It seems there is more on the way. Better protection for Americans or further erosion of civil liberties? Some of both? There is a link in the article to the actual document.
I haven't read the article yet, but I'll comment anyway. I have a serious problem with The USA PATRIOT Act Part One, mainly because it simply wasn't necessary. We already have all of the tools necessary to combat terrorism, and passing more laws is just stupid when all that needs to be done is to get the CIA to clean up it's act and cooperate with other departments.
The September 11th terrorist attacks should not have happened, and the blame should rest squarely on the shoulders of the CIA.
From Newsweek, June 10, 2002, "The Hijackers We Let Escape":
Tucked away in a posh suburban condominium [in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia] overlooking a Jack Nicklaus-designed golf course, nearly a dozen of Osama bin Laden's trusted followers, posing as tourists, plotten future terrorist strikes against the United States [in January 2000].
A few days after the Kuala Lumpur meeting, NEWSWEEK has learned, the CIA tracked one of the terrorists, Nawaf Alhazmi, as he flew from the meeting to Los Angeles. Agents discovered that another of the men, Khalid Almihdhar, had already obtained a multiple-entry visa that allowed him to enter and leave the United States as he pleased. (They later learned that he had in fact arrived in the United States on the same flight as Alhazmi.)
Yet astonishingly, the CIA did nothing with this information. Agency officials didn't tell the INS, which could have turned them away at the border, nor did they notify the FBI, which could have covertly tracked them to find out their mission.
...the CIA's Counterterrorism Center--base camp for the agency's war on bin Laden--was sitting on information that could have led federal agents right to the terrorists' doorstep. Almihdhar and Alhazmi, parading across American in plain sight, could not have been easier to find. NEWSWEEK has learned that when Almihdhar's visa expired, the State Department, not knowing any better, simply issued him a new one in June 2001--even though by then the CIA had linked him to one of the suspected bombers of the USS Cole in October 2000.
CIA officials also point out that FBI agents assigned to the CIA's Counterterrorism Center were at least informed about the Malaysia meeting and the presence of Almihdhar and Alhazmi at the time it occurred. But FBI officials protest that they only recently learned about the most crucial peice of information: That the CIA knew Alhazmi was in the country, and that Almihdhar could enter at will. "That was unforgivable," said one senior FBI official.
To bolster their case, FBI officials have now prepared a detailed chart showing how agents could have uncovered the terrorist plot if they had learned about Almihdhar and Alhazmi sooner, given their frequent contact with at least five of the other hijackers. "There's no question we could have tied all 19 hijackers together," the official said.
After the meeting, Malaysian intelligence continued to watch the condo at the CIA's request, but after a while the agency lost interest. Had agents kep up the suveillance, they might have observed another beneficiary of Sufaat's charity: Zacarias Moussaoui, who stayed there on his way to the United States later that year. The Malaysians say they were surprised by the CIA's lack of interest following the Kuala Lumpur meeting. "We couldn't fathom it , really," Rais Yatim, Malaysia's Legal Affairs minister told NEWSWEEK. "There was no show of concern."
The CIA's reluctance to divulge what it knew is especially odd because, as 2000 dawned, U.S. law-enforcement agencies were on red alert, certain that a bin Laden strike somewhere in the world could come at any moment. There was certainly reason to believe bin Laden was sending men here to do grave harm. Just a few weeks before, an alert Customs inspector had caught another Qaeda terrorist, Ahmed Ressam, as he tried to cross the Canadian border in a rental car packed with explosives.
If the CIA had done it's job
properly; the job we, as American citizens and taxpayers are paying for it to do, September 11th likely
would not have happened. The CIA should have alerted the FBI as soon as Alhazmi entered the country, and the FBI could have followed his trail to the other 19.
Instead, the CIA--whether deliberately or not--seriously dropped the ball and consequently over three thousand of our countrymen lost their lives. What has our government done in response? Has it held those in charge of the CIA accountable? Has it taken any serious steps to force greater cooperation between the CIA and other agencies? Has it demanded the CIA to disclose everything it knew? No, instead it passed the USA PATRIOT Act, allowing government agencies much greater powers to issue wiretaps, intercept emails, and confiscate private records without a warrant. It amended the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 to make it illegal for anyone presented with a subpoena regarding a terrorism investigation to disclose not only the contents of the subpoena, but the fact that he was presented with a subpoena at all. It removed judicial oversight from any investigation involving terrorism, and allowed the investigating agencies sole discretion in classifying such investigations.
Am I in the minority in thinking this is truly fucked up?
We already have the tools necessary to combat terrorism...9/11 happened only because the CIA fucked up big time. Instead of passing draconian new laws, why can't the government take action against the beaurocratic mess that allowed 9/11 to happen in the first place?