Las Vegas Review-Journal

Edward Snowden is a heronot a traitor

- RESIDENT JOHN STOSSEL John Stossel is author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”

PDonald Trump should pardon Edward Snowden. I got a chance to interview Snowden, the CIA/NSA employee who told the world that our government spied on us but lied to Congress about it.

Now Snowden hides from American authoritie­s. We talked via Zoom.

Fourteen years ago, when Snowden worked for the CIA and then the NSA, he signed agreements saying he would not talk about what he did. I confronted him about breaking his promise. “What changed me,” he answered, “was the realizatio­n that what our government actually does was very different than the public representa­tion of it.”

The NSA’S mass surveillan­ce program was meant to find foreign terrorists. When congressme­n asked NSA officials if, without warrants, they collected data on Americans, they lied and said, “No.”

“There was a breathtaki­ng sweep of intentiona­l knowing public deception,”

Snowden said. “We’re capturing everything that your family is doing online.”

I asked Snowden if his co-workers had qualms: “In private, some said, ‘This is crazy. I’m not sure this is legal, but you know what happens to people who talk about this.’ ”

What does happen? Nothing terrible, said President Barack Obama, who claimed Snowden could have revealed the government’s lawbreakin­g legally. “There were other avenues available,” he told reporters.

“What he said was incorrect,” Snowden told me.

Government officials protect themselves by discrediti­ng those who reveal inconvenie­nt truths. Previous whistleblo­wers lost their jobs. Some were shocked to be subjects of dawn raids by federal police with guns drawn. I understand why Snowden feared “proper” channels. Instead, he took documents to journalist­s. The world learned the truth.

American officials said Snowden’s leaks put lives at risk. But in the eight years since then, they’ve never given any clear examples. At the time, the NSA did claim that mass surveillan­ce stopped terrorism. Richard Ledgett, former deputy director of the NSA, said NSA programs contribute­d to stopping 54 terrorist attacks.

“We want to believe it’s true,” Snowden responded, “but it’s not. The government itself no longer makes these claims that it stopped 54 plots.”

In fact, the government no longer claims it stopped any attacks. All of this made me realize: Snowden got screwed.

Snowden went to Hong Kong to give reporters the data that showed the NSA had lied. He asked 27 countries to grant him asylum, without success. He tried to fly to Ecuador. When his plane stopped for a layover in Moscow, U.S. officials revoked his passport. He’s been stuck in Moscow for seven years now.

If he returns to America, then Snowden will almost certainly be jailed.

“I can be very much at peace with the choices that I’ve made,” he said. “It was the right thing to do, and it has made things better. Some of these programs have been halted.”

In 2013, Donald Trump was asked about Snowden. He said, “This guy is a bad guy and there is still a thing called execution!” But this year, President Trump said he’d “look at” giving Snowden a pardon.

“I think it’s clearer and clearer that what I did was the right thing to do,” Snowden tells me. “History has a way of exoneratin­g the truth.”

Sometimes, anyway. Snowden did a good thing. He deserves a pardon.

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