US intel chiefs urge lawmakers to extend Section 702 surveillance power without changes
好的,我现在需要帮用户总结这篇文章的内容,控制在100字以内。首先,我得通读文章,抓住主要信息。 文章讲的是美国情报部门领导人在周四公开支持延长《外国情报 surveillance 法》第702条,即FISA 702,这个法律允许对海外威胁进行广泛的电子监控。白宫私下要求国会盟友支持18个月的“干净”延期,也就是不修改。众议院议长Mike Johnson表示下周会将此议案提交审议,尽管有反对声音要求加强隐私保护,比如需要搜查令才能访问数据库。 CIA和FBI的负责人在听证会上表达了对延期的支持,甚至希望时间更长。而国会议员Rick Crawford也在努力推动特朗普的要求。不过,议案在众议院通过面临挑战,民主党可能不支持。此外,隐私组织也反对无限制延长,并指出AI发展让法律显得过时。 总结下来,重点是情报部门支持延期FISA 702,白宫寻求18个月的无修改延期,但面临反对和挑战。我需要用简洁的语言把这些要点浓缩到100字以内。 </think> 美国情报部门领导人公开支持延长《外国情报 surveillance 法》第702条(FISA 702),以继续对海外威胁进行电子监控。白宫寻求18个月的“干净”延期,并已向国会盟友施压。尽管面临隐私保护方面的反对意见,众议院议长Mike Johnson计划下周提交议案。CIA和FBI负责人在听证会上表达了对延期的支持,并希望时间更长。然而,议案在众议院通过面临挑战,民主党可能不支持任何续期。同时,隐私组织反对无限制延长,并指出AI发展使法律显得过时。 2026-3-19 17:15:46 Author: therecord.media(查看原文) 阅读量:6 收藏

U.S. intelligence leaders on Thursday presented a united public front in favor of extending a key national security surveillance power without changes, providing momentum to backers of such an approach before a crucial week in Congress.

The White House has privately asked its congressional allies for an 18-month “clean” extension of the spy law known as Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which enables broad electronic surveillance of the communications of overseas security threats.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) has said he will put such a renewal on the chamber floor next week, despite vocal opposition from hardline Republicans and progressive Democrats that won’t support an extension without more privacy safeguards, including a warrant requirement for law enforcement and intelligence analysts to access the massive Section 702 database.

The authority will expire on April 20 without congressional action.

The remarks at the House Intelligence Committee’s annual hearing on worldwide threats offered the most vocal support for President Donald Trump’s strategy to date.

“I wish the reauthorization was longer than 18 months, congressman,” CIA Director John Ratcliffe said in response to questions from Rep. Darin LaHood (R-IL).

“I wish you all would consider for longer than that, so that, regardless of who the president is, he or she would have the benefit of a tool that's indispensable across administrations, provides more than half of the important, actionable intelligence” the commander-in-chief relies on, he added.

FBI Director Kash Patel, who earlier in the session rattled off his agency’s efforts at better compliance with the law since a host of reforms were made during the last renewal in 2024, agreed.

“I’d like five to ten years,” he said.

Patel and Ratcliffe on Wednesday provided all House members a classified briefing on the expiring spy law to bolster the administration’s case for a tweak-free renewal. Their remarks and leadership on the issue is somewhat ironic considering the last extension was winnowed down to just two years to appease then former president Trump’s  right-wing base and allow him, if elected, to put his own stamp on the law.

The new approach has put Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard in an awkward position. In 2020, Gabbard, then a Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii, introduced legislation that would have repealed the authority and other spying capabilities.

However, today she said she would “support the president's decision to execute this.”

In his opening statement, House Intelligence Chair Rick Crawford (R-AR) said he was working with Rep. Jim Hime (CT), the panel’s top Democrat and House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-OH) — who has railed against Section 702 for years — to support Trump's request and “provide more time to assess the implementation” of the nearly five dozen reforms included in the last reauthorization.

Still, the first major hurdle is whether Republicans can advance a rule to set up a final vote on the House floor.

If it does make it to the full chamber, Himes previously predicted many Democrats would not support any renewal of spying powers, putting even more pressure on GOP leaders to convince their members.

And if a bill passes, there could be headwinds in the Senate where the last extension passed with the bare minimum 60 votes required.

Also on Thursday, a coalition of privacy and civil liberty groups sent a letter to congressional leaders arguing against renewing FISA without limits at a time when the federal government’s use of artificial intelligence is rapidly expanding.

“The law simply has not kept pace with the rapidly growing capabilities of AI,” the letter states. “We should all share the fear that powerful AI makes it possible to conduct invasive surveillance at unprecedented scale, and that these tools pose serious risks to our fundamental liberties.”

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Martin Matishak

Martin Matishak

is the senior cybersecurity reporter for The Record. Prior to joining Recorded Future News in 2021, he spent more than five years at Politico, where he covered digital and national security developments across Capitol Hill, the Pentagon and the U.S. intelligence community. He previously was a reporter at The Hill, National Journal Group and Inside Washington Publishers.


文章来源: https://therecord.media/us-intel-chiefs-urge-lawmakers-to-extend-section-702
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