Edward Snowden (1983 - )
Tue Jun 21, 1983
Image: Edward Snowden speaks about the NSA leaks in an interview with reporter Glenn Greenwald at the hotel The Mira Hong Kong. [Wikipedia]
Edward Snowden, born on this day in 1983, is an American whistleblower who leaked highly classified information from the NSA in 2013 when he was working as a CIA employee, exposing multiple governments’ widespread surveillance programs.
Snowden’s disclosures revealed numerous global surveillance programs, many run by the NSA and the Five Eyes Intelligence Alliance with the cooperation of telecommunication companies and European governments, prompting a cultural discussion about national security and individual privacy.
In 2013, the United States Department of Justice unsealed charges against Snowden of two counts of violating the Espionage Act of 1917 and theft of government property, revoking his passport. Two days later, he flew into a Moscow Airport, where Russian authorities noted that his U.S. passport had been canceled, and he could not leave the airport terminal for over one month.
Russia later granted Snowden the right of asylum with an initial visa for residence for one year, and he continues to reside there on extension today.
“Being called a traitor by Dick Cheney is the highest honor you can give to an American.”
- Edward Snowden
- Date: 1983-06-21
- Learn More: en.wikipedia.org, www.theguardian.com.
- Tags: #Birthdays.
- Source: www.apeoplescalendar.org
I never said he took more documents.
He was a CIA agent. That means he has information other than documents that could be of use to Russia.
You are bending over backwards to handwave the most logical answer: Snowden was/is working for Russia
He was entry-level cybersecurity officer for the CIA. You make it sound like he was James Bond, but he was closer to an IT professional. And the information he shared with the Gaurdian was from his time at the NSA, not the CIA.
Let’s walk through your, “most logical,” answer. Snowden was a Russian agent. Instead of maintaining his position with the NSA so he could continue to feed Russia national security secrets, he decided the best thing to do was to blow up his cover by sharing his knowledge of the U.S.'s mass surveillance program, not with Russia, but with journalists. Once he had thoroughly and publicly destroyed his career, he traveled to Russia to share additional classified materials and/or information, and his passport was coincidentally canceled en route.
That’s the simplest explanation to you? Because to me, the simplest explanation is that he was a whistle-blower, and the Obama administration decided it would be better to strand him in a hostile, authoritarian country rather than allow him to reach his intended destination.
This means he has more information than just a CIA agent.
How so? All I did was point out that espionage verifiably exists and that it is the most logical explanation for Snowden to flee to Russia, given the fact that no US intelligence worker would be welcomed there unless they were leveraging their knowledge.
Snowden “sharing his knowledge of the U.S.'s mass surveillance program”, had a negative impact on US citizens view of government, which has always been a goal of Russian espionage and psyop campaigns. You’re just reinforcing what I’ve already said.
Russia has Trump running the US as president. You think they can’t afford to expose Snowden to achieve their goals?
Just because Snowden shared his knowledge with journalists doesn’t mean he went to them first let alone exclusively.
None of your points hold up to scrutiny.
Snowden travelled from China (another enemy of US that’s working with Russia) to Russia with the end goal of going to Ecuador. All the US did was cancel his passport.
Russia could’ve treated Snowden the same as they do with anyone else who doesn’t have a passport. But for obvious reasons, they don’t.
Right, so again, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. You’re putting forward the theory that Snowden leaked classified materials to journalists because he was a secret Russian agent, then traveled to Russia to share further information, but only after making himself a target of the United States government. And he was lucky enough to travel there just before his passport was canceled. And the only evidence you have to support this speculation is that Russia, an enemy of the U.S., granted asylum to someone the U.S. wanted to prosecute.
Compare that to Snowden’s official story; he flew to Hong Kong because they had autonomy from the U.S. and China (especially before the 2019 crackdowns on protesters) and strong pro-democracy beliefs, where he gave journalists information in order to blow the whistle on the largest domestic spying program in a American history. He then attempted to travel to Ecuador while avoiding countries that would extradite him, but his passport was canceled in Russia, and he was forced to seek asylum there. This story, by the way, has not been contradicted by anyone in the government.
So, if you want to believe the conspiracy theories, that your call, but it’s not the simplest explanation. The simplest explanation is the one that’s already been given, and until anyone with any credibility can contradict it, I will continue to believe it.
Your extraordinary claim that Russia isn’t treating Snowden the same as they do any other US citizen is “just because”. That is an extraordinary claim with a laughable explanation.
Lucky enough to travel to Russia? You’re acting like he has no control over what flights he takes. Again without any explanation or even common sense.
Acting like he went to China (a rival to the US) because China is just super trustworthy. Again, a laughable explanation completely out of touch with reality. But hey, if Snowden said it it must be true.
Your conspiracy theories don’t hold up to any scrutiny.
Snowden was a spy. He fled to countries that commit the most espionage against the US because he was a spy. Those countries did NOT treat him like US intelligence agent even though he was, because he was a spy.
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