Donald Trump: ‘Price will come way down’ on Mexican border wall plan – NEWS.com.au

President Donald Trump says his planned Mexican border wall will be cheaper than anticipated.

PRESIDENT Donald Trump says his daughter Ivanka Trump has been abused and treated so badly in the wake of her clothing line being dropped.

The First Daughters self-titled fashion collection was dumped by influential department stores including Nordstrom and Neimen Marcus after sales fell sharply since Trump was elected to the White House last year.

In a further blow to the Trump familys retail businesses, homewares line Trump Home was cut from Kmart and Siers.

President Trump, however, suggested Ivanka had been targeted by the media, saying she was treated so badly and had been abused.

He made the accusations via a tweet posted today.

US President Donald Trump and his daughter Ivanka. Picture: AFPSource:AFP

Meantime, Trump has confessed that the cost of his border wall has already blown out to a reported $28 billion but he has pledged to make it affordable.

Trump made his comments in two Twitter posts but did not say how he would bring down the cost of the wall.

An internal report by the Department of Homeland Security estimated the price of a wall along the entire border at $US21.6 billion ($28.1 billion). During his presidential campaign Trump had cited a $US12 billion figure.

I am reading that the great border WALL will cost more than the government originally thought, but I have not gotten involved in the ... design or negotiations yet, Trump tweeted from his Florida resort, where he is hosting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

When I do, just like with the F-35 FighterJet or the air force One Program, price will come WAY DOWN!

Trump has vowed to make Mexico reimburse the United States for its cost but Mexico has repeatedly said it will not do so.

Trump also tweeted on Saturday about another aspect of his immigration policy the legal battle over the presidential order banning entry to the United States by refugees and citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries.

Our legal system is broken! 77 per cent of refugees allowed into US since travel reprieve hail from seven suspect countries. (WT) SO DANGEROUS! he said.

The tweet was in apparent reaction to a Washington Times story saying 77 per cent of the 1100 refugees who have entered the United States since February 3 are from the countries covered by Trumps ban.

A federal judge in Seattle blocked Trumps executive order on February 3, lifting the ban while litigation proceeds. Trump has been steadily critical of the ruling from Seattle and a subsequent appeals court ruling upholding it.

US First Lady Melania Trump and Akie Abe, wife of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, in Florida. Picture: AFPSource:AFP

SNOWDEN MIGHT BUT PUTINS GIFT TO TRUMP

Russia is considering sending Edward Snowden back to the US as a gift to President Donald Trump, a report says.

A senior US official with knowledge of sensitive Russian intelligence information told NBC News on Friday that they would be handing over the NSA whistleblower in the attempt to curry favour with Trump.

Edward Snowden has been living in Moscow since 2013 after being accused of giving the top-secret NSA information to the press. Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied

A second intelligence source confirmed that the Russians had been deliberating with US officials since the inauguration, reports the New York Post.

While the White House had no comment, Snowdens ACLU lawyer, Ben Wizner, claimed he was unaware of such plans.

Team Snowden has received no such signals and has no new reason for concern, he said.

Snowden who stole scores of top-secret documents during his time as an NSA contractor responded to the report on Twitter Friday night.

Finally: irrefutable evidence that I never co-operated with Russian intel, the 33-year-old tweeted, along with a link to the NBC News article.

No country trades away spies, as the rest would fear theyre next, he said.

Former deputy national security adviser Juan Zarate told NBC that Trump should ultimately be wary of the move.

A spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin called reports of Snowdens return nonsense. Picture: AP/Alexander ZemlianichenkoSource:AP

For Russia, this would be a win-win, Mr Zarate explained. It would signal warmer relations and some desire for greater co-operation with the new administration, but it would also no doubt stoke controversies and cases in the US around the role of surveillance, the role of the US intelligence community, and the future of privacy and civil liberties in an American context. All of that would perhaps be music to the ears of Putin.

Justice Department officials, on the other-hand, told NBC they would ultimately welcome Snowden back with open arms.

A spokesman for President Putin simply called the return nonsense, NBC reports.

Back in July, the president blasted Snowden as a spy and a traitor saying he would deal with him harshly if he were to ever return.

If I were president, Putin would give him over, Trump tweeted.

In 2013, he even went so far as to suggest giving him a death sentence.

Snowden is a spy who should be executed, Trump tweeted.

President Donald Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, accompanied by their wives, Melania Trump and Akie Abe. Trump is hosting Abe at his estate in Florida. Picture: AP/Jose Luis MaganaSource:AP

The North Carolina native has been living in Moscow since 2013 after being accused of giving the top-secret NSA information to the press, most of which contained details of US domestic surveillance programs.

After being charged with violating the Espionage Act, Snowden fled to Russia and was granted a residency permit. His stay had been recently extended until 2020.

HUNDREDS OF IMMIGRANTS ARRESTED IN ENFORCEMENT SURGE

IT comes as federal immigration agents arrested hundreds of undocumented immigrants in at least four US states this week in what officials on Friday called routine enforcement actions.

Reports of immigration sweeps this week sparked concern among immigration advocates and families, coming on the heels of Mr Trumps executive order barring refugees and immigrants from seven majority-Muslim nations, reports the New York Post. That order is currently on hold.

The fear coursing through immigrant homes and the native-born Americans who love immigrants as friends and family is palpable, Ali Noorani, executive director of the National Immigration Forum, said in a statement. Reports of raids in immigrant communities are a grave concern.

Police presence at US airports has increased since Donald Trumps election win. Picture: David McNew/Getty Images/AFPSource:AFP

The enforcement actions took place in Atlanta, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and surrounding areas, said David Marin, director of enforcement and removal for the Los Angeles field office of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Only five of 161 people arrested in Southern California would not have been enforcement priorities under the Obama administration, he said.

The agency did not release a total number of detainees. The Atlanta office, which covers three states, arrested 200 people, Bryan Cox, a spokesman for the office, said. The 161 arrests in the Los Angeles area were made in a region that included seven highly populated counties, Marin said.

Mr Marin called the five-day operation an enforcement surge.

In a conference call with reporters, he said that such actions were routine, pointing to one last summer in Los Angeles under former President Barack Obama.

US officials said that such actions were routine during the Obama administration. Picture: APSource:AP

The rash of these recent reports about ICE checkpoints and random sweeps, thats all false and thats dangerous and irresponsible, Mr Marin said. Reports like that create a panic.

He said that of the people arrested in Southern California, only 10 did not have criminal records. Of those, five had prior deportation orders.

Michael Kagan, a professor of immigration law at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas, said immigration advocates are concerned that the arrests could signal the beginning of more aggressive enforcement and increased deportations under Trump.

It sounds as if the majority are people who would have been priorities under Obama as well, Mr Kagan said in a telephone interview. But the others may indicate the first edge of a new wave of arrests and deportations.

Trump recently broadened the categories of people who could be targeted for immigration enforcement to anyone who had been charged with a crime, removing an Obama-era exception for people convicted of traffic misdemeanours, Mr Kagan said.

TRUMP ATTACKS POCAHONTAS ELIZABETH WARREN

DONALD Trumps contentious relationship with US Senator Elizabeth Warren continued as he again attacked her Native American ancestry, reportedly calling her Pocahontas during a private meeting with US senators.

The president, who previously used the term on the campaign trail, told Democrat politicians that: Pocahontas is now the face of your party, CNN reported.

He then reportedly said that the only reason she said she had Native American origins was due to her high cheekbones, a source told the network.

A scene from the classic Disney film Pocahontas. Picture: SuppliedSource:News Limited

Donald Trump has often mocked Senator Elizabeth Warrens Native American heritage. Picture: AP/J. Scott ApplewhiteSource:AP

The president reportedly used the Pocahontas reference several times during the closed-door meeting with senators, making it equal parts bizarre and completely awkward, a source told CNN.

Mr Trumps comment came a day after Republican senators silenced Senator Warren on the Senate floor by invoking a rarely used rule as she spoke out against Jeff Sessions during his confirmation hearing to become attorney general.

The rebuke has prompted a wave of support for Warren among Democrats and the public.

Throughout the campaign, Mr Trump repeatedly referred to Warren as Pocahontas and attacked her over her heritage.

Women support of Elizabeth Warren after she was silenced after speaking out against Jeff Sessions during his confirmation hearing to become US attorney general. Picture: Mario Tama/Getty Images/AFPSource:AFP

Pocahontas is not happy. Shes not happy. Shes the worst, he said in June at a rally in Richmond, Virginia. Im doing such a disservice to Pocahontas, its so unfair to Pocahontas. But this Elizabeth Warren, I call her goofy Elizabeth Warren, shes one of the worst senators in the entire United States Senate.

Ms Warren referred to her Native American origins during her run for the US Senate in 2012, when she became the first woman to hold the office in Massachusetts.

Warren had at one point referred to her grandfathers high cheekbones to support her comments.

STORES ABANDON TRUMP LINES

DAYS after Ivanka Trumps clothing line was dropped by US department store, Nordstrom (and prompted an angry rebuke via Twitter from the President), comes news that Sears and Kmart will no longer sell products from the Trump Home line on their websites.

Ivanka Trump, with husband Jared Kushner. Trumps clothing line was dropped from US department store, Nordstrom. Picture: AFP/Mandel NganSource:AFP

As part of the companys initiative to optimise its online product assortment, we constantly refine that assortment to focus on our most profitable items, a Sears Holdings spokesman told Business Insider. Amid that streamlining effort, 31 Trump Home items were among the items removed online this week. Products from the line are still offered online via third-party Marketplace vendors.

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Donald Trump: 'Price will come way down' on Mexican border wall plan - NEWS.com.au

Edward Snowden Unafraid of Donald Trump Vladimir … – time.com

Edward Snowden speaks via video link during a news conference in New York City on Sept. 14, 2016. Brendan McDermidReuters

Edward Snowden has said he is not worried about the prospect of Vladimir Putin striking a deal with Donald Trump that could lead to his extradition and trial in the United States.

Speaking on a webchat hosted by the Dutch private search engine StartPage on Nov. 10, the whistleblower and former NSA contractor said it would be "crazy" to dismiss the idea of the Russian President and Trump making a deal over his future, but he "[doesn't] worry about it."

Snowden has been stranded in Moscow since he revealed classified information about the National Security Agency's widespread surveillance three years ago. He was charged in the U.S. with violations of the Espionage Act, but various campaigns and civil liberty organizations have been putting pressure on President Obama to pardon him .

While I cant predict what the future looks like, I dont know whats going to happen tomorrow, I can be comfortable with the way Ive lived today," he said. "And no matter what happens, if there's a drone strike or I slip and fall down the stairs, that's something that won't change. As long as we do our best to live in accordance with our values, we don't have to worry about what happens tomorrow."

Trump, who has vowed to repair U.S. relations with Russia, has previously threatened Snowden with execution. "I think hes a terrible traitor, and you know what we used to do in the good old days when we were a strong country? You know what we used to do to traitors, right?," he said, during an appearance on Fox and Friends in 2013.

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Edward Snowden Unafraid of Donald Trump Vladimir ... - time.com

Russia Considers Returning Snowden to US to ‘Curry Favor’ With Trump: Official – NBCNews.com

(Left) Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Moscow State University in Moscow, Russia on Jan. 25. (Right) President Donald Trump in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 25. Alexey Nikolsky/Sputnik/Kremlin Pool via EPA and / Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

The White House had no comment, but the Justice Department told NBC News it would welcome the return of Snowden, who currently faces federal charges that carry a minimum of 30 years in prison. Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said talk about returning Snowden is "nonsense."

If he were returned to American soil, Snowden a divisive figure in America who is seen by some as a hero and others as treasonous would face an administration that has condemned him in the strongest terms.

"I think he's a total traitor and I would deal with him harshly," Trump said in July. "And if I were president, Putin would give him over." In October 2013, Trump tweeted: "Snowden is a spy who should be executed."

CIA Director Mike Pompeo has also called for Snowden to face American justice. "I think the proper outcome would be that he would be given a death sentence," Pompeo said last February.

Related:

Snowden was working as a contractor at a National Security Agency facility in Hawaii when he began stealing top-secret documents that he gave to journalists in 2013, exposing details of U.S. domestic surveillance programs.

After Snowden fled to Hong Kong and was charged with violating the U.S. Espionage Act, he ended up in Russia. Moscow granted him refuge and officials say his residency permit was recently extended until 2020.

Related:

In an interview streamed on Twitter in December, Snowden said being forced to return to the U.S. would be a human-rights violation but would also put to rest to accusations that he is a Russian spy.

"A lot of people have asked me: Is there going to be some kind of deal where Trump says, 'Hey look, give this guy to me as some kind of present'? Will I be sent back to the U.S., where I'll be facing a show trial?" Snowden said.

"Is this going to happen? I don't know. Could it happen? Sure. Am I worried about it? Not really, because here's the thing: I am very comfortable with the decisions that I've made. I know I did the right thing."

More than 1 million people signed a White House petition calling for then-President Obama to pardon Snowden. Snowden himself did not file an application and tweeted that Army leaker Chelsea Manning should get clemency ahead of him.

Snowden's Russian lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told the state-run news agency last month that his client would like to return to the United States with no criminal charges hanging over his head.

"We hope very much that the new U.S. president would show some weighted approach to the issue and make the one and only correct decision to stop prosecution against Edward Snowden," Kucherena said.

Zarate said there is no way to predict if Putin will deliver Snowden or when.

"I think this is one of those rare cases where the stakes are so high, the diplomatic implications so deep, that anything can happen," he said.

"So this could be a secret diplomatic deal made in the dead of night, or it could be a weeks-in-formation deal with lawyers on all sides," he said.

"I think at the end of the day, Moscow holds the cards here."

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Russia Considers Returning Snowden to US to 'Curry Favor' With Trump: Official - NBCNews.com

Russia ‘considering handing over Edward Snowden to Trump as gift to improve US relations’ – Mirror.co.uk

Russia is considering handing notorious fugitive Edward Snowden over to President Trump as a 'gift', it has been claimed.

Snowden, a former CIA worker, fled the US in 2013 after leaking thousands of classified documents about the government's surveillance techniques.

He remains in Russia where he received asylum.

But NBC News says US intelligence sources have recently gathered evidence that Russia is considering turning Snowden over to Donald Trump.

The new President has called Snowden a "traitor" in the past who deserves to be executed.

Last July, Trump said: "I think he's a total traitor and I would deal with him harshly.

"And if I were president, Putin would give him over."

According to NBC, handing over Snowden is one of a number of tactics being considered by Russia to "curry favour" with Trump.

Ben Wizner, one of Trump's legal supporters in the US, said he had heard of no such rumours.

And Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said talk about returning Snowden is "nonsense."

Snowden faces charges back on US soil that carry a minimum of 30 years in jail.

The reports come after Barack Obama commuted the prison sentence of British-raised former soldier Chelsea Manning in one of his final acts as President.

Manning was imprisoned for the biggest military classified leak in American history.

Originally known as Bradley Manning before transitioning from a man to a woman, she will now be freed on May 17 after Obama cut her 35-year sentence.

The 35-year-old was convicted by a court martial in July 2013 for breaking Americas espionage act.

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Russia 'considering handing over Edward Snowden to Trump as gift to improve US relations' - Mirror.co.uk

Edward Snowden and ‘How America Lost Its Secrets’ – Yahoo News


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Edward Snowden and 'How America Lost Its Secrets'
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A Mexican immigrant to the United States whose daughter asked Pope Francis for help in stopping her father's deportation attended his first hearing before an immigration judge in Los Angeles on Thursday. Judge Rose Peters made no rulings at the brief ...

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Edward Snowden and 'How America Lost Its Secrets' - Yahoo News

Will Edward Snowden Go To Jail? US Indicts A Former NSA Contractor For Violating Espionage Act – International Business Times

As Edward Snowden awaited possible extradition on the other side of the world, another National Security Agency contractor accused of stealing and leaking a large trove of classified information faced federal charges this week amounting to a potential 200 years in prison over his violation of the Espionage Act.

A federal grand jury in Baltimore found Wednesday that, over the course of up to 20 years, Harold Hal Martin, 52, flagrantly abused the trust placed in him by the government while working as a government contractor, U.S. Attorney Rod Rosenstein said in a Thursday Justice Department press release. Martin, who allegedly revealed many of the NSAs powerful hacking and overseas spying tools, faces 20 counts of willful retention of national defense information, each of which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years. He will first appear in court at 11 a.m. Tuesday. Martin at one point workedfor the tech-consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton, the same contracting company that once employed Snowden.

Meanwhile, the Russian lawyer for Snowden told the Kremlin-owned news agency Sputnik Tuesday that Russia, where the more famous NSA whistleblower and former Booz Allen Hamilton contractor is evading arrest by the American government, had not received any extradition requests from the U.S. This claim should be taken with a grain of salt, however, as the lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, also told the state news agency that the U.S. had not issued charges against Snowden. A 2013 Justice Department press release confirms that he faces charges of unauthorized disclosure of national defense information, unauthorized disclosure of classified communication intelligence and theft of government property.

Unlike U.S. Army leaker Chelsea Manning, Snowden was not among the 1,715 people granted commutations by former President Barack Obama on his way out of office, nor was he among the 212 people pardoned, as Snowden hadnt presented himself in court before the end of Obamas tenure.

President Donald Trump is not expected to take a softer stance. His appointee to run the Central Intelligence Agency, Mike Pompeo, once called for Snowdens execution. In a 2013 interview with Fox & Friends, Trump has called Snowden a terrible guy and hinted at Snowdens execution himself.

Correction:A previous version of this article mischaracterized where Harold Martin worked during the time of his NSA leak. Martin was employed withseven different contractors during the period of his illegal activity.

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Will Edward Snowden Go To Jail? US Indicts A Former NSA Contractor For Violating Espionage Act - International Business Times

‘Imago’ wins Edward Snowden Award in Berlin – Inquirer.net

Ruby Ruiz in Imago

After winning in Toronto last year, Filipino filmmaker Raymund Ribay Gutierrezs Imago received another prize in Berlin, Germany. Imago won the Edward Snowden Award at the 15th International Festival Signes de Nuit or the Internationales Festival Zeichen der Nacht. The jury commended the short film for introducing [viewers] to the unknown world of a single mother with a peculiar job.

The Snowden award honors films which offer sensible, unknown information, facts and phenomena of eminent importance.

Since its inception, the Paris-based fest has screened a thousand films in 33 countries. The films screened in the fest reflect new views, original imagery and a critical approach to the crucial points of modern human existence.

It validates our work, [and tells us] that we did well, Gutierrez told the Inquirer. I dont spend too much time thinking about awards because it will only get in my way and fuel frustration. Id rather turn my passion for filmmaking into an obligation. BAYANI SAN DIEGO JR.

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'Imago' wins Edward Snowden Award in Berlin - Inquirer.net

Was Edward Snowden a Russian agent? – The Australian Financial Review

by Charlie Savage

One evening in the American autumn of 2015, the writer Edward Jay Epstein arranged to have dinner at an Italian restaurant on the Upper East Side with the director Oliver Stone. At the time, Stone was completing Snowden, an admiring biopic about the former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, who disclosed a vast trove of classified documents about National Security Agency surveillance programs to journalists in June 2013 and had since been living as a fugitive in Russia. Epstein was working on a book about the same topic, which has now been published under the title How America Lost Its Secrets: Edward Snowden, the Man and the Theft.As the writer recounts in that book, their conversation took a testy turn:

"Toward the end of our dinner, Stone told me that he did not know I was writing a book about Snowden until a few weeks earlier. He learned of my book from Snowden himself. He said Snowden had expressed concern to him about the direction of the book I was writing. 'What is it about?' Stone asked me.

"I was taken aback. I had no idea that Snowden was aware of my book. (I had not tried to contact him.) I told Stone that I considered Snowden an extraordinary man who had changed history and was intentionally vague in my description of my book's contents. Stone seemed to be reassured "

Epstein and Stone had a history of rivalry when it came to interpreting another important historical event: the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Early in his career, Epstein wrote three books about that topic. The first, Inquest(1966), poked holes in the rigour of the Warren Commission's official investigation. The second, Counterplot(1969), brought a sceptical eye to the investigation by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison, who pursued the theory that the Central Intelligence Agency orchestrated the president's murder. And the third, Legend(1978), pointed readers to the conclusion that Oswald's image as a mixed-up loner with half-baked Marxist ideas was an operational cover story a "legend" and that he had been a Soviet intelligence agent. (After the Soviet Union collapsed, the opening of the KGB's archives did not corroborate the theory that Oswald had actually been a trained intelligence agent.)

Stone waded into those same murky waters with his 1991 movie JFK,which used a fictionalised version of Garrison's investigation as a means to explore the theory that a right-wing conspiracy, spanning the CIA and the military-industrial complex, had been responsible for Kennedy's death. The following year, Stone and Epstein were invited to be part of a panel discussion at New York's Town Hall about the Kennedy assassination and the film's controversial blending of fact and fiction. In preparation, according to a diary entry on Epstein's website, he brought an index card on which he wrote:

"Although they may aim at the same purpose of finding truth, non-fiction and fiction are two distinct forms of knowledge. The writer of non-fiction is limited by the universe of discoverable fact. He cannot make up what he does not know no matter how strong his intuition or suspicion. The writer of fiction knows no such boundary: he can fill in whatever gaps exist with his imagination."

Now, years later, the two men once again found themselves eying each other as they circled the Snowden saga.

The conventional understanding of Snowden is that he was what he appeared to be: a computer worker in the intelligence world who became alarmed about the hidden growth of the American surveillance state and decided to reveal its operations to the world, copied archives of documents, and handed them to journalists whom he had summoned to Hong Kong and whom he entrusted to decide what to publish.

Within the mainstream spectrum of interpretations of his actions, at one end are civil libertarians who consider him simply to be a heroic whistle-blower. At the other extreme are members of the national security establishment who consider him nothing more than a destructive traitor. In between are a range of those who think some of his disclosures met the high standard for "whistle-blowing"; that other disclosures brought to light important things that should not have been kept secret in a democracy but that were also not necessarily, in and of themselves, abuses or overreaches; and that still other disclosures went too far and were not a public service.

Stone's movie, which premiered in September, presents a comic-book version of the pro-Snowden narrative in which a wunderkind super-hacker takes on Big Brother. In telling that story, Stone mixes accurate material with fiction, while simplifying away complexities. His movie steps on the genuine privacy issues raised by Snowden's disclosures with melodramatic embellishments, such as a scene in which an invented senior NSA official, his Orwellian face filling a floor-to-ceiling screen, casually reveals that he knows whether the Snowden character's girlfriend is sleeping with another man.

It omits actual Snowden disclosures whose individual privacy rationale was debatable, such as when he showed the South China Morning Post documents about the NSA's hacking into certain institutional computers in China. And its discussion of the volume of internet metadata the NSA collects from equipment inside the United States ignores any distinction between truly domestic emails and foreign-to-foreign messages that are merely travelling across domestic network switches.

Epstein's book, by contrast, presents a negative view of Snowden. But the two works are not equivalent: Epstein does not merely oversimplify with the purpose of downplaying the benefits of Snowden's leaks and emphasising the harms. Rather he contends that the conventional narrative of what happened may have been a deceptive cover story. Epstein lays out the case that behind his image as a whistle-blower Snowden was instead an "espionage source" for Russia perhaps its dupe at first, or perhaps its willing spy all along:

"The counterintelligence issue was not if this USintelligence defector in Moscow was under Russian control but when he came under it. There were three possible time periods when Snowden might have been brought under control by the Russian intelligence service: while he was still working for the NSA; after he arrived in Hong Kong on May 20, 2013; or after he arrived in Russia on June 23, 2013."

The reader should know that Laura Poitras, one of the journalists to whom Snowden leaked documents in Hong Kong, later shared some of them with me, and we developed several articles from them for The New York Times. In addition, as part of a book on national security, I wrote a history of how surveillance technology, law and policy secretly evolved in the decades following Congress'enactment of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978.

It explained how the rise of fibre-optic networks in the late 1980s and the internet in the 1990s placed mounting pressure on legal constraints written for the analogue telephone era; how the Bush administration bypassed those rules after September 11 and then enlisted the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and Congress to legalise what it had created lawlessly; and how the Obama administration decided to keep and entrench what it inherited.

I could not have written that history without the files disclosed by Snowden and information the government declassified because of his leaks. While there had been stray glimpses for years suggesting that the NSA was becoming far more powerful, facts were scarce and speculation and conspiracy theories had filled the void. Snowden's disclosures enabled us to understand what was real about the NSA's activities so we could engage in an informed public debate about the rules for 21st-century surveillance. This is why I regret Stone's reintroduction of distortions into discussion of surveillance, and it may also colour my reaction to Epstein's book.

Snowden's disclosures indeed prompted robust debate and policy changes. An appeals court ruled that the NSA's bulk collection of domestic calling records was illegal, rejecting a dubious legal theory that the intelligence court had been secretly relying on for years. Congress ended that bulk collection program and required the intelligence court to tell the public when it issued novel and significant interpretations of surveillance laws.

President Obama imposed unprecedented privacy protections for information about non-Americans that the NSA collects abroad. Technology giants such asGoogle and many ordinary people began taking steps to more firmly secure their private information from hackers. Still, this enlightenment came at an undeniable, if difficult to measure, cost. Some terrorists, criminals and unsavoury regimes learned from Snowden, too, becoming harder to monitor and thereby making the world more dangerous.

Assessing whether Snowden's disclosures served the public interest whether they did more good than harm turns in part on who counts as "the public". Snowden's critics, including Epstein, tend to define the public in nationalist terms, focusing their criticism on his disclosures about NSA operations abroad, where few domestic legal rules apply and the agency can indiscriminately vacuum up private messages in bulk. Snowden's supporters point out that domestic data are also found abroad in the internet era and they argue that consideration of the NSA's work should take account of its effects on human rights: non-Americans have privacy rights, too.

Another complication for judging Snowden's actions is that we do not know how many and which documents he took. Investigators determined only that he "touched" about 1.5 million files essentially those that were indexed by a search program he used to trawl NSA servers. Many of those files are said to pertain to military and intelligence tools and activities that did not bear on the protection of individual privacy. Snowden's sceptics assume that he stole every such file. His supporters assume that he did not. In any case they believe his statements that after giving certain NSA archives to the journalists in Hong Kong, he destroyed his hard drives and brought no files to Russia.

Epstein sees Snowden's supporters as naive. He draws on his connections with the late James Jesus Angleton, the CIA's paranoid hunter for KGB moles both real and imagined during the height of the Cold War; after his dismissal from the agency in 1974, Angleton became an important source for Epstein, including for his book on Oswald. Much of How America Lost Its Secretsconsists of Epstein building "alternative scenarios" like a counterintelligence investigator in Angleton's mould trying to pierce presumed Russian deception. This, he concedes,

"differs from that of a conventional forensic investigation aimed at finding pieces of evidence that can be used to persuade a jury in a courtroom The point is to assure that any alternative that fits the relevant facts, no matter how implausible it may initially seem to be, is not neglected."

And so Epstein asks: what if Snowden told secrets to Russian intelligence officials or brought files to Moscow, despite saying otherwise? What if he meant to end up in Russia all along, and it was just a cover story when he said he was trying to get to South America and was stranded in Moscow because the United States revoked his passport? What if Snowden sold out to China and/or Russia in Hong Kong? What if the Russian intelligence service recruited Snowden when he was still working for the NSA or even earlier? What if some other hypothetical Russian mole still inside the NSA helped him? What if he was working with the Russians unwittingly, manipulated by a handler pretending to be a "hactivist" interested in internet privacy?

In this way, How America Lost Its Secretsplunges down rabbit holes, each leading to its own Wonderland. In building up his scenarios, Epstein deploys dozens of instances of variants of the words "presume", "assume" and "might have". He describes things he believes "could have been", things he interprets as "possible", things he supposes were "likely" and things he maintains were "suggested". He piles inferences atop other inferences, as with "if so, it seems plausible to believe"; "if that is the case, then"; and "if so, it wasn't much of a leap to assume". He weaves cobwebs of conjecture that start with phrases like "it doesn't take a great stretch of the imagination to conclude" and "it is not difficult to imagine'.

For Epstein's book to have value for it to be worth reading, not just an object intelligence hard-liners might display on their shelves as a sign of their contempt for Snowden the facts he selects to anchor and discipline his scenario-building cannot be flimsy or cherry-picked to fit his pre-existing beliefs. This is important because he clearly decided early that everything pointed in the direction of the Snowden saga being a foreign espionage plot. In June 2013, as the world was still absorbing the first revelations, Epstein published a column in The Wall Street Journal asking, "Who, if anyone, aided and abetted this well-planned theft of US secrets?"

And in May and June of 2014, he published two more columns laying out the case that "far from being a whistleblower, Snowden was a participant in an espionage operation and most likely steered from the beginning toward his massive theft, whether he knew this at first or not". Given this predisposition, it is unfortunate that Epstein builds his imagined scenarios upon allegations that may not be real facts.

For example, Epstein gives sinister significance to the "fact" that Snowden arrived in Hong Kong 11 days before he checked into the hotel where he met the journalists, leaving his activities during that period a mystery. Snowden has insisted that he was in that hotel the whole time, waiting for the journalists to arrive. In one of his columns written in 2014, Epstein first claimed that there was an 11-day mystery gap, citing his conversation with an unnamed hotel security guard. I am aware of no independent verification of this allegation. So as things stand, this "fact" appears to be vaporous.

Epstein also makes important factual omissions, in places even overlooking crucial information that he had mentioned elsewhere. For example, laying out the case that Snowden may have decided to concoct a whistle-blower cover story at some point after he had already started copying documents for some other purpose, Epstein stresses that Snowden's most famous leaked document a classified intelligence court order requiring Verizon to turn over all its customers' phone records, which "gave him credentials as a whistle-blower" was issued in April 2013, yet Snowden had been copying files since 2012. But other documents described the program for collecting bulk domestic phone records, including a classified inspector general report Snowden also leaked; 87 pages earlier, Epstein had noted that Snowden read that report in 2012.

It would be eye-glazing to compile a comprehensive list of Epstein's doubtful "facts", but one more is worth scrutinising because Epstein hangs such heavy weight on it: the allegation that Snowden brought files with him to Russia, despite his denials. A Hong Kong lawyer who represented Snowden has publicly said he witnessed Snowden destroy his hard drives before leaving that city; Epstein interviewed the Hong Kong lawyer, but does not mention this corroboration. Instead, he focuses on a brief exchange during a September 2013 interview of Snowden's Russian lawyer: the interviewer asked, "So he does have some materials that haven't been made public yet?" and the Russian lawyer replied, "Certainly".

For his book research, Epstein says he asked the Russian lawyer about that interview, which was conducted in Russian but translated into English before being broadcast and published, and whether the exchange was accurate. The lawyer affirmed that it was. Based on this, Epstein repeatedly states that the Russian lawyer disclosed that Snowden brought documents to Moscow; once he even embellishes it, writing that in this exchange the Moscow lawyer had disclosed that Snowden still had access in Russia to additional files that he had not given to the journalists in Hong Kong.

Yet the interview transcript shows that this exchange was ambiguous. The context, which Epstein omits, was a discussion of how the ongoing publication of new articles citing Snowden's leaks did not mean that he was still making new leaks from Russia; rather the journalists were still just working through files he had given them in Hong Kong. So maybe this was a garbled conversational moment, and the Russian lawyer was saying that the journalists had still more unpublished materials to work with. Or maybe, in that 2013 interview, he was just playing along to gin up intrigue.

For that matter, when the lawyer later told Epstein that it was accurate, was he merely affirming the English translation of his 2013 words, or did he understand himself to be confirming the interpretive gloss Epstein placed on them? It seems to me that a journalist who wanted to know the truth, even at the risk of undermining his book project, would have followed up by asking the lawyer to clarify explicitly whether he was saying that Snowden had brought files with him to Russia and, if so, how the lawyer knew that he had done so and how he accounted for his client saying otherwise. By Epstein's account, after obtaining this murky confirmation, he instead changed the subject. That left him free to construe this exchange as having generated a "fact" consistent with his thesis.

There is a related problem. Epstein gets many facts about surveillance issues wrong, calling into question his competence to serve as a guide to thinking seriously about the Snowden saga. He gets dates wrong, calls an important technology by the wrong name, and inaccurately describes various programs and a presidential directive Snowden leaked. His botched discussion of the Prism system, which Snowden disclosed, is a troubling example. The government uses Prism to collect from American webmail providers such asGmail, without a warrant, the emails of non-citizens abroad whose accounts have been targeted by intelligence officials for surveillance. When Americans communicate with those targets, the government also "incidentally" gathers those Americans' emails to and from the target without a warrant. Epstein reassures his readers three times that every few months, the NSA sifts through all the emails it has gathered via Prism in order to filter out and purge "whatever information was accidentally picked up about Americans". That is a fake fact.

In reality, the NSA does not filter out Americans' messages gathered via Prism. Indeed, it shares raw messages gathered via the Prism system with the Central Intelligence Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigationand the National Counterterrorism Centre. Once-secret rules permit officials at all those agencies to search that trove for intelligence purposes using the names of Americans and to read any private emails they find. FBI agents may also do so when investigating ordinary criminal suspects. When Congress in 2017 extends the law that authorises Prism, reformers are hoping to close this so-called "backdoor search loophole" by requiring warrants to search for Americans' emails within the Prism trove. Because this policy debate is attributable to Snowden's leaks, Epstein's misinformation about Prism is no small detail.

Epstein argues that views differ about Snowden because the public and the media lack good information, accepting what Snowden says at face value and omitting whatever does not fit that narrative because of their "confirmation bias". By contrast, he writes, those who hold darker views about Snowden include lawmakers and officials who "base it on classified reports" and "have been at least partially briefed" about the NSA's investigation. Here he cites several of the latter group who said Snowden's leaks were damaging and unjustified, including two who said in 2014 that they thought he must be a spy, although Epstein only names one of those two. But Epstein omits what Chris Inglis, who was deputy director of the NSA from 2006 to 2014 and oversaw that investigation, said last March when asked whether Snowden had acted as a spy or from his own convictions:

"Here is what I surmise based upon a careful observation of the facts available to me. It does seem clear that his intention was to go to Latin or South America after he revealed all of this material in Hong Kong. He worked very hard and his lawyers worked very hard on his behalf to actually achieve that in the days and weeks afterwards I don't think that he was in the employ of the Chinese or the Russians. I don't see any evidence that would indicate that. And even if they are careful in terms of practising denial and deception, I think there would be certain tell-tales "

Epstein also says little about Snowden's comments criticising Russia's internet policies and human rights record. But those comments have heightened chatter about what will happen to him under the Trump administration: might Vladimir Putin extradite him to the United States as a gift or a bargaining chip? In a recent interview, Snowden said he found such talk perversely encouraging, since nations do not trade away their spies.

The premise of this chatter dovetails with an odd twist at the conclusion of Epstein's book. Without much warning, he writes that he sees "no reason to doubt [Snowden's] explanation that he stole NSA documents to expose its surveillance because he believed that it was an illicit intrusion into the privacy of individuals".Epstein continues to criticise Snowden for taking documents that did not concern "domestic" spying, and he still maintains, vaguely, that by the end Snowden's "mission evolved, deliberately or not, into one that led him to disclose key communications intelligence secrets to a foreign power". But he states that he "fully" accepts that Snowden "began as a whistle-blower, not as a spy," and was still acting as a whistle-blower when he reached out to the journalists.

By pulling back at the end of his book, Epstein tries to have it both ways: weaving conspiracy theories while maintaining plausible deniability and some veneer of evidence-based journalism. But his indulgence in speculation, his treatment of questionable claims as established facts, and his misunderstanding of surveillance combine to undermine his book's credibility. How America Lost Its Secretsfails to live up to Epstein's own principle, jotted down on that card for his debate with Oliver Stone about "JFK" so many years ago: when a non-fiction writer reaches the limits of discoverable fact, he is supposed to stop not fill in whatever gaps exist with his imagination, no matter how strong his intuition or suspicion.

The New York Review of Books

How America Lost Its Secrets: Edward Snowden, the Man and the Theft, by Edward Jay Epstein, published by Knopf. Snowden, a film directed by Oliver Stone. Charlie Savage is a Washington correspondent for The New York Times. His latest book is Power Wars: Inside Obama's Post9/11 Presidency.

2017 The New York Review of Books, distributed by the New York Times Syndicate

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Was Edward Snowden a Russian agent? - The Australian Financial Review

‘Secrets’ shows it’s the government, not Edward Snowden, we should be worried about – Kansas City Star


Kansas City Star
'Secrets' shows it's the government, not Edward Snowden, we should be worried about
Kansas City Star
A catastrophic data breach. Russian complicity. Blundering institutions. Distrust of government. Reading Edward Jay Epstein's gripping and devastatingly even-handed account of Edward Snowden, How America Lost Its Secrets, provides a Faulknerian ...

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'Secrets' shows it's the government, not Edward Snowden, we should be worried about - Kansas City Star

Edward Snowden talks in real time with Pitt students | Pittsburgh … – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Former Central Intelligence Agency employee, National Security Agency contractor and whistleblower Edward Snowden spoke via live stream to a full room of Pitt students on Wednesday at the William Pitt Union Assembly Room in Oakland.

The Pitt Program Councils lecture committee organized a conversation with Mr. Snowden exclusively for Pitt students, allowing him time to speak at an undisclosed location on cybersecurity and privacy. He also took questions submitted by the students, according to Niki Iyer, 19, the public relations director for the council.

Its so cool because its a very unique opportunity, Ms. Iyer said. You cant always say, Im going to teleconference a guy in Russia who is wanted by the U.S. government. Who else better to hear his opinion from?

Mr. Snowden was behind massive document leaks in 2013 that exposed actions including government snooping on citizens and made him an international fugitive.

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Edward Snowden talks in real time with Pitt students | Pittsburgh ... - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette