Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 26, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A7
winnipegfreepress. com WORLD WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SUNDAY, JULY 26, 2015 A 7
M OSCOW - Somewhere
in the thousands of
towering apartment
blocks that ring the Russian
capital, whistleblower Edward
Snowden remains in hiding two
years after outraging U. S. intelligence
agencies with revelations of
their snooping into the private communications
of millions of ordinary
citizens.
Snowden's release of classified files
he took from his National Security
Agency contractor's job blew the lid
off programs long said to be aimed
at catching terrorists and keeping
Americans safe. The leaks triggered a
global debate on government trampling
of personal liberties and led to
last month's congressional action to
end the mass collection of telephone
records, the first major restrictions on
spy- agency powers in decades.
The journalists who were the conduits
of Snowden's disclosures have
been bestowed with their profession's
highest honours, as has director
Laura Poitras with an Academy
Award for her documentary on the
fugitive, Citizenfour .
The film ends with a glimpse of Snowden in
a highrise window that could be anywhere in
Moscow's populous suburbs, where one building
is indistinguishable from the next.
But Snowden has gained little more from
his revolutionizing disclosures beyond the
sense of accomplishment he is said to feel,
according to the few people in and outside
Russia with whom he has occasional contact.
In rare interviews the reclusive exile has
granted, he has said he would like to return
to his U. S. homeland, but not to detention and
interrogation.
Snowden, 32, appears to believe he can set
the terms for his repatriation and resolution
of the felony espionage charges lodged
against him. At this distant remove from
American politics and security concerns,
however, the young crusader may be counting
on an unlikely shift in public opinion.
Although pollsters find many younger
Americans applaud his whistleblowing, the
majority express dislike for him, which probably
will discourage leading candidates in the
looming presidential election from expending
political capital on a call for clemency. In a
U. S. News & World Report poll in April, 64 per
cent of respondents familiar with Snowden
said they held a negative view of him.
Even those helping him navigate the
blocked pathway home acknowledge the prospects
look grim for the foreseeable future.
" Edward loves America, and he would definitely
like to return home," Anatoly Kucherena,
Snowden's Moscow lawyer, said in an
interview at his ornate central Moscow office.
" But it is our position, and a very simple one,
that as long as his case is politicized and commented
on as it is by politicians of all levels,
that his return to his motherland is impossible."
Kucherena, who has close ties with the
Kremlin, said his client won't negotiate with
U. S. authorities as long as they refuse to
provide " a guarantee that he won't go to jail
for 100 years."
The Russian lawyer who was dispatched
to assist Snowden when he was marooned at
Sheremetyevo International Airport two summers
ago points out Snowden didn't defect to
Russia, nor did he disclose to Russian intelligence
agents the classified material with
which he absconded in May 2013.
" It is 1,000 per cent true that he did this as
an act of conscience," Kucherena insisted,
noting Snowden has said he left all the documents
he took from the NSA with journalists
in Hong Kong.
That is small comfort to intelligence and
security veterans who see Snowden's leaks of
classified information and his refuge in Russia
as treasonous acts deserving of the felony
charges brought against him two years ago
under the 1917 Espionage Act.
" Nobody gives credence to his statements
that he's got better encryption than Russians
or Chinese can break, especially when they
have had the time and incentives they've had.
So whether he intended to become a foreign
agent, he has become one," said Kori Schake,
a National Security Council member in the
George W. Bush administration who is now a
fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institution.
She points to the potential for more of the
classified information he stole being made
public, by him or anyone who has had access
to it, as providing little incentive for leniency
from the Justice Department.
" If what Snowden did isn't prosecutable
under the Espionage Act, I can't imagine what
would be," Schake said.
Snowden didn't set out to seek asylum in
Russia. He was reportedly attempting to fly
to a sympathetic Latin American country
- Cuba or Ecuador - via Moscow. The U. S.
government suspended Snowden's passport as
he was en route from Hong Kong, leaving him
stranded in an immigration no man's land at
the Moscow airport.
Sergei Markov, an ardent nationalist and
Kremlin adviser on diplomacy and international
affairs, said Snowden was in need
of Russia's protection because " he can
compromise thousands of intelligence and
military officials."
" We can't send him back just because
America demands it," Markov said, describing
the U. S. justice officials seeking the fugitive's
return as a " mafia" intent on revenge.
Ronald Goldfarb, a former federal prosecutor
in the U. S., curated After Snowden ,
an anthology of essays on security versus
privacy in the Information Age that examines
the fallout from the NSA leaks for the news
media, the courts, the intelligence community
and the whistleblowers.
" We didn't begin this book as a defence of
Snowden. Everyone has his own views, that
he's either too much an angel or too much a
devil. But he has raised profoundly important
issues," said Goldfarb, who advocates a more
moderate prosecution of Snowden in light of
the surveillance reforms that have resulted
from his disclosures.
Goldfarb points to Snowden's claims - and
NSA officials' denials - he attempted to take
his concern about surveillance excesses to
higher- ups at the agency, who turned a deaf
ear.
Determining what information Snowden
stole and whether it fell into the hands of hostile
governments is also necessary, he said,
to assess " what damage he caused other than
embarrassment" of intelligence officials who
lied about the scope of domestic surveillance.
" It would be wise on both parties' parts for
him to plead guilty to the technical crime he's
committed. There is no question he took property
he shouldn't have taken," said Goldfarb,
whose work for the Justice Department goes
back to the Kennedy administration.
" Let's give the government the benefit
of a doubt. If Snowden has hurt us in ways
we don't know yet, we need to ( keep) that in
mind. If not, the case can be made for a modest,
as opposed to severe, sentence."
Even if Snowden was willing to return to
the United States and face trial with assurances
of a light sentence and possible
clemency when U. S. President Barack Obama
leaves office in January 2017 - and that deal
isn't on the table yet, those privy to the backchannel
negotiations say - the window for
taking that risk is closing.
Any deal could become grist for debate in
the upcoming presidential campaign, and
it seems unlikely candidates with a serious
chance of getting nominated would risk
standing up for the perpetrator of one of the
biggest national security data breaches in
history.
" This is the wrong time for the politics of
it," Goldfarb said.
Ben Wizner, a staff lawyer with the American
Civil Liberties Union representing Snowden,
acknowledges his client isn't likely to be
going home soon.
" Right now he has two choices: stay indefinitely
there or report to a U. S. prison," Wizner
said, alluding to the charges that could bring
a 30- year term.
Snowden feels time is on his side, Wizner
said, not just because of his youth but also because
he is able to advance the global debate
on privacy rights and judicial reform, even
from the unlikely refuge of Russia.
" The reform we've gotten so far, albeit historic,
is totally unequal to the challenges we
face," Wizner said.
" We still have a lot of work to do."
- Los Angeles Times
By Carol J. Williams
' Right now he has two choices:
stay indefinitely there or report to a U. S. prison'
Snowden
STAYING PUT
Whistleblower unlikely to head home any time soon
BARTON GELLMAN / THE WASHINGTON POST FILES
Edward Snowden at a hotel room in Moscow in December 2013. He has said he would like to return to the United States.
LISLE, Ill. - Family and friends of an Illinois
woman found dead in a Texas jail remembered
her Saturday as a " courageous voice" for social
justice and promised to keep fighting for clarity
on the circumstances surrounding her death.
Hundreds of people attended Sandra Bland's funeral
near the Chicago suburb where she grew up.
They celebrated her life with words and songs of
praise, and her mother danced in the church aisle
with her arms raised. She and other mourners,
though, said they were still struggling to understand
how a traffic stop for failing to use a turn
signal escalated into a physical confrontation and
landed her in the cell where authorities say she
killed herself three days later.
The Harris County, Texas, medical examiner's
office determined through an autopsy Bland
hanged herself with a plastic bag. The 28- year- old
woman's family has questioned the finding, saying
she was excited about starting a new job and
wouldn't have taken her own life.
" I'm going to find out what happened to my
baby," her mother, Geneva Reed- Veal, said in remarks
that brought mourners to their feet. " My
baby has spoken. She's still speaking and no, she
didn't kill herself."
The traffic stop, which was captured on police
dash- cam video and on a bystander's cellphone,
and Bland's death in custody have resonated on
social media, with many grouping it with other
prominent U. S. cases involving confrontations between
the police and blacks over the past year.
Bland had spoken out about that issue and others
in a series of videos she posted online this year
with the hashtag " SandySpeaks."
Mourners at Saturday's funeral wore T- shirts
with the tag. One person had it scrawled across a
car window. Some took to Twitter with the hashtag
" SandySTILLSpeaks."
Crowds filed past her open casket to catch a last
glimpse of Bland, who was dressed in an all- white
suit with roses on top of her.
The July 10 traffic stop became heated when
Bland refused the officer's request to put out a
cigarette and his subsequent order to get out of the
car. He threatened to shoot Bland with a stun gun
unless she obeyed his order and said she kicked
him during the tussle. He has been placed on leave
pending the outcome of an investigation.
The Rev. Theresa Dear told reporters outside
the DuPage African Methodist Episcopal Church
Bland should be celebrated for standing up for
herself.
" She challenged and asked the question why,
' Why should I put out the cigarette?' " Dear said.
" She asked 12 times, ' Why am I being arrested?'
And so we celebrate that part of her personality."
She said friends and family continue to doubt
authorities, even after the release of documents
supporting the official conclusion of suicide.
" When you are about to start a new job, when
you know your family is about to bring the money
for your release, when you are an activist and a
fighter, you don't take your own life," she said.
Bland's story so moved people her funeral even
drew some who never met her.
" I don't know Sandra, and I don't know what
happened," Hank Brown, of Chicago, told the Chicago
Tribune . " But I do know she didn't have to
die. There's an epidemic of police terror in this
country, and people need to stand up."
- The Associated Press
Woman who
died in jail
in Texas
mourned
COURTESY OF THE BLAND FAMILY
Sandra Bland: funeral in hometown of Chicago
BOGOTA - Colombia's government is
suspending aerial bombings of guerrilla
camps in a bid to de- escalate fighting and
breathe new life into struggling peace
talks.
President Juan Manuel Santos made
the announcement Saturday night at a
military ceremony in Cartagena, saying
the confidence- building move was in response
to the decision by the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia to declare
a unilateral ceasefire.
FARC leaders said Monday they were
resuming a unilateral truce the rebels had
suspended two months earlier following
an army bombing of one of their camps
that left 26 people dead. That raid in turn
followed a series of deadly attacks by the
FARC, including a nighttime attack on an
army platoon that killed 10 soldiers while
they were asleep.
- The Associated Press
Bombing of guerillas
stops in Colombia
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