Published
time: August 02, 2013 17:36
Edited time: August 04, 2013 15:31
Edited time: August 04, 2013 15:31
As an aide holds up a poster, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) speaks during a
hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee July 31, 2013 on Capitol Hill in
Washington, DC (AFP Photo / Alex Wong)
Sen. Dianne Feinstein
referred to the US, Canada and Mexico as “the Homeland” at an NSA Senate
briefing on Wednesday, presenting a map that united the three nations as one.
At a Senate Judiciary
Committee meeting held to acquire details on the National Security Agency’s
mass surveillance programs, Sen. Feinstein (D-Calif.) made a geographic mistake
in which she united three large countries into one. The error went by without
comment during the briefing, but generated a significant response upon closer
examination of the map.
During the briefing,
Feinstein, who serves as chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, was
defending the NSA’s data-collection programs when she pulled out a world map
that identified North America as the “Homeland”. The newly-declassified diagram
showed terror activity that the NSA had allegedly disrupted throughout the world.
But while Europe, Africa
and Asia were correctly identified by their continent’s name, countries of
North America were all encompassed as a new mega-nation.
“Now, the NSA has produced
and declassified a chart, which I’d like to make available to all members. It
has the 54 total (terror) events,” Feinstein said. “And it shows the events
disrupted… 13 in the Homeland, 25 in Europe, five in Africa and 11 in Asia.”
Although it might be easy
to brush off the map as nothing more than a mistake made by a staffer, a writer
at The Atlantic suggested that it might indicate a potential NSA attempt at
tallying thwarted attacks in North America to make anti-terrorism efforts in
the US look more successful.
“Normally, this would be
written off as a design goof, as one of the NSA’s (newly adept) graphics guys
using a little more light blue than he ought,” writes the Atlantic’s
Philip Bump. “This being the NSA, we’re not inclined to offer that benefit
of the doubt. Is this a way of blending in Canadian and Mexican terror activity
disruptions (which, we’ll remind you, is different from actual plots interrupted)
to give a larger sense of the NSA’s success at halting terrorism within our
borders?”
Whatever the reason for the
NSA’s creation of “the Homeland”, the spy agency has already been condemned for
failing to respect the sovereignty of other nations through its extensive
data-collection efforts.
Some people have taken to
Twitter to sarcastically welcome Canada and Mexico to the United States.
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