ABC’s Brian Ross had yet another breathless (and misleading)
exclusive last night. Fired NSA analyst Russle Tice (apparently
stripped of his security clearance and let go last year over
“psychological concerns”) is claiming to be “a” source for the
NY Times’ NSA story.
Note to the FBI investigators probing the leak: This guy ain’t
it. He may have chimed in after the NY Times got the
story, but he certainly is not the original leaker. The timing of
the story (right before the Patriot Act vote) points to a
time-honored pressure tactic by political sources: when your
original leak didn’t make it into the paper, to have the originally
intended impact (in this case right before the 2004 presidential
election to harm President Bush), wait for an opportunity to make
political hay. A year goes by and Risen’s source sees the Patriot
Act vote as another big opportunity. I’d bet the source threatened
the Times that if they didn’t publish that Friday, the
story would be given to a competitor.
Mr. Tice certainly isn’t that crafty. Nor is he an expert on the
statutes governing surveillance of foreign threats operating
domestically or of Constitutional law for that matter. He obviously
missed the class on Article II in his high school government
class.
Mr. Tice is yet another disgruntled guy who got canned and wants
his pound of flesh no matter the cost to our safety and
liberty.
ABC should have pointed out in its piece that every President
since Jimmy Carter (due to the passage of FISA in 1978) has
specifically reserved to himself a Constitutional authority to
conduct warrantless surveillance to protect America from foreign
threats — including those threats that operate here in the good
ol’ US of A. That authority has been upheld in the courts, most
recently by the FISA Court of Review’s 3-0 smackdown of the FISA
Court which stated that they “take for granted” the president’s
authority to conduct such surveillance.
Nice try ABC, but you get a failing grade…again.