{"id":31258,"date":"2017-02-07T22:44:12","date_gmt":"2017-02-08T03:44:12","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.opensource.im\/uncategorized\/was-edward-snowden-a-russian-agent-the-australian-financial-review.php"},"modified":"2017-02-07T22:44:12","modified_gmt":"2017-02-08T03:44:12","slug":"was-edward-snowden-a-russian-agent-the-australian-financial-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/edward-snowden\/was-edward-snowden-a-russian-agent-the-australian-financial-review.php","title":{"rendered":"Was Edward Snowden a Russian agent? &#8211; The Australian Financial Review"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>by Charlie Savage    <\/p>\n<p>      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:    <\/p>\n<p>      \"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.    <\/p>\n<p>      \"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 \"    <\/p>\n<p>      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.)    <\/p>\n<p>      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:    <\/p>\n<p>      \"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.\"    <\/p>\n<p>      Now, years later, the two men once again found themselves      eying each other as they circled the Snowden saga.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>            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:    <\/p>\n<p>      \"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.\"    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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,    <\/p>\n<p>      \"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.\"    <\/p>\n<p>      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?    <\/p>\n<p>      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'.    <\/p>\n<p>      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?\"    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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\".    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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:    <\/p>\n<p>      \"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 \"    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>      The New York Review of Books    <\/p>\n<p>      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.    <\/p>\n<p>       2017 The New York Review of Books, distributed by      the New York Times Syndicate    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Visit link:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.afr.com\/news\/world\/europe\/edward-snowden-might-have-been-a-russian-spy-20170205-gu64mj\" title=\"Was Edward Snowden a Russian agent? - The Australian Financial Review\">Was Edward Snowden a Russian agent? - The Australian Financial Review<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> 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<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[47],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-31258","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-edward-snowden"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/31258"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=31258"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/31258\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=31258"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=31258"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/euvolution.com\/open-source-convergence\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=31258"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}