By Debra J. Saunders
Sunday, June 01, 2014
National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden has found
the court of public opinion to be far more receptive than a court of law. He
conducts the occasional interview with seemingly sympathetic journalists. NBC
News aired one such interview with anchorman Brian Williams on Wednesday night.
"Do you see yourself as a patriot?" Williams asked.
"I do," answered Snowden, now 30. He was just
trying to protect the country and the Constitution "from the encroachment
of adversaries -- and those adversaries don't have to be foreign
countries."
Dianne Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence
Committee, was having none of it. "In many respects, I think that he's
guilty of espionage," the senator from California told the San Francisco
Chronicle's editorial board Thursday. "I do not regard him as a
whistle-blower." Snowden should return to the United States to stand
trial, she said.
Feinstein must be frustrated. Every so often, Snowden
pops up with his butter-wouldn't-melt-in-his-mouth face. On the one hand, he is
supposed to be super-smart on tech. He was brave to leak a guesstimated 1.7
million classified documents -- and then reveal his identity to the superpower
government that he had so clearly outsmarted. You have to give him credit for
the courage of his convictions.
On the other hand, he makes claims that defy credulity.
He said he is surprised he ended up in Russia. He never meant for that to
happen. But he's not worried that the Russians will try to squeeze information
from him, because he didn't bring any intelligence with him.
Paradoxically, Snowden also told Williams that he
"was trained as a spy" and that he worked undercover overseas. That's
not the expected profile for an innocent abroad.
Snowden argued that the government cannot "show a
single individual who's been harmed in any way" by his leaks. That's a
clever statement -- and safe. He knows that the government doesn't name assets
or operatives who have been harmed because of leaks. The intelligence community
is wedded to secrecy, even when it undermines its own damaged credibility.
When I threw out Snowden's name-one-person challenge to
George Washington University international affairs professor Amitai Etzioni, he
countered, "Name one person who has been harmed by the NSA." Before I
could say German Chancellor Angela Merkel -- U.S. intelligence reportedly
tapped her cellphone -- Etzioni stipulated that the one person had to be an
American. His point was taken: Leaking is, for the most part, a crime against
institutions.
Surely, Snowden understands that his release of U.S.
intelligence techniques has damaged Foggy Bottom's relations with allies and,
worse, tipped off terrorist organizations to methods that can help them avoid
detection. His decision to leak was not a victimless crime. For all his daring,
Snowden doesn't dare acknowledge the price of his hijacking of U.S.
intelligence.
Snowden has maintained that he had to leak documents
because the NSA ignored his protests about what he considered illegal
practices. Most recently, Snowden told Williams that when he complained to the
NSA, "the response, more or less, in bureaucratic language, was, 'You
should stop asking questions.'"
On Thursday, Feinstein released an April 8, 2013, email
that Snowden sent to the NSA Office of the General Counsel. Hardly a jeremiad
of moral misgivings about surveillance, it's a bureaucratic query asking a
government attorney to clarify questions about executive orders superseding
federal statute. A hierarchy of governing authority lists the U.S. Constitution
on top, followed by "federal statutes/presidential executive orders."
Snowden wrote rather daintily, "I'm not entirely certain, but this does
not seem correct, as it seems to imply Executive Orders have the same
precedence as law." Weak tea, that.
It's not as if Snowden doesn't know how to be blunt. In
March, he swiped at Feinstein for condemning a CIA search of her Senate
committee's computers. In a statement to NBC, he lamented that an "elected
official does not care at all that the rights of millions of ordinary citizens
are violated by our spies, but suddenly it's a scandal when a politician finds
out the same thing happens to them."
It is instructive that the far-seeing Snowden never
thought to save or leak documents in which he was supposed to have raged against
the machine. Snowden has erected a shaky house of sticks to justify his
decision to screw national security. It only stands because it is shielded from
the elements.
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