For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
August 6, 2007
Fact Sheet: The Protect America Act of 2007
President Bush Signs Legislation Modernizing Foreign Intelligence Law To
Better Protect America
"We know that information we have been able to acquire about foreign
threats will help us detect and prevent attacks on our homeland. Mike
McConnell, the Director of National Intelligence, has assured me that this
bill gives him the most immediate tools he needs to defeat the intentions
of our enemies. And so in signing this legislation today I am heartened to
know that his critical work will be strengthened and we will be better
armed to prevent attacks in the future."
President George W. Bush, 8/5/07
The Protect America Act Modernizes The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA) To Give Intelligence Professionals The Tools They Urgently Need
To Gather Information About Our Enemies, While Protecting The Civil
Liberties Of Americans. The Act, passed with bipartisan support in the
House and the Senate, restores FISA to its original focus on protecting the
rights of Americans, while not acting as an obstacle to conducting foreign
intelligence surveillance on foreign targets located overseas.
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Changes In Technology Since 1978 Had The Effect Of Expanding The Scope Of
FISA's Coverage To Include Intelligence Collection Efforts That Congress
Excluded From The Law's Requirements. This unintended expansion of FISA's
scope meant the government, in a significant number of cases, needed to
obtain a court order to collect foreign intelligence information against a
target located overseas. This created an unnecessary obstacle to our
Intelligence Community's ability to gain real-time information about the
intent of our enemies overseas and diverted scarce resources that would be
better spent safeguarding the civil liberties of people in the United
States, not foreign terrorists who wish to do us harm.
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The Government Should Not Have To Obtain A Court Order To Conduct
Surveillance On Foreign Intelligence Targets Located In Foreign Countries.
This was not Congress' intent when it enacted FISA. As the Director of
National Intelligence stated, continuing to operate under this outdated law
meant our intelligence professionals were "missing a significant amount of
foreign intelligence that we should be collecting to protect our country."
The Protect America Act Modernizes FISA In Four Important Ways
- The Act Permits Our Intelligence Professionals To More Effectively
Collect Foreign Intelligence Information On Targets In Foreign Lands
Without First Receiving Court Approval. The Act clarifies that the
definition of electronic surveillance in FISA shall not be construed to
encompass surveillance directed at a person reasonably believed to be
located outside the U.S. This clarification restores FISA to its original
intent and means intelligence professionals will not have to go to court in
order to collect foreign intelligence on an overseas target who may be
planning to attack the U.S.
- The Act Provides A Role For The FISA Court In Reviewing The
Procedures The Intelligence Community Uses To Ensure That Surveillance
Efforts Target Persons Located Overseas. The Attorney General is required
to submit to the FISA court the procedures by which intelligence
professionals will determine that the authorized acquisitions of foreign
intelligence do not constitute electronic surveillance that is, the
procedures by which the government determines that the acquisitions are
directed at persons reasonably believed to be outside the United States.
- The Act Provides For The FISA Court To Direct Third Parties To
Assist The Intelligence Community In Its Collection Efforts. The Act
permits the Director of National Intelligence and the Attorney General to
direct third parties to provide the information, facilities, and assistance
necessary to conduct surveillance of foreign intelligence targets located
overseas.
- The Act Protects Third Parties From Private Lawsuits Arising From
Assistance They Provide The Government. No cause of action may be brought
in any court against any person for complying with a directive to provide
the Government with all information, facilities, or assistance necessary to
accomplish the acquisition of foreign intelligence information.
Our Work Is Not Done This Act Is A Temporary, Narrowly Focused Statute
To Deal With The Most Immediate Needs Of The Intelligence Community To
Protect The Country. When Congress returns in September, the Intelligence
Committees and leaders in both parties will need to complete work on the
comprehensive reforms requested by Director of National Intelligence Mike
McConnell, including the important issues of providing meaningful liability
protection to those who are alleged to have assisted our Nation following
the attacks of September 11, 2001.
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Source: The White House