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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

NSA transgressions called unintentional

Many abuses cited in new disclosures involve spying on foreigners in the U.S.

Ken Dilanian McClatchy-Tribune

WASHINGTON – Leaked documents showing the National Security Agency overstepped its legal authority thousands of times since 2011 have spurred new calls to restrict surveillance on Americans and threatened to further erode trust in the powerful spy agency.

In an attempt to contain the damage Friday, intelligence officials rushed to brief congressional staffers and the White House issued a statement of support for the NSA, which critics say has violated Americans’ privacy and civil liberties in its efforts to track terrorists and foreign agents.

The latest disclosure by fugitive NSA contractor Edward Snowden included an internal report, dated May 2012, that cited 2,776 violations during the previous year of rules meant to protect Americans’ privacy. Most of the abuses involved unauthorized eavesdropping of foreigners in the United States, but more than 800 involved inadvertent collection of telephone or Internet data on Americans.

The classified materials, which were first reported by the Washington Post, make clear that the NSA did not seek to circumvent the law, and most of the abuses appear largely technical or inadvertent in nature. But one document instructed NSA analysts to carefully limit the information they provided to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which meets in secret to review and authorize NSA requests.

The leaks came a week after President Barack Obama vowed to restore public confidence in the NSA after months of controversial disclosures. He called on Congress to change part of the Patriot Act to provide additional safeguards over domestic intelligence operations, and he proposed creating a public advocate to challenge the government inside the secret surveillance court.

A White House spokesman, Josh Earnest, sought to allay fears that the NSA is conducting widespread unauthorized surveillance. He said Friday that the documents show the NSA is detecting and reporting potential problems, as required by law.

Of the 2,776 violations cited, 1,904 involved cases in which a foreigner whose cellphone or email was under surveillance entered the United States, where court warrants are required for most eavesdropping. The NSA does not need a warrant to spy overseas.

But the NSA also collected emails and other communications of Americans without authorization, according to the documents.

In one case, the NSA improperly collected and commingled American and foreign emails moving through fiber-optic cables. In October 2011, months after the program had begun, the surveillance court declared it unconstitutional and ordered it shut down.

In 2008, according to the documents, a programming error confused 20, the telephone country code for Egypt, with 202, the area code for Washington, D.C. As a result, calling logs were improperly collected on a “large number” of calls.

NSA officials held a rare on-the-record conference call with reporters Friday to defend the agency’s record and its adherence to the law.

“No one at NSA thinks mistakes are OK,” said John DeLong, the NSA’s director of compliance. “There’s no willful violation here. The fact that this document exists is actually evidence that we take each mistake very seriously.”

In a separate classified briefing for House and Senate staffers, NSA officials said the mistakes reflected a tiny fraction of the 20 million emails, phone conversations and other communications that the agency searches each month, according to congressional officials.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, rose to the NSA’s defense. Congress has been regularly informed about compliance problems, most of which “do not involve any inappropriate surveillance of Americans,” she said.

Other lawmakers offered sharper criticism. Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md., ranking member on the House intelligence committee, called the violations of private rules “incredibly troubling.”