"Where oversight and accountability have failed, Snowden's leaks have opened up a vital public debate on our rights and privacy." (photo: Democracy In Action)
24 June 13
Where oversight and accountability have failed, Snowden's leaks have opened up a vital public debate on our rights and privacy.et's be absolutely clear about the news that the NSA collects massive amounts of information on US citizens - from emails, to telephone calls, to videos, under the Prism program and other Fisa court orders: this story has nothing to do with Edward Snowden. As interesting as his flight to Hong Kong might be, the pole-dancing girlfriend, and interviews from undisclosed locations, his fate is just a sideshow to the essential issues of national security versus constitutional guarantees of privacy, which his disclosures have surfaced in sharp relief.
Snowden will be hunted relentlessly and, when finally
found, with glee, brought back to the US in handcuffs and severely
punished. (If Private Bradley Manning's obscene conditions while
incarcerated are any indication, it won't be pleasant for Snowden
either, even while awaiting trial.) Snowden has already been the object
of scorn and derision from the Washington establishment and mainstream
media, but, once again, the focus is misplaced on the transiently shiny
object. The relevant issue should be: what exactly is the US government
doing in the people's name to "keep us safe" from terrorists?
Prism and other NSA data-mining programs might indeed
be very effective in hunting and capturing actual terrorists, but we
don't have enough information as a society to make that decision.
Despite laudable efforts led by Senators Ron Wyden and Mark Udall to
bring this to the public's attention that were continually thwarted by
the administration because everything about this program was deemed "too
secret", Congress could not even exercise its oversight
responsibilities. The intelligence community and their friends on the
Hill do not have a right to interpret our rights absent such a
discussion.
The shock and surprise that Snowden exposed these
secrets is hard to understand when over 1.4 million Americans hold "top
secret" security clearances. When that many have access to sensitive
information, is it really so difficult to envision a leak?
We are now dealing with a vast intelligence-industrial
complex that is largely unaccountable to its citizens. This alarming,
unchecked growth of the intelligence sector and the increasingly heavy
reliance on subcontractors to carry out core intelligence tasks - now
estimated to account for approximately 60% of the intelligence budget -
have intensified since the 9/11 attacks and what was, arguably, our
regrettable over-reaction to them.
The roots of this trend go back at least as far as the
Reagan era, when the political right became obsessed with limiting
government and denigrating those who worked for the public sector. It
began a wave of privatization - because everything was held to be more
"cost-efficient" when done by the private sector - and that only
deepened with the political polarization following the election of 2000.
As it turns out, the promises of cheaper, more efficient services were
hollow, but inertia carried the day.
Today, the intelligence sector is so immense that no
one person can manage, or even comprehend, its reach. When an operation
in the field goes south, who would we prefer to try and correct the
damage: a government employee whose loyalty belongs to his country
(despite a modest salary), or the subcontractor who wants to ensure that
his much fatter paycheck keeps coming?
Early polls of Americans about their privacy concerns
that the government might be collecting metadata from phone calls and
emails indicates that there is little alarm; there appears to be, in
fact, an acceptance of or resignation to these practices. To date, there
is no proof that the government has used this information to pursue and
harass US citizens based on their political views. There are no J Edgar
Hoover-like "enemy lists" ... yet. But it is not so difficult to
envision a scenario where any of us has a link, via a friend of a
friend, to someone on the terrorist watchlist. What then? You may have
no idea who this person is, but a supercomputer in Fort Meade (or, soon,
at the Utah Data Center near Salt Lake City) will have made this
connection. And then you could have some explaining to do to an
over-zealous prosecutor.
On this spying business, officials from Director of
National Intelligence James Clapper to self-important senators are, in
effect, telling Americans not to worry: it's not that big a deal, and
"trust us" because they're keeping US citizens safe. This position must
be turned on its head and opened up to a genuine discussion about the
necessary, dynamic tension between security and privacy. As it now
stands, these programs are ripe for abuse unless we establish ground
rules and barriers between authentic national security interests and
potential political chicanery.
The irony of former Vice-President Dick Cheney
wringing his hands over the release of classified information is hard to
watch. Cheney calls Snowden a traitor. Snowden may not be a hero, but
the fact is that we owe him a debt of gratitude for finally bringing
this question into the public square for the robust discussion it
deserves.
2 comments:
Good stuff...he is a hero in my book
In regard to this surveillance program the public opinion is split once again between those who respect themselves and their freedom and those who instead live in fear, look for protection and welcome the leash of their master.
It is also about a certain culture that had been slave since ancient Egypt.
http://www.wavevolution.org/en/humanwaves.html
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