                                        {"id":283,"date":"2026-06-11T22:08:13","date_gmt":"2026-06-11T22:08:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/americanindustryreview.com\/?p=283"},"modified":"2026-06-11T22:08:13","modified_gmt":"2026-06-11T22:08:13","slug":"turning-down-the-lights-on-us-surveillance-authorities-at-a-time-of-peril","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/americanindustryreview.com\/?p=283","title":{"rendered":"Turning down the lights on US surveillance authorities at a time of peril"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<p>This Friday at midnight, while the American military may very well be trading fire once again with Iran, the single most productive foreign intelligence collection authority in the U.S. government\u2019s arsenal will expire.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/americanindustryreview.com\/?p=281\">As senators depart, will their traditions endure?<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act \u2014 the law that lets our government collect communications of foreign terrorists, spies and hostile governments overseas \u2014 will lapse unless Congress acts in the next 48 hours.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>That Congress has allowed matters to reach this point, at this moment, is an act of self-sabotage that our enemies could scarcely have improved upon.<\/p>\n<p>Consider the moment. Notwithstanding the notional ceasefire, our military (and those of our partners) remains in open hostilities with Iran and its terrorist proxies.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Russia\u2019s war in Ukraine grinds on with civilian deaths rising, and Moscow\u2019s intelligence services continue to target America and our allies.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>China continues to threaten Taiwan and American interests across the Indo-Pacific.\u00a0And al Qaeda and ISIS are reconstituted, expanding, and openly calling for attacks on Americans both at home and abroad.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Against these threats, Section 702 is literally invaluable. By the government\u2019s own math, this single authority contributes to roughly 60 percent of the articles in the President\u2019s Daily Brief.\u00a0 It has exposed plots against Americans at home, protected our forces and citizens abroad, and warned allies of dangers they could not see themselves.<\/p>\n<p>There are those in Congress who seem unconcerned about their own pending failure to act, because, as they correctly note, collection will not stop all at once on Friday as existing court-approved certifications remain in effect for a time.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>But this ignores the reality that those orders cannot guarantee the compliance of providers who receive them.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>While some providers may continue fully to be sure, the reality is that others may decline to go up on new targets or stop producing altogether, meaning the Iranian terror cell identified next week (or already being collected on) may go uncovered.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>And with the House going on a short vacation next week and no deal for any movement even when it returns, we could see a precipitous decline in coverage over what could be a very high-threat summer.<\/p>\n<p>None of this is mere speculation; the authors of this op-ed have personal experience with such a lapse.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<h2>2008 expiration<\/h2>\n<p>In February 2008, Congress let the Protect America Act \u2014 Section 702\u2019s predecessor \u2014 expire while lawmakers haggled over a replacement.\u00a0 Existing directives technically remained in force then too.<\/p>\n<p>Yet we saw providers \u2014 suddenly unsure of their legal footing \u2014 reducing cooperation and balking at new taskings.\u00a0 Indeed, the gap wasn\u2019t closed until the FISA Amendments Act passed months later.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>While the government may seek to litigate with the providers \u2014 and may very well win \u2014 such litigation is measured in months, while discovered terrorist plots and wartime threats are measured in days, hours and minutes.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Intelligence delayed in wartime \u2014 and we are at war \u2014 is intelligence denied.<\/p>\n<p>There is a second problem almost no one has mentioned, and it carries with it a bitter irony.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>The expiring statute contains more than just Section 702.\u00a0 Other parts of the statute provide both authority and protections for Americans, guaranteeing them a court order for any surveillance conducted worldwide, a significant improvement over prior law.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/americanindustryreview.com\/?p=279\">At the Races: Eyes on the ball and the ballot<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Unlike the yearlong authorizations available under Section 702, these orders run 90 days and cannot be renewed after the lapse, and Section 702 \u2014 even were it available, which it won\u2019t be \u2014 can\u2019t fill the gap, because by law it may never target Americans.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>The likely fallback is the pre-2008 regime, in which targeting Americans abroad required only the attorney general\u2019s sign-off \u2014 no judge at all.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Hardly a triumph for privacy and civil liberties.<\/p>\n<p>The perversity does not stop there, because other safeguards die with the statute as well. Virtually every oversight measure and protection for American\u2019s privacy and civil liberties that have been won also go away.\u00a0And because the government\u2019s need for intelligence will never lapse, it is a virtual certainty that the government will revert to other authorities, chiefly overseas collection under Executive Order 12,333, meaning both less oversight, no FISA court, less transparency \u2014 and less capability too, for nothing can effectively replicate Section 702\u2019s speed, reliability, specificity and insight.<\/p>\n<p>A lapse \u2014 like the one we are walking into this week \u2014 delivers weaker protections for Americans and weaker intelligence for America \u2014 a lose-lose only Washington bureaucrats and politicians could engineer.<\/p>\n<p>So why is Congress even flirting with this trainwreck?\u00a0 The issue, today, is not mainly over the program\u2019s merits. The latest version of this impasse is substantially a political standoff over the president\u2019s choice of an acting Director of National Intelligence.<\/p>\n<p>Now that the president has announced the intention to nominate interim U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Jay Clayton for the permanent job, this issue should be of limited resonance, if any.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, degrading the nation\u2019s intelligence coverage in wartime as leverage in a personnel fight \u2014 even where there are fears about what that acting official might do \u2014 is simply indefensible.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Playing this game of chicken with our national security is just wrong.<\/p>\n<p>The deeper dysfunction that got us here is that Congress built this hostage ransom mechanism itself by repeatedly adopting a sunset clause for this vital \u2014 and now nearly two decade old \u2014 authority.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Statutory sunsets are often sold as built-in accountability, when in reality they have simply become a tool for political brinksmanship.\u00a0The real tool for accountability is the fact that Congress can amend Section 702 tomorrow, next month, or next year, like any other statute.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>All a sunset guarantees is that the same battles are fought over and over again every few years while the nation\u2019s most important collection program dangles over a cliff.\u00a0 And this is our third cliff in three years, and the second this year alone.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Finally, there can be little question that the substantive debate has been had.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>Two years ago Congress enacted the most sweeping FISA reforms in decades, addressing the vast majority of legitimate concerns.\u00a0 The lone remaining demand \u2014 a warrant before the government may even look at information lawfully in its possession \u2014 would rebuild the pre-9\/11 \u201cwall\u201d that left our intelligence community unable to connect the dots on two hijackers the CIA saw at a terrorist meeting in Malaysia and who were later living openly in San Diego.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>That failure led to three thousand dead Americans in New York, Virginia and Pennsylvania.\u00a0 That is not civil liberties protection; it is willful blindness.<\/p>\n<p>Congress should do two things: Extend Section 702 and the rest of the FISA Amendments Act in the next 48 hours \u2014 cleanly, before the erosion that threatens our national security begins. Then, end the cycle of nonsense: Reauthorize the program without a sunset.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>America\u2019s warfighters and intelligence professionals are doing their job on the frontlines protecting our people and interests around the globe.\u00a0 <\/p>\n<p>It is long past time for Congress to do its own.<\/p>\n<p><em>Michael B. Mukasey served as attorney general of the United States under President George W. Bush (2007\u201309) and as a U.S. district judge in the Southern District of New York (1988\u20132006), including as chief judge.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Jamil N. Jaffer is founder and executive director of the National Security Institute at George Mason University\u2019s Antonin Scalia Law School and previously served in a variety of senior national security roles in the federal government, including as counsel to the assistant attorney general for national security at the Department of Justice when Mukasey was attorney general.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/americanindustryreview.com\/?p=278\">Bipartisan bill targets government censorship threats<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This Friday at midnight, while the American military may very well be trading fire once again with Iran, the single most productive foreign intelligence collection authority in the U.S. government\u2019s arsenal will expire.\u00a0 Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act \u2014 the law that lets our government collect communications of foreign terrorists, spies and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":282,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[9],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-283","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-opinion"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - 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