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WASHINGTON, Jan. 1 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. President George W. Bush on Sunday launched
another strong defense for the controversial secret domestic spying program
he authorized the National Security Agency (NSA) to conduct after the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
The program was legal and vital to thwart terrorist attacks against the United
States, Bush told journalists during a visit to soldiers wounded in Iraq
at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas.
The president said the domestic surveillance project was "a limited program
designed to prevent attacks" on the United States,and that "most Americans
understand the need to find out what the enemy's thinking."
The surveillance, he added, involved phone calls from outside the United
States by people associated with al Qaeda. "It's seems logical to me that if we
know there's a phone number associated with al Qaeda or an al Qaeda affiliate
and they're making phone calls, it makes sense to find out why," he said.
"They attacked us before, they'll attack us again," Bush noted.
The president criticized the so far unknown source or sources who leaked
information about the clandestine program to The New York Times, which first
reported on the program last month.
"The fact that somebody leaked this program causes great harm to the United
States," Bush said.
The Justice Department has launched an investigation into the leak of
information about the program.
The revelation of the program by the Times that the National Security
Agency had been conducting warrantless surveillance has created a political
debate in Washington, where some lawmakers from both parties have been seeking
an inquiry into its legality.
Also on Sunday, the Times reported that a top Justice Department official
objected in 2004 to aspects of the NSA's domestic surveillance program and
refused to sign on to its continued use amid concerns about its legality and
oversight.
The concerns prompted two of Bush's most senior aides to make an emergency visit to a Washington hospital in March 2004 to discuss the program's future and try to win the needed approval from then Attorney General John Ashcroft, who was hospitalized, the report said. Enditem |