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Bush says Congress putting US in danger
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—President Bush said Friday that “our country is in more
danger of an attack” because of Congress’ failure to extend a law
granting the government authority to spy on foreign phone calls and
e-mails that pass through the United States.
The president and Vice President Dick Cheney met with Republican
congressional leaders in the Oval Office to discuss the impasse with the
Democratic-led House. The president said lawmakers had left for a 12-day
recess without acting on the law, which expires at midnight Saturday. He
said Congress should act quickly on the measure as soon as lawmakers
return. Bush’s argues that without the extension, the intelligence
community will not have the tools they need. Democrats, equally adamant,
accuse the president of fear-mongering and say he has the authority he
needs to intercept terrorist communications, even if the law expires.
“American citizens must understand, clearly understand that there’s
still a threat on the homeland. There’s still an enemy which would like
to do us harm,” Bush said. “We’ve got to give our professionals the
tools they need, to be able to figure out what the enemy is up to so we
can stop it.”
“By blocking this piece of legislation, our country is more in danger of
an attack,” the president said. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi maintains the
congressional majority is simply trying to balance concerns about civil
liberties against the government’s spy powers, and needs time to do it.
Republicans insist there’s no time to waste. “The Democratic leaders
ought to be held accountable for their inaction,” House Republican
leader John Boehner told reporters after the White House meeting.
Behind both sides’ rhetoric, the issue of what the government can and
can’t do is complicated by a quirk in the temporary eavesdropping law
adopted by Congress last August. It allows the government to initiate
wiretaps for up to one year against a wide range of targets. It also
explicitly compels telecommunications companies to comply with the
orders, and protects them from civil lawsuits that may be filed against
them for doing so.
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