NSA Contractor Outs Himself as Source of Greenwald’s Blockbuster U.S. Surveillance Leaks

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29-year old former CIA technical assistant and current NSA third-party contractor Edward Snowden has decided to out himself as the source of the leaked national security documents exposing the U.S. government’s massive secret telephone records collection and secret access to nine major Internet services providers, as published by journalist Glenn Greenwald of the Guardian over the course of the past week.

“Any analyst, at any time, can target anyone…anywhere,” he tells Greenwald in a video interview published this morning by the Guardian, as recorded in Hong Kong where Snowden has taken refuge for the time being. He adds that, “increasingly”, secret intelligence collection is “happening domestically.”

“Not all analysts have the ability to target everything,” he explains. “But I, sitting at my desk, certainly had the authorities to wiretap anyone, from you or your accountant to a federal judge or even the President if I had a personal email.”

Prior to his decision to leak certain classified and top secret documents about “this massive surveillance machine” he said is being secretly built by the government — documents which, he says, he reviewed specifically to make sure nobody was personally exposed by them — Greenwald reports, in a separate article, that he “had ‘a very comfortable life’ that included a salary of roughly $200,000, a girlfriend with whom he shared a home in Hawaii, a stable career, and a family he loves.”

“I carefully evaluated every single document I disclosed to ensure that each was legitimately in the public interest,” he is quoted as telling the Guardian. “There are all sorts of documents that would have made a big impact that I didn’t turn over, because harming people isn’t my goal. Transparency is.”

Thanks to his leaks from the NSA, “Snowden will go down in history as one of America’s most consequential whistleblowers alongside Daniel Ellsberg and Bradley Manning” writes Greenwald, with fellow Guardian journalists Ewen MacAskill and Laura Poitras today.

“The public needs to decide whether these programs and policies are right or wrong,” Snowden tells Greenwald in the fascinating video interview…

NSA and the intelligence community in general, is focused on getting intelligence where ever it can by any means possible, that it believes, on the grounds of sort of a self-certification, that they serve the national interest. Originally, we saw that focus very narrowly tailored, as far as intelligence gathered overseas. Now, increasingly, we see that it’s happening domestically. And to do that, they — the NSA, specifically — targets the communications of everyone. It ingests them by default. It collects them in its system, and it filters them and it analyzes them and it measures them and it stores them for periods of time, simply because that’s the easiest, most efficient and most valuable way to achieve these ends. So while they may be intending to target someone associated with a foreign government or someone they suspect of terrorism, they’re collecting your communications to do so.

A decade ago, Snowden had enlisted in the U.S. Army in hopes of going to Iraq with the Special Forces, the Guardian reports. He became disenchanted, he says, when “Most of the people training us seemed pumped up about killing Arabs, not helping anyone.” Following a serious injury during training, he was discharged, and eventually made his way into the intelligence field, and now the pages of history.

When asked why he decided to expose these programs, and now come out publicly about them at this time, as opposed to staying in the shadows until otherwise discovered, Snowden explains in the video…

I think that the public is owed an explanation of the motivations behind the people who make these disclosures that are outside of the democratic model — when you are subverting the power of government, that that’s a fundamentally dangerous thing to democracy. And if you do that in secret consistently, ya know, as the government does when it wants to benefit from a secret action that it took, it’ll kind of give its officials a mandate to go ‘Hey, you know, tell the press about this thing and that thing so the public is on our side’.

But they rarely, if ever, do that when an abuse occurs. That falls to individual citizens, but they’re typically maligned. You know, it becomes a thing of ‘these people are against the country, they’re against the government’.

But, I’m not. I’m no different from anybody else. I don’t have special skills. I’m just another guy who sits there day to day in the office and watches what’s happening and goes ‘This is something that’s not our place to decide.’ The public needs to decide whether these programs and policies are right or wrong. And I’m willing to go on the record to defend the authenticity of them, and say I didn’t change these, I didn’t modify the story. This is the truth. This is what’s happening. You should decide whether we need to be doing this.

“Why should people care about surveillance?,” Greenwald asked Snowden, who replies:

Because even if you’re not doing anything wrong, you’re being watched and recorded. And the storage capability of these systems increases every year consistently by orders of magnitude, to where it’s getting to the point you don’t have to have done anything wrong. You simply have to eventually fall under suspicion from somebody — even by a wrong call — and then they can use this system to go back and scrutinize every decision you’ve ever made, every friend you’ve ever discussed something with, and attack you on that basis to sort of derive suspicion from an innocent life and paint anyone in the context of a wrongdoer.

In a two-page September 21, 2011 letter sent by Democratic Senators Ron Wyden (OR) and Mark Udall (CO), both members of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee, to Attorney General Eric Holder, stressing their concern about government misrepresentation of our current surveillance laws, the Senators pointed out what they describe as a stark gap between our current laws and our actual, secret implementation of those policies.

“We have been concerned for some time,” they wrote, “that the U.S. Government is relying on secret interpretations of surveillance authorities that — in our judgement — differ significantly from the public’s understanding of what is permitted under U.S. law.”

The two men, privy to many of the classified policies now partially exposed thanks to Snowden’s leaks, said that they believed there needs to be more public transparency of those policies and programs.

“We believe that policymakers can have legitimate differences of opinion about what types of domestic surveillance should be permitted, but we also believe that the American people should be able to learn what their government thinks that the law means, so that voters have the ability to ratify or reject decisions that elected officials make on their behalf.”

While Snowden was not asked specifically, during the Guardian video, to speak to the concerns of the Senators, his closing response seemed to do exactly that:

In the months head, the years ahead, it’s only going to get worse, until eventually there will be a time where policies will change, because the only thing that restricts the activities of the surveillance state are policy. Even our agreements with other sovereign governments — we consider that to be a stipulation of policy, rather than a stipulation of law.

Because of that, a new leader will be elected, they’ll flip the switch, say that ‘because of the crisis, because of the dangers that we face in the world’ — ya know, some new and unpredicted threat — ‘we need more authority, we need more power.’ And there will be nothing the people can do at that point to oppose it. It’ll be turnkey tyranny.

As progressive blogger “Digby” observed, about the video interview with Snowden taped three days ago and released this morning: “Whistleblowers are often an odd lot. You have to be to take on the powerful like this. I know that I would never in a million years have the balls to do what he has done. Except for his amazing bravery, he seems surprisingly normal.”

Indeed, he does. There is little doubt that he will now be maligned in the way that Greenwald, remarkably, has been over the past several days. While Greenwald was one of the staunchest, unyeilding critics of the Bush Administration for years, attacked regularly as a ‘radical liberal’ by the Right at that time, he is now being similar assaulted by Democrats who are furious about his consistent stand on issues of civil liberties.

What has been most remarkable, however, from my observations over the past several weeks — beginning initially with the news that the Obama Administration’s DoJ had secretly subpoenaed broad telephone records from Associated Press reporters and had identified Fox “News” journalist James Rosen as a “co-conspirator” in another leak case, right up to the disclosures over the past week — is how many Democrats have taken up virtually identical talking points and positions in order to defend the Obama Administration, as those used by Republicans to defend George W. Bush while he was carrying out many of the exact same actions.

Curiously, many Obama loyalists don’t seem to notice the astounding irony of using those same tactics and talking points to defend the President after having decried them when used by Bush loyalists during the first decade of the century.

At the same time, many Bush loyalists are conveniently pretending to forget the nearly-identical arguments once made in blind defense of Bush, now that they hope to use them to attack President Obama. Either that, or, like Dubya’s former Press Secretary Ari Fleisher who said yesterday that he’s “proud, actually, as a Republican to be backing what President Obama has done”, they are simply ringing in to endorse the same Big Government policies they once supported under Bush, even while falsely claiming, both then and now, to be “conservatives” who staunchly oppose broad government overreach and unbridled intrusion into the private lives and Constitutional rights of American citizens.

The political world has, in some respects, now completely turned upside down. But whether or not you agree with Snowden’s brave decision to leak this information to the public, or whether or not you agree with the policies exposed by them, we are all now much better educated about what our government is doing in our name, and, therefore, better able to make informed decisions about that government and those policies.

That is, of course, the very point of the very best whistleblowing, which 2008 candidate Obama once described as “acts of courage and patriotism, which can sometimes save lives and often save taxpayer dollars [and that] should be encouraged rather than stifled as they have been during the Bush administration.”

And now we have the “courage and patriotism” of yet another American whistleblower and several dedicated and unflinching journalists (from a British publication) to thank for it.

CORRECTION: I had initially misidentified the states represented by Senators Wyden and Udall. That has now been corrected above. My apologies for the error.

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14 Comments on “NSA Contractor Outs Himself as Source of Greenwald’s Blockbuster U.S. Surveillance Leaks

  1. Snowden, Greenwald, MacAskill, and Poitras are heroic. I hope the brouhaha, which is certain to ensue, provides some sort of tipping point for sanity and constitutionality to return. We need to have their backs cuz I can’t imagine the Obama Administration(with plenty of help from crazies of all political persuasions) is not gonna try to crucify them.

  2. This guy’s whistleblowing is supported by the FISA court ruling which held that certain activities Snowden has and is revealing are violations of the Fourth Amendment, and probably the relevant Patriot Act statutes as well.

  3. Brad wrote:

    What has been most remarkable — is how many Democrats have taken up virtually identical talking points and positions in order to defend the Obama Administration, as those used by Republicans to defend George W. Bush while he was carrying out many of the exact same actions.

    Well said.

    It is one indication of how they have built in a knee-jerk sports minded ideology into the public persona.

    It is as if we were on teams that fight for the team no matter how absolutely wrong the team is.

    Holder must go, and the Stalinist spy state must go too.

  4. Maybe some of the less knee-jerk Obomber-supporting “progressives” will now come around to what a lot of us have known for sometimes – Barry Obomber is an impeachable miscreant. Thank you Ed Snowdon, and especially the increasingly great Glen Greenwald, who totally deserves an “Izzy” for this.

  5. great story. thank you, edward snowden.

    one technical point, Udall is from Colorado and Wyden from Oregon. fact mistakes in a piece like this can lead to suspicions as to veracity of the entire piece.

    {Thanks for alerting us to the mistake, now corrected. — ed.}

  6. Just been reading about Manning’s trial. Sure sounds like a kangaroo court to me.

  7. I think we should all focus on the issues and not who is the annointed hero du jour. For that reason (and others) we should withhold judgment on whether Snowden is a hero, an intelligence “plant” or something else. I am especially concerned that Greenwald, who I respect greatly for his efforts, is being set up Rove v. Rather style.

    To elaborate a bit, an ATT tech discovered and disclosed this sort of spying nearly ten years ago. Snowden is not telling us anything new, but merely confirming what has been reported in the alternative media over the last ten years or so. This being the case, it seems puzzling to laud him as a “hero.”

    Lets not get ahead of ourselves until we know more. His background is highly suspect as is his decision-making. Why pick Hong Kong? Surely he knows that despite Hong Kong’s purported independence from China, the Chinese have their own spy programs very similar to those disclosed by Greenwald and Snowden. So why would someone like Snowden place his fate in the hands of a government with the same attitude as the one Snowden is opposing in the US? It doesn’t add up.

  8. I have always considered Bradblog a balanced and fair blog so let’s have a look at the other side of the discussion and not just what is being spouted by firebaggers and libertarians. This, Greenwald/Snowden “hair on fire” thing has never passed the smell test to me and I am an outsider. It’s odd IMO.

    Are you Losing your shpadoinkle Brad?
    http://thedailybanter.com/2013/06/nsa-story-falling-apart-under-scrutiny-key-facts-turning-out-to-be-inaccurate/

    The Washington Post is already back tracking.
    “On Thursday, June 6, the Washington Post published a bombshell of a story, alleging that nine giants of the tech industry had “knowingly participated” in a widespread program by the United States National Security Agency (NSA).
    One day later, with no acknowledgment except for a change in the timestamp, the Post revised the story, backing down from sensational claims it made originally. But the damage was already done.”
    http://www.zdnet.com/the-real-story-in-the-nsa-scandal-is-the-collapse-of-journalism-7000016570/

  9. GWN, do you realize there is an explanation that makes both sides technically correct, right? Supposedly “back doors” are built into a lot of hardware and software nowadays, so technically the government may very well have access to their servers without them knowing it.

  10. I think that we the public have already given up our right to privacy when we joined facebook, twitter etc. I do not put my birthdate, hometown, school, children etc on these sites that I occasionally visit. Snowden brought it out that we were spying on foreign powers while the president was visiting them, which I thought WAS treasonous. Let’s wait and see as it may be much ado about nothing. I am concerned about his connected to the 2 right wing Pauls and what his real motive is.

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