By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON, Sept 29 (Reuters) - The U.S. National Security
Agency would need to begin winding down what it considers its
most valuable intelligence program before its expiration at
year-end if the U.S. Congress leaves its reauthorization in
limbo, the agency's deputy director said on Friday.
The possibility the U.S. government may begin losing access
to the surveillance authority even before it would officially
lapse on Dec. 31 is likely to increase pressure on lawmakers to
quickly renew the law.
"We would have to be looking to work with our mission
partners in the government as well as the companies to start
scaling down in advance," George Barnes, the deputy director of
the NSA, said at the George Washington University Center for
Cyber & Homeland Security event.
"We would, definitely. The last thing we would want to do is
conduct any operation ... if we did not have an active statute
in place," Barnes said in response to a question asked by
Reuters. "We would have to work the dates backwards to make sure
we didn't cross the line."
The NSA did not immediately respond when asked about the
remarks from Barnes.
The law, Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act, allows U.S. intelligence agencies to eavesdrop
on, and store vast amounts of, digital communications from
foreign suspects living outside of the United States.
It is considered a critical national security tool by U.S.
officials, who say it supports priorities ranging from
counterterrorism to cyber security.
But the program, classified details of which were exposed by
2013 by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, also incidentally
scoops up communications of Americans for a variety of technical
reasons, including if they communicate with a foreign target
living overseas. Those communications can then be subject to
searches from analysts without a warrant.
The scenario articulated by Barnes resembles one that
occurred two years ago, when portions of a separate law, the
Patriot Act, that allowed the NSA to collect bulk domestic phone
metadata were expiring.
Gridlocked over whether to enact reforms, U.S. lawmakers
briefly let that Patriot Act lapse. The NSA said it had to begin
winding down the program about a week before its expiration.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers in Congress is working on
legislation to reform aspects of Section 702, but many
Republicans, supported by the White House, want to renew the law
without changes and make it permanent.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
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