From Russia With Love: Snowden Gets Asylum
Jacob Heilbrunn | August 1, 2013
With its decision to grant Edward Snowden temporary asylum, Russia is
once again demonstrating its independence from America and handing a
big victory to WikiLeaks. The Obama administration has gone into
overdrive to attempt to capture Snowden, promising Moscow that Snowden
would neither be tortured nor subjected to the death penalty if he is
returned. But in the wake of the treatment of Bradley Manning, who was
apparently subjected to prolonged isolation and other maltreatment,
those promises are necessary but hardly sufficient. America's track
record when it comes to dealing with dissent—for that is what Snowden
represents—is a parlous one, from the incarceration of Eugene Debs
during World War I to the latest batch of whistleblowers. So Moscow has
blown a giant raspberry at President Obama.
The problem is really of his own making. The appropriate response to
Snowden would have been to promise him immunity from prosecution and
allow him to return to America, where he could have testified to
Congress. From a practical standpoint, the administration would have
been better off with Snowden in America rather than back in Russia,
where he can dribble out embarrassing information. Everything that
Snowden has said appears to be accurate. The latest revelation concerns a
computer program called XKeyscore that is one more step towards the
omnicompetent state. It permits government officials to snoop wherever
and whenever they please, to trawl through your internet activities,
chats, emails, and so on. The indispensable James Bamford, writing in the New York Review of Books,
reports that "with the arrival of the Obama administration, the NSA's
powers continued to expand at the same time that administration
officials and the NSA continued to deceive the American public on the
extent of the spying."
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