Fred Kaplan at Slate: Edward Snowden Doesn’t Deserve Clemency

What to do with Edward Snowden should the Russians spit him out
Opinion • Views: 25,855

Slate’s Fred Kaplan is leaving the media reservation and telling it like it is about Edward Snowden and the push to grant him immunity from prosecution: Edward Snowden Doesn’t Deserve Clemency: The NSA Leaker Hasn’t Proved He Is a Whistleblower.

Is a clear picture emerging of why Snowden’s prospects for clemency resemble the proverbial snowball’s chance in hell? He gets himself placed at the NSA’s signals intelligence center in Hawaii for the sole purpose of pilfering extremely classified documents. (How many is unclear: I’ve heard estimates ranging from “tens of thousands” to 1.1 million.) He gains access to many of them by lying to his fellow workers (and turning them into unwitting accomplices). Then he flees to Hong Kong (a protectorate of China, especially when it comes to foreign policy) and, from there, to Russia.

This isn’t quite what it would have seemed in Cold War times. Russia and China are no longer our sworn ideological enemies. But in the realm of cyberconflict and cybersecurity, they are our chief adversaries; they hack, or try to hack, into American computer networks more than any other countries (and we hack, or try to hack, into theirs as well).

Did the Times editorialists review the statement that Snowden made to a human rights group in Moscow this past July, soon after Vladimir Putin granted him asylum? He thanked the nations that had offered him support. “These nations, including Russia, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Ecuador, have my gratitude and respect,” he proclaimed, “for being the first to stand against human rights violations carried out by the powerful.” Earlier, Snowden had said that he sought refuge in Hong Kong because of its “spirited commitment to free speech and the right of political dissent.” He also said, in his interview with the South China Morning Post, that he hoped to spread his cache of documents to journalists in every country where the NSA had operated. “The reality is,” he said on another occasion, “that I have acted at great personal risk to help the public of the world, regardless of whether that public is American, European, or Asian.”

Whistleblowers have large egos by nature, and there is no crime or shame in that. But one gasps at the megalomania and delusion in Snowden’s statements, and one can’t help but wonder if he is a dupe, a tool, or simply astonishingly naïve.

Or simply a libertarian.

Read the whole thing.

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8 comments
1 Eclectic Cyborg  Fri, Jan 3, 2014 4:48:12pm
one can’t help but wonder if he is a dupe, a tool, or simply astonishingly naïve.

D. All of the above

2 dog philosopher  Fri, Jan 3, 2014 4:49:24pm

pilfer (v.)
1540s, from pilfer (n.) “spoils, booty,” c.1400, from Old French pelfre “booty, spoils” (11c.), of unknown origin, possibly related to pelf. Related: Pilfered; pilfering.

but did he pilfer for pelf?

3 William Barnett-Lewis  Fri, Jan 3, 2014 4:52:56pm

I still seriously wonder if he wasn’t turned by FSB while he was in Switzerland and that this whole thing has been at their direction.

4 Justanotherhuman  Fri, Jan 3, 2014 4:55:07pm

It’s looking more and more to me as though he had plans to defect to Russia all along (as I explained 2 threads back). I think he knew this when he went to Hong Kong, and don’t think he actually planned to go anywhere else, Iceland, Eucuador, Cuba—any of them.

The Russians gave him asylum in HK and put him on an Aeroflot flight—the month-long stay in the airport was pure theater.

5 Lidane  Fri, Jan 3, 2014 4:56:03pm

He’s an upper middle class white guy and a libertarian dudebro.

He’s naive, entitled, and clearly bought into the Wikileaks/Greenwald bullshit that there should be no state secrets and no spying and then everything will be hunky dory and perfect.

6 Justanotherhuman  Fri, Jan 3, 2014 5:00:47pm

Hmmm. Edward Snowden is not a special snowflake. He just thinks he is. (H/T to Romantic Heretic—see right side list.)

7 Justanotherhuman  Fri, Jan 3, 2014 5:15:30pm

re: #3 William Barnett-Lewis

I still seriously wonder if he wasn’t turned by FSB while he was in Switzerland and that this whole thing has been at their direction.

That very well could be; he was working there for the CIA from 2007-2009 when he went to work at Dell. We know now that he was stealing files when he was working for Dell as a contractor for the NSA in Japan, at least in 2012 (and perhaps even before then). And he was at Dell for almost 4 yrs, until early 2013 at which time he began contacting Poitras and Greenwald and wound up with Booz Hamilton in Hawaii in March.

USIS didn’t complete a background check on Snowden until 2011, 2 yrs after he started working for Dell. So, he worked for 4 yrs without a complete background check, and, it appears, a pretty incomplete one.

8 wheat-dogghazi  Fri, Jan 3, 2014 5:15:38pm

I lost any respect for Snowden once he landed in Hong Kong, and called it a bastion of free speech and liberty. I knew then he was a ignoramus, not just about Hong Kong’s history and current situation as part of mainland China, but in anything outside his technical expertise.


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