Edward Snowden. Politicians, activists, scholars and experts are divided on whether the whistleblower deserves praise or punishment for his actions. (photo: Alan Rusbridger/Guardian UK)
Pardon
Edward Snowden
By Ed Pilkington, Guardian
UK
14 September 16
Bernie Sanders, Daniel Ellsberg, former members of the NSA and
more weigh in on whether Obama should grant clemency to the divisive
whistleblower
Bernie
Sanders leads a chorus of prominent public figures calling for clemency, a plea
agreement or, in several cases, a full pardon for the National Security Agency
whistleblower Edward Snowden.
Writing
in the Guardian, the runner-up in the race to become Democratic presidential
candidate argues that Snowden helped to educate the American public about how
the NSA violated the constitutional rights of citizens with its mass surveillance program.
Sanders argues that there should be some form of resolution that would
acknowledge both the “troubling revelations” that he had brought to light and
the crime that he committed in doing so, that would “spare him a long prison
sentence or permanent exile”.
Sanders
joins 20 other prominent public figures – from Hollywood actors and rock
musicians to politicians, professors and Black Lives Matter activists – who
call on Barack Obama to find some way of allowing Snowden to return home to the
US from exile in Russia. The Guardian’s voices are raised in the week that
Oliver Stone’s film, Snowden, is released in the US and that a coalition of
groups including the ACLU and Amnesty International launch a new campaign for a
presidential pardon before Obama steps down.
Among
the writers in the Guardian are Daniel Ellsberg, the whistleblower who released
the Pentagon Papers in the 1970s, who calls for Snowden to be allowed to make a
public interest defense in any US trial. From the world of arts, actor Susan
Sarandon and director Terry Gilliam, novelist Barry Eisler and Sonic Youth
singer Thurston Moore all make impassioned calls for an Obama pardon.
Senior
politicians from both sides of the Atlantic, including former US senator Mark
Udall, UK parliamentarian David Winnick and German Green party member
Hans-Christian Ströbele all fly the flag for a Snowden homecoming. Similar
calls are made by public intellectuals including Noam Chomsky, Cornel West and Sanders’
former Democratic presidential rival and Harvard law professor, Lawrence
Lessig.
Not
everyone writing in the Guardian today is empathetic towards the whistleblower.
The former director of the NSA, Michael Hayden, says Snowden should face “the
full force of the law” were he to come home. Stewart Baker, also latterly of
the NSA, argues that Snowden’s leak caused harm to US national interests – a
contention that is strongly disputed by many of the other people writing here.
Bernie
Sanders
US senator for Vermont and Democratic presidential runner-up
US senator for Vermont and Democratic presidential runner-up
The
information disclosed by Edward Snowden has allowed Congress and the American
people to understand the degree to which the NSA has abused its authority and
violated our constitutional rights.
Now we
must learn from the troubling revelations Mr Snowden brought to light. Our
intelligence and law enforcement agencies must be given the tools they need to
protect us, but that can be done in a way that does not sacrifice our rights.
While
Mr Snowden played an important role in educating the American people, there is
no debate that he also violated an oath and committed a crime. In my view, the
interests of justice would be best served if our government granted him some
form of clemency or a plea agreement that would spare him a long prison
sentence or permanent exile.
Susan
Sarandon
Oscar-winning actor
Oscar-winning actor
Ed
Snowden did this country a great service. Here was a man who had a well-paying
job and a good life in Hawaii yet tore it all up so that he could reveal to all
of us what the NSA was doing to us in the name of national security. He did so
for no personal gain, and at massive personal cost, because he cared about a
basic principle: that governments should not lie to their people.
I
don’t think a person like that should be exiled from their country. I don’t
think a person like that deserves to be locked away for decades like Chelsea
Manning. I think President Obama should do the right thing: pardon Ed and let
him come home to his family and his people.
Daniel
Ellsberg
Former US military analyst who released the 1971 Pentagon Papers on the Vietnam war, and who met Snowden in Moscow last year
Former US military analyst who released the 1971 Pentagon Papers on the Vietnam war, and who met Snowden in Moscow last year
Ed
Snowden should be freed of the legal burden hanging over him. They should
remove the indictment, pardon him if that’s the way to do it, so that he is no
longer facing prison.
The
NSA and US government have revealed no evidence that the information Ed Snowden
released has caused any harm. Inconvenience, yes, embarrassment certainly, but
what has truly been revealed is that the NSA itself was unquestionably
committing international, domestic and constitutional crimes.
Were
the government to have any evidence that Snowden revealed information that should
have been protected, I think he should be judged by a jury. I was the first
person to be tried for a leak under the Espionage Act, and I certainly didn’t
object to my case being weighed by a jury, although it never came to that. But
there has to be a public interest defense, which doesn’t exist in US law now.
As
things stand, I think the chance that this or any president will pardon Snowden
is zero. They wouldn’t dare to challenge the intelligence community that
remains so hostile to him. Nor does Snowden have any chance of a fair trial
under the Espionage Act, any more than I did.
So
nothing would be gained by him coming back and standing trial unless the
Espionage Act were changed to permit that public interest defense. He’s said to
me that he’s willing to come back and serve one, two or conceivably three years
as a result of a plea bargain arranged beforehand, but they haven’t offered him
one as far as I’m aware.
Terry
Gilliam
Film director and former Monty Python star
Film director and former Monty Python star
I
think anyone helping to strengthen the workings of democracy should be
rewarded. What Edward Snowden’s prize should be, I don’t know, perhaps
something as unglamorous and hard to display on his mantelpiece as a
presidential pardon. That would be nice.
Michael
Hayden
Former director of the National Security Agency
Former director of the National Security Agency
What
Edward Snowden did amounted to the greatest hemorrhaging of legitimate American
secrets in the history of my nation.
If he
wants to come home, and that’s his choice, I think he should face the full
force of the law. Then he would be able to mount his defense. I would not be
supportive of a public interest defense, however, because the American people
declare some things to be legal and some things to be illegal, and don’t anoint
the individual citizen to decide whether that’s a good or a bad idea.
If
Snowden really claims that his actions amounted to genuine civil disobedience,
he should go to some English language bookstore in Moscow and get a copy of Henry
David Thoreau’s Civil Disobedience. Thoreau points out clearly that civil
disobedience gets its moral authority by the willingness to suffer the
penalties from disobeying a law, even if you think that law is unjust.
It
would be incredibly unwise for this president to offer a pardon. President
Obama and his successors are dependent on the 100,000-plus people inside the
American intelligence community – the people Edward Snowden betrayed. For any
president to align himself with Snowden’s approach in this controversy would
carry an incredible cost to the spirit and morale of the intelligence
community.
Malkia
Cyril
Executive director of the Center for Media Justice and a Black Lives Matter activist
Executive director of the Center for Media Justice and a Black Lives Matter activist
Right
now, Black Lives Matter activists protesting deadly police and other forms of
state violence who have not been accused of any crime are being spied on with
Stingray cellphone interceptors, tracked through biometric facial recognition
software and license-plate readers, among other things. And, this isn’t limited
to black activists.
Black
people of all kinds know that since blacks were enslaved in the western
hemisphere, to be black in America is to suffer persistent surveillance, to be
watched as if being black was a spectator sport. How many black people right
now are wearing electronic monitors? Are in databases we can’t get off? Are on
the no-fly list? Are living in communities that are so over-policed they have
been turned into open-air prisons?
This
is why Edward Snowden must be pardoned – because the ability of black
communities to organize for our collective liberation depends, in part, on
whistleblowers like him. Black movements for peace and freedom demand that out
of the darkness of empire, truth-tellers emerge to sound the alarm.
His
revelations directly challenged the commonly held belief that media, phone and
technology corporations must always give into state interests to target and
harass the public. His bravery was a catalyst for the modern movement to defend
democracy from both state and corporate overreach.
Noam
Chomsky
Professor of linguistics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Professor of linguistics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
President
Obama should provide Edward Snowden with a form of clemency that would permit
him to return home to the United States – and still more appropriately in my
view, remove all threats of criminal investigation as well.
Snowden
should, in my opinion, be welcomed home with honors for his service to his
country, and for his courage and integrity in the manner in which he performed
this service. Apart from exceptional circumstances, citizens have every right
to know what their government is doing, in particular what it is doing to them
– in the present case, as Snowden revealed to us, keeping citizens under
extensive and deeply intrusive surveillance.
No
case has been made that relevant exceptional circumstances prevail. As well
known, initial claims about prevention of terrorist actions collapsed under
investigation, and no credible case has been made that the massive invasion of
privacy, arguably in violation of constitutional rights, is warranted. Snowden
made every effort to follow established procedures for bringing this crucial
information to the general public. When these failed, he took the courageous
and honorable step of transmitting the information through the medium of
careful and highly reliable and experienced journalists, who, along with him,
carefully vetted the material to ensure that no possible harm would be caused
to individuals or to security.
Citizens
of the United States – and indeed the world, considering the extraordinary
range of the operations that have been revealed – are very much in Snowden’s
debt. He should certainly not be punished in any way for the services that he
has performed in the interests of democracy and civil rights. At the very
least, he should be granted the full freedom to return home without fear of
prosecution, and, I very much hope, to be welcomed with the respect that he
richly deserves.
Thurston
Moore
Singer-songwriter of Sonic Youth
Singer-songwriter of Sonic Youth
From
the perspective of someone born in the friendly ’50s in the USA, it has become
normal to witness the uncovering of classified information over time ...
Living
in this day in age one would imagine that we – so connected
now – could’ve found a way to share resources in a more socially responsible
way. It’s absolutely perplexing to me to try to understand people involved in
The Bilderberg Group, or see people, even friends and colleagues in places such
as Los Angeles, spending hours and hours and hundreds of dollars bleaching
their hair every week and purchasing absurdly priced designer clothing whilst
in travels on the same tours through Europe and witness to young Syrian
refugees or young disenfranchised children and kids in Detroit or Mexico City
or even London on the streets, starved. There is an obvious and embarrassing
injustice.
Simultaneously
going to the cinema, there are sometimes advertisements/campaigns before the
trailers to join the military – and there we are in the audience boo-ing! How
dare these guys boast their heartless, imperialist activities in an effort to
recruit young people. It’s sickening.
It’s
difficult to talk about. It’s hard to even talk anymore. I listen more now. We
listen to our Palestinian neighbors. We listen to the brave men and women and
trans people fighting for basic rights. We seek out film festivals and
documentary festivals where activist artists bravely tell stories to try to
affect change in communities. We read everything Chelsea Manning has written.
It inspires us. We try to make a more universal music of peace and love.
We are
grateful for the courage and the conscience of the whistleblowers. Everywhere.
From Angela Davis and the Black Panther party in the USA, Anna Mendelssohn (aka
Grace Lake) and Stuart Christie and The Angry Brigade in the UK and today’s
activist beauties such as Snowden, Manning, Assange ... others. All I can say
to them is thank you, and try to honour them in my music. They are heroes. They
will be remembered, hopefully honored in their own lifetime.
Cornel West
Philosopher, civil rights activist and professor at Princeton University
Philosopher, civil rights activist and professor at Princeton University
In an
age of pervasive mendacity and massive criminality my dear brother Edward
Snowden exemplifies courage and integrity. I call for President Obama to give
him a pardon owing to his public service for truth and democratic
accountability.
Lawrence
Wilkerson
Retired US army colonel and former chief of staff to US secretary of state Colin Powell
Retired US army colonel and former chief of staff to US secretary of state Colin Powell
Frankly,
I believe that were Snowden to return to the US, he would be treated badly; so
much so, that even if he were fully pardoned – and could convince himself that
that were truly so – he still would still be treated very badly.
That,
sadly, is the nature of our country these days (some would argue we have always
been thus and point to all manner of cases from the Salem witch trials to Alger
Hiss, to the Rosenbergs, to the San Francisco 49ers quarterback now being
shouted down for his refusals with respect to the US national anthem).
Snowden’s actions, in many minds, constitute treason. I’m quite certain that
most of the following of Donald Trump, for example, would want him in prison
for life at best and hanged at worst.
After
listening to Snowden on tape and video multiple times, I believe him to be a
highly courageous and extremely ethical young man. He just might be the type
who could weather such a storm and lead an otherwise productive life, like
Daniel Ellsberg has for example. That might make him a martyr to some; but he
will remain a villain to many others.
Am I
for pardoning him? I would have to know a great deal more about the real
impacts of his revelations – not the lies the government tells – before I could
formulate my view. None of this truth is about to be forthcoming, so I really
cannot make an informed judgment. It’s shameful because I don’t think any
reasonable citizen can.
Mishi
Choudhary
Technology lawyer
Technology lawyer
The
essence of America’s precious freedom is the right to speak up. For people all
over the world, especially in countries where whistleblowers’ only fate is
death, Snowden has become a symbol of citizenship and moral courage. He has
changed the way we feel about possibility of freedom.
He has
taught us that in times of moral crisis, neutrality is not the side we want to
be on. In pardoning Snowden, America strengthens itself and the ideas it stands
for. Bring him home, honor him.
Barry
Eisler
Bestselling novelist and former covert CIA operative
Bestselling novelist and former covert CIA operative
I
wholeheartedly support a full presidential pardon for whistleblower Edward
Snowden.
As a
CIA officer 25 years ago, I knew the government classified too much
information. Everyone knew it. But no one spoke up. And today the problem is
far worse.
But
because of Edward Snowden, we now know the head of US intelligence was lying to
the Senate committee responsible for intelligence oversight. Programs concealed
from the citizenry have been declared unconstitutional by federal courts. For
the first time, the country has the minimal information necessary to grapple
with the benefits and dangers of a surveillance apparatus far more vast and
intrusive even than the one Senator Frank Church warned 40 years ago could lead
to the eradication of privacy and the imposition of tyranny.
Surely
in a democracy, the people have a right to know about the implementation of
programs with risks as vast as that. Surely in a democracy, the people have
a need to know.
That
today we do know, that today we are able to engage in this critical
conversation about how properly to govern ourselves, is almost entirely due to
the conscience and courage of one man: Edward Snowden. For his service to his
country, he deserves a Presidential Medal of Freedom. But a presidential pardon
might be acknowledgment enough.
Susan
Buck-Morss
Philosopher and professor of political science at the CUNY Graduate Center
Philosopher and professor of political science at the CUNY Graduate Center
The
charge of espionage against Snowden makes no sense. How can he be guilty as an
agent of an enemy power, when his goal was to defend the people of the United
States against secret and illegal actions by their own government?
A line
between hero and traitor in this case is impossible to draw. And that is the
deeper issue. What would a pardon of Edward Snowden signal? It would
acknowledge the very principle of democratic rule. Nothing protects us from the
abuses of executive power more effectively than their exposure by individual
citizens who make them public and sound the alarm.
David
Winnick
UK member of parliament and vice-chair of the Home Affairs Committee
UK member of parliament and vice-chair of the Home Affairs Committee
From
the start I thought that Edward Snowden had made a significant contribution in
revealing the excesses and, in some instances, illegal surveillance carried out
by US agencies.
If not
for his actions, there would not have been the tightening up of such operations
and we would never have known how even leaders of various democracies, such as
Chancellor Merkel, had their phones tapped by the National Security Agency.
A half
a century ago, Daniel Ellsberg was denounced in the US as a traitor for
releasing the Pentagon Papers, which contained information concealed from the
public about the war being waged against Vietnam. His actions have long since
been vindicated, and there is a general consensus that what he did was
absolutely right. Mr Ellsberg has strenuously defended Edward Snowden.
Hans-Christian
Ströbele
Green party member of the German Bundestag
Green party member of the German Bundestag
When I
met Edward Snowden in Moscow in October 2013, he told me that he would
eventually like to live in a country where democracy and the rule of law are
respected. I can think of two ways to make that happen.
First,
President Obama could pardon Snowden at the end of his last term, in the way
other outgoing presidents have done in the past. Second, Snowden could be
awarded the Nobel peace prize, which would bestow him a certain degree of
immunity in the US even if he isn’t pardoned: during the cold war, for example,
we saw that Soviet Union was unwilling to prosecute people who had been awarded
with such an internationally recognised honour.
The
key to both of these solutions doesn’t lie in our hands, but there is something
we all can do. Like Oliver Stone’s new film, we can try to help emphasise that
there is another side to Snowden’s story than the one that prevails in the US
media: that this is a man with a lot of integrity, who did a great merit for
the civil rights and privacy for the mankind and who knew what he was doing
when making a extremely risky decision.
Cindy
Cohn
Executive director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
Executive director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
Whistleblower
Edward Snowden’s disclosures provided powerful confirmation that the NSA was
spying on the digital lives of hundreds of millions of innocent people,
undermining digital security and attacking American companies. The leaks caused
a sea change in policy and secrecy related to government spying that led to the
first piece of legislation to rein in the NSA in over 30 years, reform to the
secret Fisa court, and significant, long-overdue public releases of critical
information by the government about its spying on innocent Americans as well as
millions of others around the world.
The
information he revealed was critical to starting a conversation about
realigning a broken relationship between the intelligence community and the
public. His motivations – and the impact of the leaks – were clearly to benefit
the public and restore privacy and security to the internet.
The
heavy price that the government seeks to exact – indicting him under the
Espionage Act as if he had sold secrets to an enemy with no chance of
explaining the broader public benefit – is wrong. Snowden’s behavior both
before and after he brought this information to the media is that of a
whistleblower who brought necessary public attention to a corrupt surveillance
system still in need of further reform.
Mark
Udall
Former US senator for Colorado and member of the select committee on intelligence
Former US senator for Colorado and member of the select committee on intelligence
Strong
oversight of our intelligence agencies is essential so the American people
trust what they are doing to keep us safe. That trust was shaken when Edward
Snowden disclosed the disconcerting truths about US surveillance that fueled my
years-long effort, alongside Senator Wyden, to end the dragnet, warrantless
collection of Americans’ communication records. Although Snowden’s actions
aided my push for reform, the fact remains that Snowden broke an oath he
willingly took to protect our national security and classified secrets.
I do
not believe the president should pardon Snowden. You can make the case that he
did our nation a service, and that is why I believe he should return to the
United States to make that argument in court and to the public.
Ron
Wyden
US senator for Oregon
US senator for Oregon
I’m
not going to sit in judgment on pending criminal charges, though I certainly
don’t think there should be a double standard where defenders of particular
programs can disclose classified information get and off scot-free, while
critics of those programs go to prison.
I
think it’s very clear that mass surveillance was never going to end until the
public found out about it. That’s why I spent years urging the Bush and Obama
administrations to begin this discussion with the public. I wish this debate
had started earlier, but I’m glad it’s happening now.
Karen
Greenberg
Director of the Center on National Security at Fordham University
Director of the Center on National Security at Fordham University
What
if there hadn’t been a Snowden? A program that violated the principles that
this country holds dear may have continued to this day. A program that an
appellate court in New York found illegal, that was so egregious in terms of
law and civil liberties, may have continued or even been expanded.
Edward
Snowden was immensely important and will only become more important as time goes
on. Not only did he show the American public what was being done in their name
and to them, he ended a program which, upon examination, national security and
legal experts concluded did not work.
When
considering whether or not he deserves to be pardoned, the president should
remember that even former attorney general Eric Holder said that Snowden
performed a public service. His revelations were the tidal wave the nation
needed to change its ways. The importance of what he did for the country
outweighs the law that he violated and the just move is a pardon for Edward
Snowden.
Ladar
Levison
Owner of webmail service Lavabit that he shut down in 2013 rather than comply with US government orders to facilitate spying on Snowden
Owner of webmail service Lavabit that he shut down in 2013 rather than comply with US government orders to facilitate spying on Snowden
Snowden
has stated he would be willing to stand and be judged by a jury of peers, but
doesn’t believe he would receive a fair trail. I believe the conduct I
encountered proves his contention. The individuals responsible for
investigating, prosecuting and adjudicating his actions have lied in court,
ignored conflicts of interest and irrevocably tainted the evidence against him.
I believe it amounts to prosecutorial misconduct.
The
charges against Snowden should be dismissed with prejudice; just like the case
against Daniel Ellsberg was dismissed. To quote Judge Byrne, from his decision
in 1973: “The totality of the circumstances of this case offend a sense of
justice.”
On the
other hand, I think asking President Obama to pardon him is a lost cause.
Snowden revealed misconduct by the very person who is being asked to grant him
the pardon. If we were to petition anyone, it should be Congress, or possibly
the four presidential candidates (Republican, Democratic, Libertarian, Green).
Lawrence
Lessig
Law professor at Harvard Law School and former Democratic presidential candidate in 2016
Law professor at Harvard Law School and former Democratic presidential candidate in 2016
There
should be nothing less than a full pardon. The information that Snowden
released to the public was critical: it made Americans aware of the way the law
was being violated or at least subverted by unchecked government officials.
Then
there was the manner in which he released the information. It was careful and
limited, given the unresponsiveness he had experienced inside the NSA and from
other branches of government.
Whistleblowing
is an essential part of the architecture of checking government power. We’ve
recognized the importance of whistleblowers in the past, and it’s entirely
appropriate that Obama now recognizes the role that Snowden played in America
in exposing the way in which extraordinary power was abused.
Stewart Baker
Former
general counsel of the National Security Agency
I am
not in the “pardon Snowden” camp. And the longer he stays away, the fewer
people will be in that camp.
In the
early days after his leaks, Snowden was a bit of a paradox – a plausible,
intelligent commentator who seemed to have done something that was
irresponsible at best and actively hostile to US national security at worst. We
were just not sure what to make of him.
But
the public benefits of those leaks were spent within a week or two, as they
spurred a genuine debate about surveillance. And it turned out they could have
been achieved by leaking three or four documents.
In the
years since then, the massive flood unleashed by Snowden has been used for one
purpose only – to harm US intelligence and national interests by exposing
perfectly legitimate intelligence sources and methods.
As the
debate wanes, the ongoing harm to the United States remains front and center.
So the longer he stays away the more he becomes, in reality and in perception,
simply one of Putin’s tools. And a willing tool to boot, one suspects. That
fact naturally casts a new and unflattering light on his deeds in 2013.
Salil
Shetty
Secretary-general of Amnesty International
Secretary-general of Amnesty International
Edward
Snowden clearly acted in the public interest. He sparked one of the most
important debates about government surveillance in decades, and brought about
a global movement in defence of privacy
in the digital age. Punishing him for this sends out the dangerous
message that those who witness human rights violations behind closed doors
should not speak out.
It is
ironic that it is Snowden who is being treated like a spy when his act of
courage drew attention to the fact that the US and UK governments were
illegally spying on millions of people without their consent.
C 2015 Reader Supported News
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
No comments:
Post a Comment