Former NSA Official Disputes Claims by NSA Chief | Threat Level | Wired.com
LAS VEGAS — A former NSA official has accused the NSA’s director of
deception during a speech he gave at the DefCon hacker conference on
Friday when he asserted that the agency does not collect files on
Americans.
William Binney, a former technical director at the NSA, said during a
panel discussion that NSA Director Gen. Keith Alexander was playing a
“word game” and that the NSA was indeed collecting e-mails, Twitter
writings, internet searches and other data belonging to Americans and
indexing it.
“Unfortunately, once the software takes in data, it will build
profiles on everyone in that data,” he said. “You can simply call it up
by the attributes of anyone you want and it’s in place for people to
look at.”
He said the NSA began building its data collection system to spy on
Americans prior to 9/11, and then used the terrorist attacks that
occurred that year as the excuse to launch the data collection project.
“It started in February 2001 when they started asking telecoms for
data,” Binney said. “That to me tells me that the real plan was to spy
on Americans from the beginning.”
Binney is referring to assertions that former Qwest CEO James Nacchio
made in court documents in 2007 that the NSA had asked Qwest, AT&T,
Verizon and Bellsouth in early 2001 for customer calling records and
that all of the other companies complied with the request, but Nacchio
declined to participate until served with a proper legal order.
“The reason I left the NSA was because they started spying on
everybody in the country. That’s the reason I left,” said Binney, who
resigned from the agency in late 2001.
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