Edward Snowden risked UK agents’ lives – and could have spied for Russia while in the U.S.

Snowden stole hundreds of thousands of documents exposing NSA spying Congress heard in March that documents contained US military secrets He fled to Russia where officials say he's paying for board with information Senator claims Putin is 'exploiting' Snowden until he 'reaches max on that' Also claimed Snowden may have been feeding Russians and Chinese information all along without knowing it

By Ian Drury

Published: 06:36 EST, 16 May 2014 | Updated: 21:46 EST, 16 May 2014

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Turned? Western security officials believe Snowden has become a Russian informant out of fear

Edward Snowden put British agents lives at risk, it was claimed yesterday, as it was alleged he spied for Russia while in the U.S.

Intelligence chiefs believe the whistleblower is passing secrets to Vladimir Putin in return for sanctuary.

Snowden, 30, became one of the worlds most wanted men last June when he broke cover as the civilian CIA worker who stole classified documents from the US National Security Agency.

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Edward Snowden risked UK agents' lives - and could have spied for Russia while in the U.S.

Journalist Glenn Greewald gives the inside story of Edward Snowden – Video


Journalist Glenn Greewald gives the inside story of Edward Snowden
Glenn Greenwald gives dramatic insider details about how he stumbled on what is perhaps the biggest leak of American intelligence in history, information he received from former NSA contractor...

By: The National

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Journalist Glenn Greewald gives the inside story of Edward Snowden - Video

Glenn Greenwald: State Surveillance And The Snowden Story – May 14, 2014 – Video


Glenn Greenwald: State Surveillance And The Snowden Story - May 14, 2014
Kojo sits down with investigative journalist Glenn Greenwald to talk about his role in breaking news from documents stolen by whistleblower Edward Snowden. Kojo asks what #39;s next in this groundbreak...

By: The Kojo Nnamdi Show

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Glenn Greenwald: State Surveillance And The Snowden Story - May 14, 2014 - Video

Edward Snowden ‘being manipulated into giving vital secrets to Russians in return for being allowed to stay there’

Snowden stole hundreds of thousands of documents exposing NSA spying Congress heard in March that documents contained US military secrets He fled to Russia where officials say he's paying for board with information Senator claims Putin is 'exploiting' Snowden until he 'reaches max on that' Also claimed Snowden may have been feeding Russians and Chinese information all along without knowing it

By Ian Drury

Published: 06:36 EST, 16 May 2014 | Updated: 17:23 EST, 16 May 2014

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Turned? Western security officials believe Snowden has become a Russian informant for fear he will be extradited to America to face espionage charges.

EDWARD Snowden put British agents lives at risk, it was claimed yesterday, as it was alleged he spied for Russia while in the U.S.

Intelligence chiefs believe the whistleblower is passing secrets to Vladimir Putin in return for sanctuary.

Snowden, 30, became one of the worlds most wanted men last June when he broke cover as the civilian CIA worker who stole classified documents from the US National Security Agency.

Originally posted here:
Edward Snowden 'being manipulated into giving vital secrets to Russians in return for being allowed to stay there'

Our enemies are stronger because of Edward Snowden’s treacherous betrayal

Modern-day code-breaking is immensely more challenging than it was in the Bletchley Park era during the Second World War, when the capture of German code books enabled British mathematicians such as Alan Turing to read vital enemy communications. Todays encryption software automatically encodes data, making it difficult to decipher without outside assistance. To this end most Western spy agencies have formed close working relationships with many of the worlds leading internet providers, helping them to monitor the communications of hostile governments and organisations. In the past, this close-knit relationship has enabled Western surveillance organisations such as the NSA and GCHQ to provide vital intelligence that has helped to disrupt al-Qaeda plots and support efforts by Nato forces to defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan, as well as providing vital information about the military ambitions of emerging powers such as China and India.

But thanks to Snowden and his acolytes, our ability to maintain high-level surveillance on potential threats to our security has been severely affected.

For, during the few months he spent working at the NSAs Signals Intelligence Centre in Hawaii, Snowden did not simply confine himself to acquiring information on the agencys mass surveillance techniques, which attracted most of the headlines when the Guardian first published his revelations last year. Many of the 1.7 million documents that Snowden copied and stole relate to top-secret American spying operations on countries like Russia and China. They also, as US General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has testified, relate directly to Americas military capabilities, operations, tactics, techniques and procedures. As one official familiar with Snowdens activities remarked, This is a treasure trove of material for any adversary of the West.

The alarming scope of the leaking operation, and the fact that he specifically targeted a large number of top secret US databases, has led some American commentators to conclude that he was engaged in espionage on behalf of a foreign power, with Russia and China identified as the most likely culprits. But even if Snowden was acting on his own initiative, it is safe to assume that, having claimed asylum in Russia, both the Kremlin and Beijing are now well-acquainted with the intricacies of Western intelligence-gathering, enabling them to amend their own operational activities accordingly.

British and American security officials are certainly working on that assumption, and have now been forced to embark on the massive task of recalibrating their intelligence operations, so that they no longer relate to the model provided by Snowden. British officials estimate it will cost tens of millions of pounds just to change GCHQs eavesdropping facilities.

In the meantime, hostile groups such as al-Qaeda have lost no time in exploiting the gap in our intelligence-gathering capabilities to strengthen their position, with all the implications that is likely to have for our own future security.

Certainly, if countries like Russia and China were to gain the advantage at our expense, or groups such as al-Qaeda launched a successful terror attack, then Snowdens treacherous betrayal might not seem to have been such a good idea after all.

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Our enemies are stronger because of Edward Snowden's treacherous betrayal

"The Stuff I Saw Really Began to Disturb Me": How the U.S. Drone War Pushed Snowden to Leak NSA Docs – Video


"The Stuff I Saw Really Began to Disturb Me": How the U.S. Drone War Pushed Snowden to Leak NSA Docs
http://www.democracynow.org - In his new book, "No Place to Hide," journalist Glenn Greenwald provides new details on Edward Snowden #39;s personal story and his motivation to expose the U.S. surveilla...

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"The Stuff I Saw Really Began to Disturb Me": How the U.S. Drone War Pushed Snowden to Leak NSA Docs - Video

"Right Out of a Spy Movie": Glenn Greenwald on First Secret Meeting with NSA Leaker Edward Snowden – Video


"Right Out of a Spy Movie": Glenn Greenwald on First Secret Meeting with NSA Leaker Edward Snowden
http://www.democracynow.org - In part two of our extended interview, journalist Glenn Greenwald tells the inside story of meeting National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden. Greenwald...

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"Right Out of a Spy Movie": Glenn Greenwald on First Secret Meeting with NSA Leaker Edward Snowden - Video