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WASHINGTON, Dec. 18 (Xinhuanet) -- The US National Security Agency(NSA) first began to conduct warrantless eavesdropping on telephone calls and e-mail messages between the United States and Afghanistan in the immediate aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, The New York Times reported Sunday.
The NSA's surveillance of telecommunications between
the United States and Afghanistan started months before President George W. Bush
officially authorized a broader version of the agency's special domestic
collection program, current and former government officials were quoted as
saying.
The agency operation included eavesdropping on
communications between Americans and other individuals in the United States and
people in Afghanistan without the court-approved search warrants that are
normally required for such domestic intelligence activities.
After the Sept. 11 attacks, the Bush administration
and senior American intelligence officials quickly decided that the existing
laws and regulations restricting the government's ability to monitor American
communications were too rigid to permit quick and flexible access to
international calls and e-mail traffic involving terrorism suspects, the report
said.
In the days after the attacks, the Central
Intelligence Agency determined that al Qaeda, which had found a haven in
Afghanistan, was responsible. Congress quickly passed a resolution authorizing
the president to conduct a war on terrorism, and the security agency was
secretly ordered to begin conducting comprehensive coverage of all
communications into and out of Afghanistan, including those to and from the
United States, current and former officials said.
It could not be learned whether Bush issued a formal
written order authorizing the early surveillance of communications between the
United States and Afghanistan that was later superseded by the broader order,
according to the report. Enditem |