My
creeping concern that the NSA leaker is not who he purports to be ...
Naomi
Wolf
via
Facbook, 15 June, 2013
I
hate to do this but I feel obligated to share, as the story unfolds,
my creeping concern that the NSA leaker is not who he purports to be,
and that the motivations involved in the story may be more complex
than they appear to be. This is in no way to detract from the great
courage of Glenn Greenwald in reporting the story, and the gutsiness
of the Guardian in showcasing this kind of reporting, which is a
service to America that US media is not performing at all. It is just
to raise some cautions as the story unfolds, and to raise some
questions about how it is unfolding, based on my experience with
high-level political messaging.
Some
of Snowden’s emphases seem to serve an intelligence/police state
objective, rather than to challenge them.
a)
He is super-organized, for a whistleblower, in terms of what
candidates, the White House, the State Dept. et al call ‘message
discipline.’ He insisted on publishing a power point in the
newspapers that ran his initial revelations. I gather that he
arranged for a talented filmmaker to shoot the Greenwald interview.
These two steps — which are evidence of great media training,
really ‘PR 101″ — are virtually never done (to my great
distress) by other whistleblowers, or by progressive activists
involved in breaking news, or by real courageous people who are under
stress and getting the word out. They are always done, though, by
high-level political surrogates.
b)
In the Greenwald video interview, I was concerned about the way
Snowden conveys his message. He is not struggling for words, or
thinking hard, as even bright, articulate whistleblowers under stress
will do. Rather he appears to be transmitting whole paragraphs
smoothly, without stumbling. To me this reads as someone who has
learned his talking points — again the way that political campaigns
train surrogates to transmit talking points.
c)
He keeps saying things like, “If you are a journalist and they
think you are the transmission point of this info, they will
certainly kill you.” Or: “I fully expect to be prosecuted under
the Espionage Act.” He also keeps stressing what he will lose: his
$200,000 salary, his girlfriend, his house in Hawaii. These are the
kinds of messages that the police state would LIKE journalists to
take away; a real whistleblower also does not put out potential legal
penalties as options, and almost always by this point has a lawyer by
his/her side who would PROHIBIT him/her from saying, ‘come get me
under the Espionage Act.” Finally in my experience, real
whistleblowers are completely focused on their act of public service
and trying to manage the jeopardy to themselves and their loved ones;
they don’t tend ever to call attention to their own self-sacrifice.
That is why they are heroes, among other reasons. But a police state
would like us all to think about everything we would lose by standing
up against it.
d)
It is actually in the Police State’s interest to let everyone know
that everything you write or say everywhere is being surveilled, and
that awful things happen to people who challenge this. Which is why I
am not surprised that now he is on UK no-fly lists – I assume the
end of this story is that we will all have a lesson in terrible
things that happen to whistleblowers. That could be because he is a
real guy who gets in trouble; but it would be as useful to the police
state if he is a fake guy who gets in ‘trouble.’
e)
In stories that intelligence services are advancing (I would call the
prostitutes-with-the-secret-service such a story), there are great
sexy or sex-related mediagenic visuals that keep being dropped in, to
keep media focus on the issue. That very pretty pole-dancing
Facebooking girlfriend who appeared for, well, no reason in the media
coverage…and who keeps leaking commentary, so her picture can be
recycled in the press…really, she happens to pole-dance? Dan
Ellsberg’s wife was and is very beautiful and doubtless a good
dancer but somehow she took a statelier role as his news story
unfolded…
f)
Snowden is in Hong Kong, which has close ties to the UK, which has
done the US’s bidding with other famous leakers such as Assange. So
really there are MANY other countries that he would be less likely to
be handed over from…
g)
Media reports said he had vanished at one point to ‘an undisclosed
location’ or ‘a safe house.’ Come on. There is no such thing.
Unless you are with the one organization that can still get off the
surveillance grid, because that org created it.
h)
I was at dinner last night to celebrate the brave and heroic Michael
Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights. Several of Assange’s
also brave and talented legal team were there, and I remembered them
from when I had met with Assange. These attorneys are present at
every moment when Assange meets the press — when I met with him off
the record last Fall in the Ecuadoran embassy, his counsel was
present the whole time, listening and stepping in when necessary.
Seeing
these diligent attentive free-speech attorneys for another
whisleblower reinforced my growing anxiety: WHERE IS SNOWDEN’S
LAWYER as the world’s media meet with him? A whistleblower talking
to media has his/her counsel advising him/her at all times, if not
actually being present at the interview, because anything he/she says
can affect the legal danger the whistleblower may be in . It is very,
very odd to me that a lawyer has not appeared, to my knowledge, to
stand at Snowden’s side and keep him from further jeopardy in
interviews.
Again
I hate to cast any skepticism on what seems to be a great story of a
brave spy coming in from the cold in the service of American freedom.
And I would never raise such questions in public if I had not been
told by a very senior official in the intelligence world that indeed,
there are some news stories that they create and drive — even in
America (where propagandizing Americans is now legal). But do
consider that in Eastern Germany, for instance, it was the fear of a
machine of surveillance that people believed watched them at all
times — rather than the machine itself — that drove compliance
and passivity. From the standpoint of the police state and its
interests — why have a giant Big Brother apparatus spying on us at
all times — unless we know about it?
Naomi
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