|
.  Bush
Backs Big Brother Database
A forthcoming U.S. government database will compile information from
all federal agencies and the private sector on people deemed possible
terrorist threats, President Bush said in his State of the Union address.
Mr. Bush used the speech to announce the Terrorist Threat Integration
Center (TTIC), a mammoth data-collection project intended to fuse
information collected domestically by police and internationally by spy
agencies.
"Our government must have the very best information possible, and
we will use it to make sure the right people are in the right places to
protect all our citizens," Bush said to applause from the joint
houses of Congress.
The White House offered few details about how TTIC will evolve, but
critics of an existing data-mining program under development by the U.S.
government were quick to draw comparisons to the controversial Total
Information Awareness (TIA) project. Last week, citing privacy concerns,
the U.S. Senate voted unanimously to slap restrictions on that agency,
which is run by Adm. John Poindexter at the Defense Department.
"It's potentially a huge repository of information concerning
American citizens," David Sobel, general counsel of the Electronic
Privacy Information Center, said of the TTIC. "There's nothing in
what has been made publicly available that would contain a limitation on
such collection. To what extent, if any, will this system collect and
maintain information on U.S. citizens?"
The Justice Department did not immediately respond to questions on
Wednesday about what information on Americans would be accessible to the
TTIC. One government official with knowledge of the center, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, said it was not designed to supplant Mr.
Poindexter's efforts but was instead "an effort by the president to
bring together elements of agencies that are focused on terrorism."
Mr. Bush's announcement of the TTIC is the latest step in a massive
push after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to increase data-sharing
between U.S. police and spy agencies. Congress removed many barriers to
data exchange in the USA Patriot Act, and Attorney General John Ashcroft
in September 2002 announced rules designed to formalize the "sharing
of information between federal law enforcement and the U.S. intelligence
community."
Mr. Ashcroft applauded the project in a statement distributed after Mr.
Bush's speech. "The TTIC will ensure that terrorist threat-related
information is integrated and analyzed comprehensively across agency lines
and then provided to the federal, state and local officials who need it
most," Mr. Ashcroft said. "We will be able to optimize our
ability to analyze information, form the most comprehensive possible
threat picture and develop the plans we need to prevent terrorist
attacks."
The project's head, once selected, will report to CIA Director George
Tenet. The center will operate in collaboration with the FBI and the new
Department of Homeland Security and have access to "all intelligence
information" available to the government, including data collected by
the National Security Agency and Defense Intelligence Agency.
TTIC also will "maintain an up-to-date database of known and
suspected terrorists that will be accessible to federal and nonfederal
officials and entities, as appropriate," according to a fact sheet
prepared by the White House.
Lee Tien, an attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF),
said: "Maybe their strategy is to duck all those questions and go
ahead with programs that don't have any connection to Poindexter and get
away from the swamp that TIA is in. It sounds to me that in anticipation
of folks like [Sen. Chuck] Grassley, who have complained about the Defense
Department being involved domestically, they're trying to ward off that
criticism."
Mr. Grassley, a prominent Republican and chairman of the Senate Finance
committee, this month lent his voice to the growing criticism of the
Pentagon's TIA project. Mr. Grassley said he was concerned that the FBI
was closer to using that project than it had previously acknowledged. Last
year, Mr. Bush chose Mr. Poindexter to oversee TIA, a move that drew sharp
criticism because of the former admiral's central involvement in the
Iran-Contra scandal.
A spokeswoman for Mr. Grassley said the senator would review the TTIC
proposal but did not immediately have a comment.
It's not clear how much data-mining TTIC will do, but the White House's
description says it will "fuse and analyze all-source
information" and ensure that "information from all sources is
shared, integrated, and analyzed seamlessly."
Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., has introduced a bill to regulate
"data-mining technology" in use by the government that could, if
enacted, apply to TTIC.
The TTIC is charged both with overseeing a "national
counterterrorism tasking and requirements system" and with
maintaining shared databases.
That means the center will be able to order the FBI, CIA or NSA to
collect information on someone, according to Jim Dempsey, the executive
director of the Center for Democracy and Technology.
"The fact that you can task and that you can access the raw
intelligence, the raw take of the collectors, makes it almost irrelevant
that you don't have your own collection," Mr. Dempsey said.
"This presents the centralization of control over collection and
access to information on a scale we've never seen before."
Copyright ©
2003 Bell Globemedia Interactive Inc


Join our
Daily News Headlines Email Digest
|
|
Information
Clearing House
Daily
News Headlines Digest |
HOME
COPYRIGHT
NOTICE
|