A solid 62 per cent Americans said the federal government's investigations for possible terrorist threats were more important, even if that intrudes on personal privacy, the national survey released yesterday by the Pew Research Centre and the Washington Post found.
A majority 56 per cent find the National Security Agency's access to telephone call records to uncover terrorist activity "acceptable" vis-a-vis 41 per cent who said it was "not acceptable".
Of them, 30 per cent found it 'strongly' acceptable while 26 per cent found it 'somewhat' acceptable, according to the survey conducted Thursday through Sunday among a random national sample of 1,004 adults.
Results from the full poll have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.
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These numbers are relatively unchanged from a similar question asked in July 2002, months after the September 11 terrorist attacks in the US.
In 2006, when news broke of the NSA's monitoring of telephone and e-mail communications without court approval, there was a closer divide on the practice -- 51 per cent to 47 per cent.
US President Barack Obama strongly defended the secret surveillance, saying it has helped prevent terrorist attacks but assured people that nobody was listening to their calls.
Top US officials -- National Intelligence Director James Clapper as well as White House Press Secretary Jay Carney -- too defended the programme, saying that it is important to keep a track of the foreign activities and that such efforts helped them to abort several terrorist attacks and nab terrorists like David Headley, the 26/11 Mumbai attacks convict.
Meanwhile, US lawmakers demanded immediate extradition of the 29-year-old contractor and whistleblower Edward Snowden from Hong Kong over the sensational leaking.