Analysts at the U.S. National Security Agency
can gain access to the content of U.S. targets' phone calls and email
messages without court orders, NSA leaker Edward Snowden said,
contradicting denials from U.S. government sources.
U.S.
surveillance agencies have weak policy protections in place to protect
U.S. residents, but "policy is a one-way ratchet that only loosens,"
Snowden, the former NSA contractor, said in a chat on The Guardian's website Monday.
The
technology filter designed to protect U.S. communications is
"constantly out of date, is set at what is euphemistically referred to
as the 'widest allowable aperture,' and can be stripped out at any
time," Snowden wrote in the chat. "Even with the filter, US comms get
ingested, and even more so as soon as they leave the border."
If
an analyst at the NSA, CIA or other U.S. intelligence agency has access
to the databases of collected communications records, "they can enter
and get results for anything they want," Snowden added. "Phone number,
email, user id, cell phone handset id, and so on - it's all the same.
The restrictions against this are policy based, not technically based,
and can change at any time."
Earlier this month, The Guardian and The Washington Post
published information leaked from Snowden about the NSA and other U.S.
surveillance. Snowden leaked a document showing a court order allowing
the NSA and Federal Bureau of Investigation to collect phone records
from Verizon customers, and he alleged that NSA analysts can gain access
to phone calls and email messages without court approval.
Snowden's comments came after U.S. Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, suggested that lawmakers were told in a classified briefing last week that officials with the NSA and FBI believe they don't need court-ordered warrants to listen to phone calls and read emails.
Nadler, in a hearing last Thursday, asked FBI director Robert Mueller if the agencies need a warrant to listen to phone calls.
"You
have to get a special, particularized order from the FISA court
directed at that particular phone and that particular individual,"
Mueller said.
NSA director Keith Alexander also said the agency
needs warrants to access the contents of phone calls and email messages
when questioned in another hearing last week.
The U.S. Office of
the Director of National Intelligence Public also disputed Snowden's
assertions of warrantless wiretapping and Nadler's understanding of the
classified briefing to lawmakers.
"The statement that a single
analyst can eavesdrop on domestic communications without proper legal
authorization is incorrect and was not briefed to Congress," the ODNI said in a statement.
Nadler,
in a statement released after the Thursday hearing, said the Obama
administration had assured him that the "NSA cannot listen to the
content of Americans' phone calls without a specific warrant."
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