discussion in open settings of
extraordinary information dealing with sensitive intelligence
operations.'' As the Attorney General and the Director of National
Intelligence have pointed out, ``[e]very time we repeat this process it
risks exposing our intelligence sources and methods to our
adversaries.''
Despite these flaws, the bill before us is needed. It is very similar
to the bill that the Senate passed earlier this Congress and on which
the House refused to act. It has passed the House by a 3-to-1 margin,
and I expect that we will see a similar margin in the Senate, as the
bill already appears to have gained the support of some Senators who
opposed last year's bill. I look forward to the passage of this bill.
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