NSA
whistleblower Snowden promises more leaks during live chat
It
has been a little over a week since the The Guardian revealed that
Edward Snowden was behind on of the most significant leaks in US
history. Snowden exposed how the NSA's surveillance program had
infiltrated American computer networks without anyone knowing, but
the agency said spying has foiled several terror plots worldwide. On
Monday, the leaker was live chatting on the Internet with people and
gave more insight on the NSA program and said there is much more info
to come. RT's Sam Sacks brings us up to speed.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=g-1cnrAsX30
Snowden's
father: Son better off now in Russia
26
July, 2013
The
father of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden said Friday
his son has been so vilified by the Obama administration and members
of Congress that he is now better off staying in Russia.
Lon
Snowden of Allentown, Pa., had been working behind the scenes with
lawyers to try to find a way his son could get a fair trial in the
U.S. Edward Snowden has been charged in federal court in Alexandria
with violating the Espionage Act by leaking details of NSA
surveillance.
But
in a telephone interview with The Associated Press, the elder Snowden
said he has lost faith in recent weeks that his son would be treated
fairly by the Justice Department. He now thinks his 30-year-old son
is better off avoiding the U.S. if possible until an administration
that respects the Constitution comes into office.
"If
it were me, knowing what I know now, and listening to advice of sage
people like (Pentagon Papers leaker) Daniel Ellsberg ... I would
attempt to find a safe haven," Snowden said.
As
a military analyst more than four decades ago, Ellsberg leaked the
Pentagon Papers, a secret study of America's involvement in Vietnam,
to major newspapers.
The
elder Snowden said he thinks Russia is probably the best place to
seek asylum because it is most likely to withstand U.S. pressure.
Edward Snowden applied for temporary asylum in Russia last week.
Lon
Snowden, a Coast Guard veteran who has worked on national security
issues in his career, said he has tremendous faith in the American
people and in the Constitution. He said that in a more subdued
environment he feels confident that his son could get a fair trial,
and the leak would be considered in context of his son's desire to
expose a surveillance program that he and others believe exceeds
constitutional bounds.
But
he said the Justice Department's efforts to pressure other countries
to turn over Snowden, coupled with silence from President Barack
Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder in the face of denunciations
leveled by members of Congress who have labeled Snowden a traitor,
have eroded his hope for a fair trial.
On
NBC's "Today" show Friday, Lon Snowden said there's been a
concerted effort by some members of Congress to "demonize"
his son.
Lon
Snowden and his lawyer, Bruce Fein, released a letter Friday asking
Obama to dismiss the criminal charges against Edward Snowden and to
support legislation "to remedy the NSA surveillance abuses he
revealed."
The
elder Snowden and Fein said they were disgusted by Holder's letter
Friday to Russian officials promising that Snowden would not face the
death penalty if he were extradited. They said it reflects a mindset
that Snowden is presumed guilty and that a sentence of 30 years or
life would be a reasonable punishment.
In
the phone interview with AP, Lon Snowden said he has had no direct
contact with his son, and knows no more about his son's day-to-day
life in Moscow, where he is reportedly staying at an airport transit
zone, than anyone else.
More
broadly, he expressed frustration that the story has become so
focused on his son and his whereabouts and U.S. efforts to get him
extradited, while the issues surrounding his son's disclosures of
extensive surveillance programs that he says disregard the
Constitution have been swept aside.
Lon
Snowden said talking about the issues his son has raised allows him
to connect to his son and keep the issues he raised in front of the
American people. He and Fein are starting a nonprofit group called
the Defense of the Constitution Foundation to promote those ideas.
"In
essence, he has passed on the torch of democracy," Lon Snowden
said of his son.
Lon
said he's also focused on the issues rather than on his son's
personal situation in part because he isn't sure there is much he can
do to help him.
"He
sacrificed everything and gained nothing," the elder Snowden
said. "He's done what he's done. The consequences are
unavoidable, and I don't know if I can mitigate those."
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