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US Intelligence to Disclose Number of Americans Under Surveillance

US Intelligence to Disclose Number  of Americans Under Surveillance
US Intelligence to Disclose Number  of Americans Under Surveillance

The US intelligence community will soon disclose an estimate of the number of Americans whose electronic communications have been caught in the crosshairs of online surveillance programs intended for foreigners, US lawmakers said in a letter seen by Reuters.

The estimate, requested by members of the US House of Representatives Judiciary Committee, is expected to be made public as early as next month, the letter said.

Its disclosure would come as the US Congress is expected to begin debate in the coming months over whether to reauthorize or reform the so-called surveillance authority, known as Section 702, a provision that was added to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in 2008.

"The timely production of this information is incredibly important to informed debate on Section 702 in the next Congress—and, without it, even those of us inclined to support reauthorization would have reason for concern," said the letter signed by 11 lawmakers, all members of the House Judiciary Committee.

The letter was sent on Friday to National Intelligence Director James Clapper. It said his office and National Security Agency officials had already briefed congressional staff about how the intelligence community intends to comply with the disclosure request.

Clapper's office confirmed the letter had been received but declined further comment.

The lawmakers termed their letter an effort to "memorialize our understanding" of the intelligence community's plan to provide an estimate in real numbers, not percentages, as soon as January that can be shared with the public. The government has long held that calculating the number of Americans subject to Section 702 surveillance might be technically impossible and would require privacy intrusions exceeding those raised by the actual surveillance programs, which were originally intended to counter foreign espionage.

Intelligence officials have said that online data about Americans is "incidentally" collected under Section 702, due to a range of technical and practical reasons. Critics have assailed such collection as back-door surveillance of Americans without a warrant.

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