Bush orders
NSA to snoop on US agencies
The Register | Jan. 28, 2008
By
Ashlee Vance
Not content with
spying on other countries, the NSA (National Security Agency) will
now turn on the US's own government agencies thanks to a fresh
directive from president George Bush.
Under the new
guidelines, the NSA and other intelligence agencies can bore into
the internet networks of all their peers. The Bush administration
pulled off this spy expansion by pointing to an increase in the
number of cyber attacks directed against the US, possibly from
foreign nations. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence
(ODNI) will spearhead the effort around identifying the source of
these attacks, while the Department of Homeland Security and
Pentagon will concentrate on retaliation.
The Washington Post
appears to have broken the news about the new Bush-led joint
directive, which remains classified. The paper reported that the
directive - National Security Presidential Directive 54/Homeland
Security Presidential Directive 23 - was signed on Jan. 8. Earlier
reports from the Baltimore Sun documented the NSA's plans to add US
spying to its international snooping duties.
The new program
will - of course - drains billions of dollars out of US coffers and
be part of Bush's 2009 budget.
During Bush's
presidency, US citizens have come under an unprecedented spying
regime. In addition to upping its focus on suspected criminals, the
administration permitted a system for wiretapping the phone calls of
Average Joes and Janes. The government is also funding specialized
computers from companies such as Cray that can search through
enormous databases at incredible speed. Ah, if only Stalin could see
us now
The government
points to cyber attacks against the State, Commerce, Defense and
Homeland Security departments as the impetus for expanding the NSA's
powers. "U.S. officials and cyber-security experts have said Chinese
Web sites were involved in several of the biggest attacks back to
2005, including some at the country's nuclear-energy labs and large
defense contractors," the Post reported.
Critics of the new
directive will point to the NSA's ability to operate in total
secrecy as cause for concern.
More troubling,
however, may be the Pentagon and Homeland Security's aspirations to
hit attackers with counter-strikes.
Proving that a
nation rather than a rogue set of attackers are behind a cyber
attack will likely be very difficult. In addition, the international
community has yet to address the rules of cyber war in any
meaningful way.
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