The government should NOT, EVER be allowed to lie to the people as Clapper did. It is the worst corruption of a stable democratic tradition possible. If secrets must exist, do not talk about them. At least we will know where the dark areas are, and we can act to decide whether it's worth it to elect representatives to open them up.
It was a catch-22 where a no-comment was as good as a confirmation. I personally don't have a problem with limited misinformation about national security issues (flat out lying about whether a military operation is taking place, say) to the public, although I do think there should still be legal consequences for doing so under oath. I also think that doing so and then accepting those legal consequences may well be the duty of government officials from time to time. This may well have been one of those cases, although more due to excessive classification and insufficient transparency than a genuine national security need.
Anyway, two more articles.
Bruce Ackerman calling for unilateral congressional action to reveal details of the programs. The U.S. Constitution guarantees that elected representatives "shall not be questioned in any other Place … for any Speech or Debate in either House." In other words, they cannot be prosecuted for reading classified material into the public record -- and it is up to them, and them alone, to decide what is worth talking about.
I'd not considered that angle. As an interesting parliamentary note, the submission of written materials into the record is done through the whole "I ask unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks" thing. This allows the parliamentarian to go back and insert whatever documents they like. The floor speech is just a placeholder for the actual records. In what is a pretty unique move, recently
Gohmert decided to block such revisions during the debate over the farm bill. Not much relation to the thread (although hypothetically someone could pre-emptively block any attempts to insert classified material into the record, short of reading it out in total in a series of floor speeches), just an interesting story that popped into my head.
The other is
this look at the XKeyscore program. What is worrying to me is that the Guardian posted a slideshow from 2007, during the era of Bush's warrantless wiretapping program, and suggested that implied anything to do with current practices despite the legislative changes since that time.
But if the slides were drafted in January of 2007, then they pre-date both the Protect America Act (passed in August of 2007), which modified large swaths of the NSA’s warrantless surveillance programs first started under President Bush, and the FISA Amendments Act (passed in July of 2008), which instituted strict limits on how the NSA can collect, and required a specific warrant to intentionally collect, any data on a U.S. citizen. The title slide is marked 2008, but it’s unclear how it was modified, since the classification date would have to be updated if it included new classified data. It is also unclear if the slides were published in the months before or after the passage of the FISA Amendments Act.
In Greenwald’s story, he repeatedly references, and includes tightly cropped screen captures of, another presentation apparently dated December 2012. While the 2007/2008 presentation can be perused to substantiate some of the reporting, many of the strongest claims Greenwald makes in his article are backed up only by small, cropped screen captures of slides that are not posted to the Guardian’s website. There is no way to verify or confirm what he’s reporting.
Combine this with the technical errors in the initial PRISM reporting and I'm getting even more uneasy about the Guardian's reporting on these issues.