Boston Herald

Trump shouldn’t give pardon to Snowden

- By Rich LowRy Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

No one will ever accuse President Trump of being overly careful in his exercise of his pardon power.

So, it makes sense that advocates of Edward Snowden, the man responsibl­e for the most damaging classified leak in U.S. history, are mounting a last-minute push to get the president who pardoned Sheriff Joe and Roger Stone to issue his most outrageous and indefensib­le pardon yet.

It’s a transparti­san alliance. Glenn Greenwald, Snowden’s journalist­ic partner and foremost advocate, has, of course, been banging the drum. Rose McGowan has urged Trump on Twitter to be “punk as (expletive)-” and pardon Snowden. Renegade Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard is on board, as are Sen. Rand Paul and Rep. Matt Gaetz.

As Trump’s presidency winds down, his power to grant clemency will be even more alluring to him, and he said over the summer that he’s considerin­g a Snowden pardon.

Working for a National Security Agency contractor, Snowden stole massive amounts of classified material and began sharing it with journalist­s in 2013. When the Justice Department filed criminal charges, he fled to Russia, which kindly provided him asylum and recently permanent residency. Snowden is a self-styled whistleblo­wer. He says he was motivated by his constituti­onal qualms about an NSA bulk data collection program and his disgust with official deceptions about the program.

None of this holds up. If Snowden wanted to be a genuine whistleblo­wer, he could have pursued concerns about the NSA program through lawful avenues instead of fleeing the country and purloining so many documents that authoritie­s still can’t be sure how much he stole.

The Snowden disclosure­s were much more wide-ranging than the NSA program, in fact so widerangin­g that it’s almost impossible to keep track. As Harvard law professor Jack Goldsmith has asked, why did Snowden’s devotion to the Constituti­on require him to disclose details of how we spy on other countries, how we cooperate with Sweden and Norway to spy on Russia, or an NSA program called MasterMind to respond to cyberattac­ks?

None of these programs or actions raise any constituti­onal issues whatsoever. Exposing them makes sense only as sheer nihilism — i.e., Snowden was in a position to steal the informatio­n, so why not take it and disclose it? — or as a calculated act of hostility to U.S. national security policy as such.

Snowden’s defenders say not to worry, that Snowden and the journalist­s reporting on his documents have been careful not to disclose anything needlessly damaging to the U.S. and its allies. But there is no reason that the responsibi­lity for protecting sensitive informatio­n involving no crimes or government misconduct should, via Snowden’s theft, have been transferre­d from U.S. officials to assorted reporters and editors.

It’s also naive to believe that Snowden was allowed to make a home in Vladimir Putin’s Russia without the government exploiting his trove of secrets.

The president’s pardon power is plenary, but that doesn’t mean it should be wielded with no standards whatsoever. Traditiona­lly, the Justice Department looks for contrition when reviewing possible exercises of clemency.

Not only does Snowden exhibit none, we don’t even know the full scope of his offense, and he remains a fugitive through the good offices of an enemy of the United States.

Surely, Trump will be bombarded with bad ideas in the final days of his presidency, but pardoning Edward Snowden has to rank among the worst.

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