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Congressional leaders in 2004 favoured keeping surveillance program secret: Cheney

Cheney said Monday he was directly involved in setting up the program, run by the National Security Agency, in the weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.
Cheney said Monday he was directly involved in setting up the program, run by the National Security Agency, in the weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Richard Drew

WASHINGTON – Former Vice-President Dick Cheney says congressional leaders he briefed in 2004 on a surveillance program recently disclosed by leaker Edward Snowden supported it, and both Republicans and Democrats wanted to keep it secret.

Cheney said Monday he was directly involved in setting up the program, run by the National Security Agency, in the weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. He said it has had “phenomenal results” in preventing terrorist attacks.

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READ MORE: Snowden applying for asylum in multiple countries: Wikileaks

Cheney did not specify which program he was referring to. Snowden has disclosed details of programs monitoring phone records and scouring the Internet for threats of terrorism.

Cheney said he met with congressional leaders about three years after the program started. He said they rejected the idea of seeking more formal authorization for it because information would leak.

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