President Barack Obama is expected to restrict
National Security Agency access to Americans' phone records and rein in
spying on foreign leaders, according to people familiar with a White
House review of the government's surveillance programs.
Obama could unveil his highly
anticipated decisions as early as next week. On Thursday, the president
is expected to discuss his review with congressional lawmakers, while
his top lawyer plans to meet with privacy groups. Representatives from
tech companies are meeting with White House staff on Friday.
The White House says Obama is still collecting information before making final decisions.
Among the changes Obama is
expected to announce is more oversight of the National Intelligence
Priorities Framework, a classified document that ranks US
intelligence-gathering priorities and is used to make decisions on
scrutiny of foreign leaders. A presidential review board has recommended
increasing the number of policy officials who help establish those
priorities, and that could result in limits on surveillance of allies.
Documents released by former
National Security Agency systems analyst Edward Snowden revealed that
the US was monitoring the communications of several friendly foreign
leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel. The revelations
outraged Merkel as well as other leaders, and US officials say the
disclosures have damaged Obama's relations around the world.
Obama and Merkel spoke by phone Wednesday, but US officials would not say whether they discussed the NSA issues.
The president also is said to be
considering one of the review board's most aggressive recommendations, a
proposal to strip the NSA of its ability to store telephone records
from millions of Americans and instead have phone companies or a third
party hold the records. The NSA would be able to access the records only
by obtaining separate court approval for each search, though exceptions
could be made in the case of a national security emergency.
It's unclear whether Obama will ultimately back the proposal or how quickly it could be carried out if he does.
Before making his final decisions,
the president was supposed to receive a separate report from a
semi-independent commission known as the Privacy and Civil Liberties
Oversight Board, which was created by Congress. However, that panel's
report has been delayed without explanation until at least late January,
meaning it won't reach the president until after he makes his decisions
public.
Members of that oversight board
met with Obama on Wednesday and have briefed other administration
officials on some of their preliminary findings. In a statement, the
five-member panel said its meeting with the president focused on the NSA
phone collection program and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Court, which oversees the data sweeps.
It's unclear why Obama will
announce his recommendations before receiving the report from the
privacy and civil liberties board. One official familiar with the review
process said that some White House officials were puzzled by the
board's delay. The report would still be available to Congress, where
legislators are grappling with several bills aimed at dismantling or
preserving the NSA's authority.
That
official and those familiar with the White House review insisted on
anonymity because they were not authorised to discuss the process by
name.
Obama also met Wednesday with
members of the US intelligence community, which largely supports keeping
the NSA surveillance programs intact.
Shortly after receiving the review
board recommendations last month, Obama signaled that he could be open
to significant surveillance changes, including to the bulk collecting of
phone records.
“There are ways we can do it,
potentially, that gives people greater assurance that there are checks
and balances - that there's sufficient oversight and sufficient
transparency,” Obama said at a December 20 news conference. He added
that programs like the bulk collection “could be redesigned in ways that
give you the same information when you need it without creating these
potentials for abuse.”
The president also has backed the
idea of adding a public advocate position to the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court, which rules on many of the domestic surveillance
decisions. The court typically hears only from the government as it
decides cases, and the advocate would represent privacy and civil
liberties concerns.
That review followed disclosures
from Snowden, who leaked details of several secret government programs.
He faces espionage charges in the US, but has been granted temporary
asylum in Russia.
While Obama has said he welcomes the review, it's unlikely it would have occurred without Snowden's disclosures.
Last month, US District Judge
Richard Leon ruled that the NSA's bulk collection program appeared to
violate Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches, but
he didn't issue a preliminary injunction against unreasonable searches
because of expected appeals. Late Wednesday, Justice Department lawyers
asked Leon to halt further proceedings in his court on the NSA case and a
second NSA-related lawsuit until the US Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit hears the government's appeal of his
December ruling.
Government lawyers said they were
asking for the judicial stay from Leon because they were concerned that
further court proceedings could jeopardise classified information about
the surveillance program.
Larry Klayman, the conservative
lawyer who filed the suit, has said he plans to ask the US Supreme Court
to hear the case. - Sapa-AP
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