Letter from the US: Gov’t targets NSA whistleblower

June 13, 2013
Issue 

The exposure of the huge surveillance by the National Security Agency (NSA) of all phone calls in the United States, as well as the vast data mining of all electronic communications through computer servers and search engines worldwide, is one of the most important whistle-blowing events of our times.

Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the surveillence Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam War, says these exposures by Edward Snowden, who worked for a private contractor used by the NSA, said Snowden’s exposures were even more important than the Vietnam War revelations.

It lays bare the existence of a surveillance state of a scope beyond what the great majority of the world’s peoples, including Americans, could even imagine.

The ruling-class response has centered on a manhunt to capture Snowden, and put him in the dock like they are doing to WikiLeaks whistleblower Bradley Manning.

Closing ranks

Democrats and Republicans have closed ranks, with few exceptions, to whip up a witch-hunt to hunt down Snowden and prosecute him “to the full extent of the law”.

Top leaders of both parties have chimed in. Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein, head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said that Snowden’s revelations are “an act of treason”. Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner said Snowden “is a traitor.”

The penalty for treason is death.

Snowden knows he is in danger. In his interview from Hong Kong, where he flew before his name was released as the leaker, he said: “I could be, you know, rendered by the CIA. I could have people or any of their third party partners come after me …

“We’ve got a CIA station just up the road in the consulate here in Hong Kong, and I’m sure they’re going to be very busy for the next week. And that’s a fear I’ll live under the rest of my life, however long that happens to be.

“You can’t come forward against the world’s most powerful intelligence agencies and be completely free from risk, because they’re such powerful adversaries that no one can meaningfully oppose them. If they want to get you, they’ll get you, in time.”

The media and pundits are being mobilised to counter the positive image and message Snowden presented in his interview. He is either presented as a not very smart man who could not have had access to the material he exposed, or he is an evil genius bent on destroying the United States.

He did not graduate high school, so he is a dumb clutz, or he is so smart and proficient with computers he just knew too much for his own good.

Besides, he is lying — who are you to believe, the President, Congress, the judicial system and the NSA or some guy who turned against the war while a soldier in Iraq?

Obama's response

Some liberals are arguing that the vast programs revealed are unfortunately needed to prevent “a new 9/11”, which if it should occur, would lead to even worse attacks on democratic rights. Therefore, we have to get behind the president and trust him.

Barack Obama supporters who were appalled when Bush raised implementing such a program (but went ahead with it secretly anyway) now claim that Obama’s continuation and acceleration of the program is different. After all, Obama reassures us that he knows how to balance national security and Americans the democratic rights of US citizens. And isn’t he an honorable man?

Obama went on TV to tell US citizens that “no one is listening to your phone calls”. The “only” information about every phone call the NSA gathers and sorts through and saves, is who is called, when and for how long.

This creates a vast trove of information about everyone's communications.

As Snowden explained: “Even if you’re not doing anything wrong, you’re being watch and recorded … You simply have to fall under suspicion from somebody, even a wrong call, and then they can use the system to go back in time and scrutinise every decision you ever made, every friend you’ve ever discussed something with, and attack you on that basis, to sort of derive suspicion from an innocent life and paint anyone in the context of a wrongdoer.”

The only phone calls actually listened to in this dragnet are those the watchers decide to listen to. Obama promises this will only be done with a judge’s oversight.

But legal authorisation has already been given by secret judges’ decisions beforehand. They’ll listen to whatever they want.

The first of Snowden’s revelations that reporter Glenn Greenwald released in the British Guardian and the Washington Post concerned this surveillance of every phone call in the US.

The second revelation was about the even broader dragnet of Internet communications throughout the world. This is done by wholesale monitoring via services offered by companies such as Google, Facebook, Apple and Verizen.

These huge firms are fearful that the revelations will cause users worldwide to distrust them. The British Financial Times, always on the lookout for a business opportunity, speculated that European outfits may seek to move into this market with the promise they will not do business with the NSA.

This overwhelming search and seizure without the fig leaf of probable cause, or even suspicion of a crime by those targeted, is in direct violation of the Bill of Rights in the US Constitution.

The NSA can zero in on anything that relates to “national security” as they sift through the data. Whenever the rulers use this phrase, they mean their security.

This can mean monitoring striking workers, union dissidents, socialists, civil rights and immigration rights activists, and anyone the capitalists think might disturb their “security”.

There can be no doubt they monitored, read or listened in to every Facebook entry, every tweet, every phone call of the participants of the Occupy movement. Nor any doubt this information was used to coordinate the nation-wide police dispersal of that movement.

After these revelations, no one should anyone have any doubt on that score.

The dragnet of the Internet means they also monitor every email, tweet or Facebook posting of protesters throughout the world. Does the NSA share this information with its allies, such as the governments of Israel, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain? Did it share with Hosni Mubarak during the protest wave that eventually brought the Egyptian dictator down?

Since much commerce is done over the Internet, the NSA is gathering information about the trade and commercial secrets of US capitalist competitors throughout the world. This is being done while the US is loudly protesting that China is hacking such secrets of US firms.

A further revelation from Snowden — and Greenwald promises more to come — is that Obama ordered his senior national security and intelligence officials to draw up a list of potential foreign targets for US cyber-attacks.

The Obama administration itself characterises such cyber-attacks as “acts of war” when accusing other nations of carrying them out.

Then Greenwald revealed more details about an NSA data-mining tool called Boundless Informant. In just one month, March, the NSA collected 97 billion pieces of information from computer networks worldwide.

Most targetted

A top-secret “global heat map” showed the most frequently targeted were Iran, Pakistan, Jordan, Egypt and India. In the same month, the NSA collected three billion pieces of information from computers in the US under the program.

In the new Kafkaesque world of the “national security state”, logic is of a special type. Snowden committed a crime, you see, because the very existence of the huge surveillance operation itself was classified. Therefore, revealing its existence violated the rules of classification of state secrets.

After the first revelations, Obama said he welcomed discussion on them. But the discussion itself could not have begun if Snowden had not revealed the existence of the program, which was to have been kept secret.

So Obama welcomes a discussion on the existence of the program, but seeks to jailed the person who revealed its existence, which Obama tried to hide.

In reality, the administration is moving to squash any real debate by coming down with an iron fist.

Whether this will work, or whether a mass movement in defense of democratic rights begins to coalesce around these revelations remains to be seen.

[Barry Sheppard was a long-time leader of the US Socialist Workers Party and the Fourth International. He recounts his experience in the SWP in a two-volume book, The Party — the Socialist Workers Party 1960-1988, available from Resistance Books. Read more of Sheppard's articles.]


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