Instead
of mobilizing an all-out effort to investigate and correct massive
criminal, unconstitutional acts committed by the Executive Branch and
the courts, this is the response of the US.
U.S.
overhauling intelligence access in bid to prevent another Snowden
The
United States is overhauling procedures to tighten access to top
secret intelligence in a bid to prevent another mega-leak like the
one carried out by former spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, a top
Pentagon official said on Thursday.
18
July, 2013
Deputy
Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told a security forum that the
government was already moving to better isolate intelligence so that
all of it isn't accessible in one place, and to implement a "two-man
rule" - similar to procedures used to safeguard nuclear weapons.
"When
are we taking countermeasures? ... The answer is now," Carter
told the Aspen Security Forum in Colorado. "This failure
originated from two practices that we need to reverse."
U.S.
intelligence agencies conducting a forensic review of the activities
of Snowden, a former National Security Agency contractor, are close
to pinning down the extent of the classified documents he accessed
and the means by which he removed materials from a secure
environment, according to intelligence and security officials close
to the investigation.
Carter
declined to delve into details, saying the assessment was still
ongoing. But he added: "I can just tell you right now the damage
was very substantial."
Snowden
has provided documents about secret U.S. and British eavesdropping
programs to Britain's Guardian newspaper, the German magazine Der
Spiegel and the Washington Post. He also made allegations about U.S.
eavesdropping on Chinese targets to the Hong Kong-based South China
Morning Post.
The
30-year-old American who has had his U.S. passport revoked, is stuck
in the transit area of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport and has applied
for temporary asylum in Russia.
Senator
Dianne Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, said
last month that U.S. officials advised her that Snowden had roughly
200 classified documents.
However,
American officials and others familiar with Snowden's activities say
they believe that at a minimum, he acquired tens of thousands of
documents.
Current
and former U.S. officials say that while authorities now think they
know which documents Snowden accessed, they are not yet sure of all
that he downloaded. Snowden was adept at going into areas and then
covering his tracks, which posed a challenge in trying to determine
exactly what materials he had accessed, officials said.
Carter
partly blamed the emphasis placed on intelligence sharing in the wake
of the September 11, 2001 attacks, which allowed someone like Snowden
to access so many documents at once.
"We
normally compartmentalize information for a very good reason, so one
person can't compromise a lot," Carter said. "Loading
everything onto one server ... It's something we can't do. Because it
creates too much information in one place."
He
told reporters that the efforts to create more barriers to accessing
information were under way, as were efforts to create a two-man rule
for some operations.
Asked
where the two-man rule was being put into effect, Carter said:
"Everywhere where there are system administrators who had
elevated type access, those procedures are (being adopted)."
Former
and current U.S. officials told Reuters that a massive overhaul of
the security measures governing such intelligence would be extremely
expensive.
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