When assessing Edward Snowden, the man behind perhaps the
biggest intelligence leak in American history, conscience is the key.
A supporter holds a sign at a small rally in
support of Edward Snowden in Manhattan's Union Square on June 10, 2013.
Daniel Ellsberg, take your leaked Pentagon Papers and step aside.
There’s a new gunslinger in town: Edward J. Snowden — former CIA employee, 29
years of age and now whistleblower on the run.
Whether Snowden ends up jailed in the U.S., dead in some dumpster
overlooking Hong Kong’s harbour, or — even worse — if he winds up as a regular
contributor to CNN or Fox News, we will be hearing about him for years to come
in any history of audacious American whistleblowers.
Snowden is the man behind what might be the biggest intelligence
leak in American history. In a series of explosive disclosures to The Guardian
newspaper, he has revealed that the U.S. National Security Agency is collecting
more than 200 billion pieces of intelligence a month, gathering a vast quantity
of emails and web searches from the world’s largest Internet companies and
routinely misleading the people who are supposed to oversee its actions.
Snowden’s disclosures reveal a scale of global eavesdropping that
is greater than previously known. They also describe an expanding role for
private corporations in what appears to be developing into a secret
surveillance state. For its part, the U.S. government explains this as being
crucial in its anti-terrorism efforts.
A debate has begun to rage in U.S. and British political circles
about whether, in revealing these secrets, Snowden is a hero, or a traitor. My
sense is that he is far more the former than the latter. He didn’t did do it
for money, or to “aid and abet the enemy.” As unlikely as this may be in
today’s poisoned political environment, it appears he did it out of conscience
— “My sole motive is to inform the public as to that which is done in their
name, and that which is done against them.” That motivation will make it more
difficult for the Americans to pursue him aggressively as his case moves ahead.
Snowden was an employee of a U.S. government contractor in Hawaii
that worked with the National Security Agency. He had free access to its
mushrooming computer systems and said he became alarmed at the scale of
surveillance of innocent people. Snowden said he thought Barack Obama would act
to restrain the NSA, but when that didn’t happen, he made the decision to leak:
“I had been looking for leaders, but I realized that leadership is about being
the first to act.”
He fled to Hong Kong last month and told the South China Morning
Post newspaper this week that he wants the people there to decide his fate. The
U.S. has not yet filed an application for extradition and a court battle could
be lengthy. Snowden said that he had faith in Hong Kong’s legal system: “I am
not here to hide from justice. I am here to reveal criminality.”
The response from the American political establishment has been
predictably ferocious. John Boehner, the House Speaker, called him a “traitor.”
Senator Dianne Feinstein, chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said it
was “an act of treason.” Most of the influential newspaper columnists were also
critical, citing the continuing threats to the United States as a result of the
Sept. 11 attacks in 2001.
But largely lost in the public clamour was what Snowden’s
disclosures revealed. They confirmed that the U.S. government routinely
collects the phone logs of millions of Americans who have no ties to terrorism,
without seeking any court warrants. They confirmed that the NSA has access to
Internet companies such as Google, Facebook and Microsoft, enabling it to
collect online data about millions of Americans for perpetuity. And they
confirmed that American authorities, in their testimony to the U.S. Congress,
have lied about their practices.
James Clapper, President Obama’s director of national
intelligence, said this week that the Snowden leaks were profoundly serious:
“For me, it is literally — not figuratively, literally — gut-wrenching to see
this happen.” But only three months ago, when testifying at a Senate hearing,
he was asked: “Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or
hundreds of millions of Americans?” Clapper replied: “No, sir.”
Thanks to Edward J. Snowden, we now know that Clapper lied. And we
know much more.
Tony Burman, former head of Al Jazeera
English and CBC News, teaches journalism at Ryerson University. tony.burman@gmail.com
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