The National Security Agency’s spying on US allies abroad has drawn the ire of one of its key supporters in Congress.
California Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein, chair of the Senate intelligence committee, sent out a statement Monday afternoon saying that Congress had not been “satisfactorily informed” of the NSA’s activities and calling for a “total review of all intelligence programs.”
In her statement, Feinstein said it was her “understanding” that until recently, President Barack Obama was kept in the dark about the NSA spying on German Chancellor Angela Merkel. National Security Council spokesperson Caitlin Hayden told reporters she would not “go into the details” of the administration’s “private discussions” with Feinstein in her role as intelligence commitee chair.
On Tuesday, the NSA director and other spy chiefs will appear at a House Intelligence Committee hearing.
In addition to Merkel, Obama has also apologized recently to leaders in France and Brazil over NSA surveillance in those countries. Feinstein has been one of the NSA’s most vocal supporters in Congress, frequently working to foil her colleagues’ efforts to force the agency to be more transparent or curtail government surveillance powers prior to leaks facilitated by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.
Feinstein has defended many of the NSA’s controversial activities, such as bulk collection of Americans’ communications data, as necessary to protect the country from terrorism. While other legislators are set to introduce legislation reining in the NSA Tuesday, the Senate intelligence committee is set to markup a Feinstein authored bill that would preserve the NSA’s bulk data collection program with, in Feinstein’s words, additional “transparency and privacy protections.”









