Russia evades US SIGINT surveillance – Has Snowden turned spy?

This will be a bit controversial as famed NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden himself is a controversial figure. Some say hes a hero, others say hes a villain and others say the truth is somewhere in between. Given the nature of what Snowden acquired and disclosed, we must be careful not to assume that every intelligence failure that comes along has something to do with Snowden. However, world events in recent weeks have piled together some circumstances that bear review. Russia has invaded Crimea, yet according to a report in the Daily Beast prior to the invasion, US intelligence concluded that Russia would not openly invadethe Crimean Peninsula or the Ukraine itself. Calling it a bluff, the article stated:

A senior U.S. intelligence official told The Daily Beast that the timing of the military exercise, coming only days after the Ukrainian parliament voted to oust the pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych, was suspicious. But nonetheless, U.S. intelligence agencies have collected no information suggesting the training exercises were preparation for an invasion.

The mere fact of the timing when you consider what is going on in Ukraine and you see the sudden nature of the exercise would cause concern, this official said. From an intelligence perspective we dont have any reason to think its more than military exercises.

That assessment was clearly wrong, theres no getting around that. Intelligence operations have missed some things before, but it seems that in this case, the open assessment was based on a lack of positive indicators and that seems to have turned out to be a major problem. Julian Barnes of the Wall St. Journal last week went into how Russians had been able to evade eavesdropping by the US. This is a recent development that surprised people, because obviously the plans to invade should have been intercepted by US surveillance, US SIGINT was potentially circumvented.

U.S. military satellites spied Russian troops amassing within striking distance of Crimea last month. But intelligence analysts were surprised because they hadnt intercepted any telltale communications where Russian leaders, military commanders or soldiers discussed plans to invade.

Americas vaunted global surveillance is a vital tool for U.S. intelligence services, especially as an early-warning system and as a way to corroborate other evidence. In Crimea, though, U.S. intelligence officials are concluding that Russian planners might have gotten a jump on the West by evading U.S. eavesdropping.

One has to consider whether it is a coincidence that the Russians figured out how to throw NSA surveillance off their tracks, or whether they have gained another edge somehow in their capabilities. It is quite tantalizing to think that a famed NSA contractor in possession of highly classified, highly sensitive information about the very parties that conduct this surveillance may have something to do with it. Snowden was granted asylum in Russia, and according to the latest Russian statements on the affair, there is no pressure to end his asylum. Thats as interesting a coincidence as any other, and it is quite possible that select documents may have ended up in Russian hands given this sudden ability to evade the NSAs ability to pick up communications.

You cant exactly throw this at Snowdens feet so readily however, as it is still just a possibility. The intelligence community is capable of missing things and has done so before, and I suppose there are many possibilities as to why Russia has been able to evade surveillance. Note that as outside observers we may never get to the truth of the matter, but we must remain vigilant to all the potential factors and that includes that Snowden may have leaked direct info to his grantors of asylum. The Wall Street Journal writes:

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Russia evades US SIGINT surveillance – Has Snowden turned spy?

McGovern To Deliver Speech At Drury University

CREATED 5:17 AM

Edward Snowden will be the topic of a speech by former CIA analyst and senior national security advisor Ray McGovern.

Edited from a press release from Drury University:

SPRINGFIELD, Mo., March 26, 2014 Former CIA analyst and senior national security advisor Ray McGovern will speak at Drury University at 11 a.m. on Monday, March 31 in Lay Hall Auditorium. The event is free and open to the public. McGoverns speech is titled, Edward Snowden: Patriot or Villain? McGovern met with Snowden last fall in Russia, where Snowden has been granted temporary asylum.

Ray McGovern served as a CIA analyst from the early 1960s through the administration of George H.W. Bush. During the 1980s, his duties included working on the classified National Intelligence Estimate document, and preparing the Presidents Daily Brief for senior advisors to Ronald Reagan.

Following his service in the government, McGovern became a political activist protesting abuses of government power, especially the manipulation of intelligence data. In January 2003, he helped form Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) to expose what its members called the falsification of intelligence to justify war on Iraq. More recently, McGovern has criticized the sweeping surveillance programs of the NSA, and U.S. policy regarding Syria and Ukraine.

The lecture is sponsored and paid for by a group of Springfield citizens who are organizing a speaking tour for McGovern throughout the Midwest, and is co-hosted by Drurys Department of Political Science & Geography. Lay Hall is located on Benton Avenue, between Central and Calhoun Streets. Public parking is available along Benton and in Lot 6, across Benton just north of Central High School.

For more information about the lecture, contact: Jeffery A. VanDenBerg, chair, Political Science & Geography Department, at (417) 873-6947.

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McGovern To Deliver Speech At Drury University

Edward Snowden’s Passport, Political Asylum and Related Issues News Conference March 25, 2014 – Video


Edward Snowden #39;s Passport, Political Asylum and Related Issues News Conference March 25, 2014
Video of News Conference: March 25, 2014 at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. Ray McGovern, Coleen Rowley and Norman Solomon spoke at this news con...

By: paulydc

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Edward Snowden's Passport, Political Asylum and Related Issues News Conference March 25, 2014 - Video

White House cyber chief: Snowden damage will be felt for decades

Damage to U.S. national security caused by NSA contractor Edward Snowden will take decades to repair, the White House official in charge of cyber security said Friday.

Make no mistake: We are going to be dealing with the fallout from that for all of your careers, and the impact that that has had on our national security will reverberate for decades, Michael Daniel, special assistant to the president for cyber security, told Naval Academy midshipmen.

Daniel, in a speech to the academys Center for Cyber Security Studies, also said the Obama administration has adopted a passive approach to offensive and retaliatory cyber attacks against nation states and criminal hackers caught attacking U.S. networks. Cyber attacks are a tool of last resort after diplomacy and law enforcement means are tried, he said.

We are going to prioritize network defense and law enforcement before conducting offensive cyber attacks, Daniel said in a wide-ranging speech.

The presidential cyber security official also said the administration opposes placing control of the Internet under foreign governments, despite a recent announcement that the federal government will give up authority over the Internet name server group.

Instead, the administration favors what Daniel called a multi-stakeholder approach to Internet governance involving both governments and the private sector that would protect free speech and dissidents.

Snowden, currently under the protection of the Russian government, stole an estimated 1.7 million classified NSA documents using his access as a computer administrator and by fooling several NSA employees into providing their passwords.

Snowden compromised sensitive accesses used by the National Security Agency to conduct electronic spying, along with techniques and tools that are no longer available to us, Daniel said, without elaborating.

Daniel said he has spent a huge amount of time over the past year trying to figure out how to plug the holes that Mr. Snowden revealed that we have in the security of our classified networks.

Other classified NSA systems are being rebuilt and the Snowden affair also has undermined efforts to focus on other pressing cyber security and national security issues, he said.

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White House cyber chief: Snowden damage will be felt for decades