U.S.

Senate judiciary committee sets January hearing on NSA surveillance

Members of the White House task force that reviewed the NSA's practices will appear before the committee on Jan. 14

An independent panel has recommended the NSA end some parts of its bulk data collection program.
Reuters

In the wake of the National Security Agency (NSA) spying scandal, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., announced Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press" that the Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing in January on the findings of a presidential task force's report reviewing the agency's monitoring and data-collection program.

"The first public exposure to what the panel said is going to be before the Senate Judiciary Committee in a couple weeks, and we are going to go into it at great length," Leahy, who is chair of the committee, said on the show.

President Barack Obama appointed the five-person task force to review the NSA's wide-ranging surveillance program in the wake of controversy surrounding the spying, sparked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden's release of information about the program.

All five members of the task force will appear before the Senate committee on Jan. 14, according to a press release from Leahy's office.

The panel has recommended sweeping changes to U.S. government surveillance programs, including limiting the bulk collection of Americans' phone records by stripping the NSA of its ability to store that data in its own facilities. Court orders would be required before the information could be searched.

In the 300-page report released Wednesday, the five-member panel also proposed greater scrutiny of decisions to spy on friendly foreign leaders, a practice that has outraged U.S. allies around the world.

Click for the latest news and analysis on the NSA's surveillance program.

While the panel's 46 recommendations broadly call for more oversight of the government's vast spying network, few programs would be ended. There's also no guarantee that the most stringent recommendations will be adopted by President Barack Obama, who authorized the panel but is not obligated to implement its findings.

The task force said it sought to balance the nation's security with the public's privacy rights and insisted the country would not be put at risk if more oversight was put in place. In fact, the report concludes that telephone information collected in bulk by the NSA and used in terror investigations "was not essential to preventing attacks."

"We're not saying the struggle against terrorism is over or that we can dismantle the mechanisms that we have put in place to safeguard the country," said Richard Clarke, a task force member and former government counterterrorism official. "What we are saying is those mechanisms can be more transparent."

The review group was set up as part of the White House response to leaks from Snowden about the scope of the government surveillance programs. Snowden is now a fugitive from U.S. authorities and was granted temporary asylum by Russia. The White House is conducting its own intelligence review, and Obama is expected to announce his decisions in January.

The White House had planned to release the panel's report next month, but officials said they decided to make it public early to avoid inaccurate reporting about its content. It coincided with increased political pressure on Obama following a blistering ruling Monday from a federal judge who declared that the NSA's vast phone data collection was likely unconstitutional.

The judge, Richard Leon, called the NSA's operation "Orwellian" in scale and said there was little evidence that its gargantuan inventory of phone records from American users had prevented a terrorist attack. However, he stopped his ruling from taking effect, pending a likely government appeal.

Al Jazeera and The Associated Press

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Topics
NSA, NSA Leaks
People
Edward Snowden

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