Keith
Alexander Unplugged: on Bush/Obama, 1.7 million stolen documents and
other matters
The
just-retired long-time NSA chief, Gen. Keith Alexander, recently
traveled to Australia to give a remarkably long and wide-ranging
interview with an extremely sycophantic “interviewer” with The
Australian Financial Review.
8
May, 2014
The resulting
17,000-word transcript andaccompanying
article form
a model of uncritical stenography journalism, but Alexander clearly
chose to do this because he is angry, resentful, and feeling unfairly
treated, and the result is a pile of quotes that are worth examining,
only a few of which are noted below:
AFR: What were the key differences for you as director of NSA serving under presidents Bush and Obama? Did you have a preferred commander in chief?
Gen. Alexander: Obviously they come from different parties, they view things differently, but when it comes to the security of the nation and making those decisions about how to protect our nation, what we need to do to defend it, they are, ironically, very close to the same point. You would get almost the same decision from both of them on key questions about how to defend our nation from terrorists and other threats.
The
almost-complete continuity between George W. Bush and Barack Obama on
such matters has been explained by far
too many senior officials in both
parties,
and has been amply documented in far too many venues, to make it
newsworthy when it happens again. Still, the fact that one of the
nation’s most powerful generals in history, who has no incentive to
say it unless it were true, just comes right out and states that Bush
and The Candidate of Change are “very close to the same point”
and “you would get almost the same decision from both of them on
key questions” is a fine commentary on a number of things,
including how adept the 2008 Obama team was at the
art of branding.
The
fact that Obama, in 2008, specifically
vowed to
his followers
angered over his campaign-season NSA reversal that
he possessed “the firm intention — once I’m sworn in as
president — to have my Attorney General conduct a comprehensive
review of all our surveillance programs, and to make further
recommendations on any steps needed to preserve civil liberties and
to prevent executive branch abuse in the future” only makes that
point a bit more vivid.
AFR: Can you now quantify the number of documents [Snowden] stole?
Gen. Alexander: Well, I don’t think anybody really knows what he actually took with him, because the way he did it, we don’t have an accurate way of counting. What we do have an accurate way of counting is what he touched, what he may have downloaded, and that was more than a million documents.
It’s
hard to recall a better and clearer example of how mindless and
uncritical the American media is when it comes to the unproven
pronouncements of the U.S. Government. Back in December, 60
Minutes broadcast
a now-notorious
segment of
pure access journalism in which they gullibly disseminated one
false NSA claim after the next in
exchange for being given exclusive(!) access to a few Secret and
Exciting Rooms inside the agency’s headquarters. Theprogram
claimed that
Snowden “is believed to still have access to 1.5 million classified
documents he has not leaked”. On its
Twitter account, 60
Minutes made
this claim to promote its show:
How Edward Snowden managed to steal an alleged 1.7 million documents from the NSA. Sunday: http://t.co/gbrIu5yMcc
— 60 Minutes (@60Minutes) December 13, 2013
Mike
McConnell, the vice chairman of Booz Allen and former Director of
National Intelligence in the Bush administration, then claimed
that ”Snowden
absconded with 1.7 million to 1.8 million documents.”
Ever
since then, that Snowden “stole” 1.7 or 1.8 million documents
from the NSA has been repeated over and over again by US media
outlets as verified fact. The
Washington Post‘s
Walter Pincus, citing an anonymous official source, purported to
tell readers that
“among the roughly 1.7 million documents he walked away with —
the vast majority of which have not been made public — are highly
sensitive, specific intelligence reports”. Reuters frequently
includes in its reports the
unchallenged assertion that “Snowden was believed to have taken 1.7
million computerized documents.” Just this week, the global
news agency told
its readers that
“Snowden was believed to have taken 1.7 million computerized
documents.”
In
fact, that number is and always has been a pure fabrication, as even
Keith Alexander admits. The claimed number has changed more times
than one can count: always magically
morphing into randomly chosen higher and scarier numbers.
The reality, in the words of the General, is that the US
Government ”really
[doesn't] know[] what he actually took with him”
and they ”don’t
have an accurate way of counting”. All
they know is how many documents heaccessed in
his entire career at NSA, which is a radically different question
from how many documents he took. But that hasn’t stopped American
media outlets from repeatedly affirming the inflammatory
evidence-free claim that Snowden took 1.7 million documents. As
usual, even the most blatantly unreliable claims from National
Security State officials are treated as infallible papal
pronouncements by our Adversarial Watchdog Press.
There’s
an equally vital point made by Alexander’s admission. The primary
defense of the NSA and its defenders is that one need not worry about
the staggering sums of data they collect because they have
implemented very rigorous oversight mechanisms and controls that
prevent abuse. Yet Edward Snowden spent months downloading a large
amount of highly sensitive documents right under their noses. And not
only did they have no idea that he was doing it, but now – even
after spending large sums of money to find out – they are still
completely incapable of learning which documents he took or even how
many he took. Does that at all sound like a well-managed, tightly
controlled system that you can trust to safeguard your most personal
data and to detect and prevent abuse of this system by the tens of
thousands of people who have access to it?
AFR: What is your personal opinion on the decision to award a Pulitzer Prize to the Guardian and Washington Post newspapers for their “revelation of widespread secret surveillance by the National Security Agency, helping through aggressive reporting to spark a debate about the relationship between the government and the public over issues of security and privacy”?
Gen. Alexander: I’m greatly disappointed that we have rewarded those who have put so many lives at risk. I think that’s the best way to say that. . . . At the end of the day, I believe peoples’ lives will be lost because of the Snowden leaks because we will not be able to protect them with capabilities that were once effective but are now being rendered ineffective because of these revelations.
There
are few things in life more ironic than being accused by
U.S. Generals,
including those who participated in the war in Iraq, of being
responsible for the loss of lives. For that sort of irony, nothing
will beat that episode where the US Pentagon chief and Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff announced that WikiLeaks – not
themselves, but WikiLeaks – has
“blood on its hands” by
virtue of publishing documents about the U.S. war in Afghanistan. In
the world of the U.S. National Security State and its loyal media,
those who go around the world killing innocent people over and over
are noble and heroic, while those who report on what they do are the
ones with “blood on their hands”.
But
what makes this claim so remarkable is how often it is made and how
false it always turns out to be. The accusation about WikiLeaks
was ultimately
demonstrated to be
false.
The same was true of the identical
claim made about
NSA whistleblower Thomas Drake, and the leaker
who exposed the Bush-era warrantless eavesdropping program,
and Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg, and virtually every other
person who has brought unwanted transparency to what the U.S.
Government is doing in the dark. But accusing whistleblowers and
journalists of causing the deaths of innocent people is a tactic
people like Gen. Alexander continue to embrace because it’s
virtually never pointed out by our stalwart media how many times that
claim has been proven to be an utter fabrication
Former NSA Director Debates Journalist Involved in Snowden Leaks
Featuring
General Michael Hayden (former director of CIA and NSA) and Barton
Gellman (participant in the Edward Snowden surveillance leaks) debate
at American University about the balance between security and
liberty, government and free press
To release his new book, "No Place to Hide" Glenn Greenwald gave an hour-long interview to Democracy Now!
Glenn Greenwald: U.S.
Corporate Media is
"Neutered, Impotent and
Obsolete"
Democracy Now!
In the final part of our extended interview, Glenn Greenwald reflects on the Pulitzer Prize, adversarial journalism and the corporate media’s response to his reporting on Edward Snowden’s leaked National Security Agency documents. "We knew that once we started publishing not one or two stories, but dozens of stories … that not just the government, but even fellow journalists were going to start to look at what we were doing with increasing levels of hostility and to start to say, 'This doesn't actually seem like journalism anymore,’ because it’s not the kind of journalism that they do," Greenwald says. "It doesn’t abide by these unspoken rules that are designed to protect the government."
"Right Out of a Spy Movie":
Glenn Greenwald on First
Secret Meeting with NSA
Leaker Edward Snowden
In part two of our extended interview, journalist Glenn Greenwald tells the inside story of meeting National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden. Greenwald and filmmaker Laura Poitras were the journalists who first met Snowden in Hong Kong last June, going on to publish a series of disclosures that exposed massive NSA surveillance to the world. Greenwald has just come out with a new book on the Snowden leaks and their fallout, "No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the U.S. Surveillance State." Recalling his first encounter with Snowden, Greenwald says: "The big question was: How are we going to know that it’s you? We know nothing about you. We don’t know how old you are, what you look like or what your race is or even your gender. And he said, ’You’ll know me because I’ll be holding in my left hand a Rubik’s cube.’ And so, he walked in, was holding a Rubik’s cube, came over to us, introduced himself, and that was how we met him."
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