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White House
says spying broader than known: report
Reuters | Aug. 1, 2007
The Bush administration's top
intelligence official has acknowledged that a controversial domestic
surveillance program was only one part of a much broader spying
effort, The Washington Post reported in its Wednesday edition.
Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell wrote in a letter
that other aspects of the National Security Agency's domestic spying
program remain classified, the Post said.
"That is the only aspect of the
NSA activities that can be discussed publicly because it is the only
aspect of those various activities whose existence has been
officially acknowledged," McConnell wrote, according to the Post.
Bush acknowledged the existence of
a program that monitored domestic phone calls and e-mails without
court oversight in December 2005. The administration has not
confirmed other secret spying efforts reported by news outlets, such
as one that searched millions of telephone records.
Bush signed an executive order
that authorized "a number of ... intelligence activities" following
the hijacking attacks of September 11, 2001, McConnell wrote.
The warrantless wiretapping
program was put under court supervision in January but the
administration now wants Congress to allow it to do many of the same
activities without a court order.
The letter was sent on Tuesday to
Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter, the top Republican on the Senate
Judiciary Committee.
The letter was written to defend
Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales, who has been under
attack over his testimony to Congress about the warrantless spying
program, the Post said.
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