Wednesday - August 15, 2007
Using America's satellites for domestic policing?
The Director of National Intelligence has opened up the use of America's spy satellites to domestic law enforcement agencies.
As one who likes to balance rights with security, I've never had a problem with the NSA program that tapped into calls placed from overseas. The purpose of these intercepts were and still are made for national security reasons and national security reasons only. And to that extent, I wouldn't have a problem with using our spy satellites to watch the border or follow suspected terrorists across the country. These are issues related to national security and foreign policy, where individual rights are not usually an issue.
But when it is suggested that our intelligence resources such as our satellites be used for domestic law enforcement, the classical liberal in me has to object. Such high resolution photography will ultimately be abused by local and federal law enforcement, not to mention just think of all the civil litigation that will be created by these high resolution photographs.
Obviously, there is one issue of utmost importance, our privacy. Do you want your government watching your every move. Twenty years ago, satellites were said to be able to read your license plate from orbit--how much better are they today? Modern satellites can provide real time data from a synchronous orbit. There is great potential for abuse.
As long as this technology is turned against this nation's enemies, it is fine. When it turns into a tool of domestic surveillance, it is highly problematic.
Here is the article:
The decision, made three months ago by Director of National Intelligence Michael McConnell, places for the first time some of the U.S.'s most powerful intelligence-gathering tools at the disposal of domestic security officials. The move was authorized in a May 25 memo sent to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff asking his department to facilitate access to the spy network on behalf of civilian agencies and law enforcement.
Until now, only a handful of federal civilian agencies, such as the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the U.S. Geological Survey, have had access to the most basic spy-satellite imagery, and only for the purpose of scientific and environmental study.
According to officials, one of the department's first objectives will be to use the network to enhance border security, determine how best to secure critical infrastructure and help emergency responders after natural disasters. Sometime next year, officials will examine how the satellites can aid federal and local law-enforcement agencies, covering both criminal and civil law. The department is still working on determining how it will engage law enforcement officials and what kind of support it will give them.
Access to the high-tech surveillance tools would, for the first time, allow Homeland Security and law-enforcement officials to see real-time, high-resolution images and data, which would allow them, for example, to identify smuggler staging areas, a gang safehouse, or possibly even a building being used by would-be terrorists to manufacture chemical weapons.
Overseas -- the traditional realm of spy satellites -- the system was used to monitor tank movements during the Cold War. Today, it's used to monitor suspected terrorist hideouts, smuggling routes for weapons in Iraq, nuclear tests and the movement of nuclear materials, as well as to make detailed maps for U.S. soldiers on the ground in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Plans to provide DHS with significantly expanded access have been on the drawing board for over two years. The idea was first talked about as a possibility by the Central Intelligence Agency after 9/11 as a way to help better secure the country. "It is an idea whose time has arrived," says Charles Allen, the DHS's chief intelligence officer, who will be in charge of the new program. DHS officials say the program has been granted a budget by Congress and has the approval of the relevant committees in both chambers. Read more....
Trackposted to Planck's Constant, The Pink Flamingo, DeMediacratic Nation, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, and 4 Time Father?, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe. Author: The Lockean
Technorati Tags: Satellites Domestic spying
Technorati Cosmos:
Technorati Watchlist:
Add this entry to: