(Reuters) - A U.S. spy program that sweeps up vast amounts of
electronic communications survived a legislative challenge in the House of
Representatives on Wednesday, the first attempt to curb the data gathering
since former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed details of its scope.
The House of Representatives voted 217-205 to defeat
an amendment to the defense appropriations bill that would have limited the
National Security Agency's ability to collect electronic information, including
phone call records.
Opposition to government surveillance has created an unlikely
alliance of libertarian Republicans and some Democrats in Congress, The House
vote split the parties, with 94 Republicans in favor and 134 against, while 111
Democrats supported the amendment and 83 opposed it.
The White House and senior intelligence officials opposed the
amendment by Republican Representative Justin Amash of Michigan, which had been
prompted by Snowden's revelations. Snowden, a fugitive from the United States,
has been holed up at a Moscow airport for the past month unable to secure
asylum.
The House later approved the defense appropriations bill, which
included nearly $600 billion in Pentagon spending for the 2014 fiscal year,
including the costs of the Afghanistan war.
Republican Representative Tom Cotton, who endorsed the NSA
program, described the "metadata" being collected as essentially a
five-column spreadsheet containing the number called, the number of the caller,
the date, the time and the duration of call.
"This program has stopped dozens of terrorist attacks,"
Cotton said. "That means it has saved untold American lives. This
amendment ... does not limit the program, it does not modify it, it does not
constrain the program, it ends the program. It blows it up."
Cotton, a former Army captain who served in Iraq and Afghanistan,
said a comprehensive set of phone call records was needed in order for the
program to work.
"If you want to search for a needle in a haystack, you have
to have the haystack. This (amendment) takes a leaf-blower and blows away they
entire haystack. You will not have this program if this amendment passes."
'SIMPLY WRONG'
But Amash, a conservative Republican, and other supporters of the
amendment said the fundamental issue was whether the U.S. government had the
right to collect and retain the personal communications data of American
citizens.
"Government's gone too far in the name of security,"
said Representative Ted Poe, a Texas Republican. "Rein in government
invasion, no more dragnet operations, get a specific warrant based on probable
cause or stay out of our lives."
Representative Joe Barton, another Texas Republican, said the
issue was not whether the NSA was sincere or careful in collecting data for use
in anti-terrorism operations.
"It is (about) whether they have the right to collect the
data in the first place on every phone call on every American every day,"
he said, noting that the law only allowed collection of relevant data. "In
the NSA's interpretation of that, relevant is all data, all the time. That's
simply wrong."
U.S. spy chiefs, the White House and senior lawmakers responsible
for overseeing intelligence agencies in Congress had joined ranks against the
effort to curb the program.
Representatives Mike Rogers of Michigan and Dutch Ruppersberger of
Maryland, the Republican chairman and senior Democrat on the House Intelligence
Committee, said in a statement after the vote that the amendment would have
eliminated a "crucial counterterrorism tool."
"The charge that the program tramples on the privacy of
citizens is simply wrong," they said, promising to work to build public
confidence in the program's privacy protections.
In an unusually public discourse on a secret spying program, James
Clapper, the director of national intelligence, urged the House in a statement
on Wednesday to be wary of the "potential effect of limiting the
intelligence community's capabilities" under the current law.
Clapper's statement came amid a push against the proposal by the
White House and other senior intelligence officials, including Army General
Keith Alexander, the head of the NSA, who visited lawmakers on Capitol Hill on
Tuesday to warn about the implications of the amendment.
The House overwhelming approved a separate amendment dealing with
the NSA surveillance program that was billed as an alternative to the Amash
amendment.
But critics charged that the measure only restated current law,
which prevents collection of the content of emails and phone calls, and would
not deal with collection of "metadata."
(Reporting by David Alexander, Tabassum Zakaria and Patricia
Zengerle; Editing by Vicki Allen and Jackie Frank)
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