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RAY BAKER: On March 25, supporters for NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden held a press
conference at the National Press Club, calling for a change in the United States government's
stance towards Snowden. They want Snowden's U.S. passport to be restored and for the government
to not intervene in his political asylum process. RootsAction.org cofounder Norman Solomon said
that the Obama administration is not only creating roadblocks for Snowden, but it has
unfairly tarnished his reputation.
NORMAN SOLOMON: We're all familiar with the term blaming the messenger. What we've seen
in the last nine months is a /'m{Nb@"keISn/ and exacerbation of such a dynamic, denouncing
the messenger, vilifying the messenger, taking away the passport of the messenger, and indeed
trying to prosecute and imprison the messenger, who since last June has provided the American
people with the capacity to learn about what's being done in our names with our own tax dollars,
in fact to participate in the informed consent of the governed.
We're also familiar in recent years with the saying, if you see something, say something.
Edward Snowden saw something and he said something. He saw the undermining of the free press aspects
of the First Amendment. He saw the undermining of the Fourth Amendment. He saw the full-scale
assault on due process and other key aspects of the Fifth Amendment.
BAKER: Solomon's group RootsAction.org sponsored a pair of petitions defending Snowden's right
to his passport and his ability to seek asylum. With a combined total of 100,000 signers,
they presented both petitions to the Justice Department and the State Department.
This came right after President Obama announced that he would be curbing the NSA's ability
to collect phone records. Former FBI special agent Coleen Rowley pointed out that such
a reform would have only been possible because of Edward Snowden's revelations. But she said
the government has yet to let up on prosecuting Snowden.
COLEEN ROWLEY: Well, you know the old shoot the messenger. Okay. If a person gets the
truth out that turns out to be true-- didn't say this in my talk, but a whistleblower test,
part of it is it has to turn out to be accurate. If your fears and concerns are ridiculous
or silly, that wouldn't be the case. But if it turns out to be accurate and if the entity
that is doing the wrong or the illegal act actually fixes it, how can they turn around
now and blame that messenger for telling them the truth that allowed them to fix the problem?
It makes no sense whatsoever.
BAKER: But how the White House makes sense of its pursuit of Snowden is by looking at
his lack of criticism of other nations.
JAY CARNEY: Mr. Snowden's claim that he is focused on supporting transparency, freedom
of the press, and protection of individual rights and democracy is belied by the protectors
he has potentially chosen. China, Russia, Ecuador, as we've seen. His failure to criticize
these regimes suggests that his true motive throughout has been to injure the national
security of the United States, not to advance internet freedom and free speech.
BAKER: Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern, who has met with Snowden in Russia, said that
Snowden was certainly concerned about the protection of American rights--just look at
his actions before the leak.
RAY MCGOVERN: He had a copy of the U.S. Constitution on his desk. And it was all dogeared. And
every now and then he'd whip it out and he'd say, now, is what we're doing consonant with
the Fourth Amendment?
BAKER: Former intelligence officials, researchers, and scholars alike are echoing the call for
Edward Snowden to have his passport reinstated. But here on Capitol Hill, members of both
the House and Senate are singing a different tune about Mr. Snowden, with some even suggesting
he's a Russian spy.
MIKE ROGERS: I believe there's a reason he ended up in the hands, the loving arms of
an FSB agent in Moscow. I don't think that's a coincidence.
MCGOVERN: The notion that he chose to be in Russia and that Mike Rogers can, you know,
imitate Joe McCarthy in saying, oh, we know the Russians, the Russians are behind all
this, you know, he didn't choose to be in Russia. It was only because his passport was
withdrawn from him and he became stateless, because John Kerry the Secretary of State
decided to do that. That's why he had to stay in Russia.
And I have to say this, that Putin faced a very difficult decision. Now, in terms of
international law, it was easy. Okay? He was due, that is, Edward Snowden was due political
asylum. Why was this difficult for Putin? Putin's an intelligence officer. He grew up
in the KGB. You know? He's the last kind of guy that wants to create a precedent that
you can leak all this sensitive stuff and get asylum somewhere.
BAKER: Senate intelligence chair Dianne Feinstein had a change of heart herself upon finding
out that her Senate Intelligence Committee was being spied on by the same NSA wiretappings
she once defended.
DIANNE FEINSTEIN: What the president has said is that he wanted to maintain the capability
of the program, that, as Chairman Rogers said, it has not been abused or misused and it is
carried out by very strictly vetted and professional people.
FEINSTEIN: Based on what Director Brennan has informed us, I have grave concerns that
the CIA's search may well have violated the separation of powers principles embodied in
the United States Constitution.
ROWLEY: I actually--when I watched Dianne Feinstein, I watched her whole speech. And
my memo about 9/11 in 2002, May 2002, I delivered it to Dianne Fienstein. I had it--two envelopes,
and they went to the Intelligence Committee. She wasn't even the chairperson yet. Well,
I was a little disappointed over the years that she didn't become a voice for good government.
She actually, with this intelligence committee, became complicit with the NSA and the CIA
and the black sites and the torture. And so this moment, where she gave the speech in
saying our balance of powers between the executive and the legislative is imperiled now, we have
a constitutional crisis, I took heart from that. I said, that's exactly what we've been
trying to warn you about.
BAKER: However, Some Americans still believe Edward Snowden betrayed the trust of the United
States and endangered the welfare of servicemen and women at home and abroad. But Norman Solomon
argued that those who criticize Snowden have not been able to show how he has jeopardized
the well-being of American citizens.
SOLOMON: With all the bluster and the rhetoric coming from Capitol Hill and the executive
branch, those folks have not been able to point to a single injury to the public interest,
to the security of the United States.
What Edward Snowden has done is injure the tissue of lies, the fortification of deceit
that have been routine, coming from the Obama administration. The only way we know about
the metadata collection program, the mass surveillance, all these hundreds, literally,
of revelations we've gotten in the last nine months about what's being done in our names,
with our tax dollars, as American citizens, we know about all of it only because of Edward
Snowden. And it really takes a lot of gall and Orwellian arrogance for the Obama administration,
even after it now is saying it will cut back on the metadata bulk surveillance program,
to still pursue Edward Snowden, to still refuse to give him his passport back, to still refuse
to promise not to abduct him or grab him and drag him back to the United States. And we
know if that would happen that his fate would be similar to Chelsea Manning being thrown
in solitary confinement, cut off from the public. That is exactly what the Obama administration
wants is to silence the voice of Edward Snowden.
BAKER: This is Ray Baker reporting from Washington for The Real News.