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Gurnow Michael - The Edward Snowden affair: exposing the politics and media behind the NSA scandal

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Gurnow Michael The Edward Snowden affair: exposing the politics and media behind the NSA scandal

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While penning a series of articles on Internet security, author Michael Gurnow noticed there was something odd in the worlds response to NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. The public was evenly divided while diametrically opposed politicians were in strange agreement. Regardless of opinion, the Left, Right, anti-establishment, conspiracy theorist, techno-greek or Washington insider people want to know more about Edward Snowden and the events that led to his disclosures.

The narrative begins with Snowden literally growing up in the shadow of the National Security Agency. At a pace that reads like a taut political thriller Gurnow reveals for the first time the dramatic details of how select members of the media broke the story, and the cat and mouse game that followed between the media and the administration. Gurnow goes on to explain in plain language the political, legal and technological implications of the whistleblowers classified data...

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The Edward
Snowden Affair

EXPOSING THE POLITICS AND
MEDIA BEHIND THE NSA SCANDAL

Michael Gurnow

Blue River Press
Indianapolis

www.brpressbooks.com

The Edward Snowden Affair 2014 Michael Gurnow

ISBN: 9781935628361

eISBN: 9781935628736

Library of Congress Control Number: 2014930448

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions

Cover designed by Phil Velikan
Editorial assistance provided by Dorothy Chambers
Packaged by Wish Publishing

Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a database or other retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, by any means, including mechanical, photocopy, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Distributed in the United States by
Cardinal Publishers Group
www.cardinalpub.com

For my wife, may your watchful eye remain ever-present

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Though there were many hands that crafted my ability and willingness to undertake this endeavor, I am obligated to pay my respects to a handful in particular.

Before I met Tom Doherty, I didnt believe laughter within the publication industry could be bilateral. This project might have stagnated if it wasnt for his humorous reprieves, pragmatic sensibility and level-headed judgment.

To my editors, Dorothy Chambers and Holly Kondras, who are living proof literary alchemists walk among us.

Kelly McDaniel not only taught me how government functioned in theory and actuality, he continues to do so with equal amounts of patience and courage.

My IT knowledge and understanding of technopolitics would be nonexistent if it werent for Floyd Lockhart. Our understated, muffled conversations prove endlessly rewarding.

Without the devoted efforts of my IT teamDaniel Ellinghouse, Latham Hunter and the Bushido Chemistthis project would have come to a premature end.

I owe a debt to Timothy Chism for being a very timely second set of eyes.

I would also like to tip my hat to Philip Dorling, author of one of the Snowden disclosure reports, whose willingness to provide a vital puzzle piece helped maintain the consistency of the narrative.

And my wife, who manipulated me into believing I could do this.

Table of Contents

Prologue:
A Busy Day for Washington

WASHINGTON HAD ITS HANDS FULL. The day before, June 5, a British daily newspaper The Guardian revealed that the FBI, with the power of the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court behind it, was actively utilizing a provision within the PATRIOT Act. A highly secretive order had been issued requiring one of the worlds largest telecommunication providers, Verizon, to hand over all domestic call records between the dates of April 25 to July 19, 2013. The government was quick to respond as it reassured everyone the content of Verizon users calls were not included, merely when and where a call was made, to what number, and on what phones. What the White House conveniently failed to include in its briefing was that the three-month window was not an exception but an ongoing rule: Consecutive extensions had been occurring for the past seven years and, though only hinted at in The Guardians report, included culled customer information of Verizons competitors, AT&T and Sprint. The government was also in the process of accommodating the massive amount of incoming data. It was putting the finishing touches on a $1.5 billion top secret building located in the middle of the Utah desert.

A day later as the American capital attempted to quell the flames which were being fanned by the ACLU, Fourth Amendment advocates and enraged Verizon users, not one but two bombs were dropped. Pulitzer-winning journalist Barton Gellman and Oscar-nominated filmmaker Laura Poitras presented another, albeit much grander, revelation about the U.S. governments surveillance methods. In a Washington Post article titled, U.S. intelligence mining data from nine U.S. Internet companies in broad secret program, the duo disclosed classified information obtained from an anonymous source which had been extracted from the most enigmatic and secretive organization in America and perhaps the world: the National Security Agency. A few minutes later, an American attorney living in Brazil and the man partially responsible for the Verizon story, Glenn Greenwald, seconded the claim in The Guardians NSA Prism program taps in to user data of Apple, Google and others. As the same groups who were up in arms about the previous days shocking headlines lunged forward in protest while gaining international support and sympathy from countries around the world, many anticipated this was the tip of the proverbial iceberg and much, much more was taking place behind the security curtain in Fort Meade, Maryland. Yet, as the White House steadfastly backpedaled amid the incessant barrage of questions, one remained unanswered: Where had Greenwald, Gellman and Poitras gotten their information? If history was any guide, the public might never know unless the person responsible was caught, killed or opted to make a deathbed confession.

Three days later, the world would meet Edward Snowden, a former CIA and NSA contractor who had orchestrated the information dump not months but years prior, who had already fled the country and was now holed up in a hotel room in Hong Kong. This was the person responsible for, in The New York Times approximation, The most significant security breach in American history.

In the months ahead, a worldwide manhunt would ensue as the press continued to dispense piecemeal information about other covert surveillance programs. Democrats and Republicans would find themselves in uneasy agreement. Global demonstrations would take place. World leaders would learn America had been spying on them. A foreign presidents plane would be forbidden safe passage for fear it contained the fugitive. Congress would consider demolishing the foundation upon which democracy was built. In less than two months, after three nations had offered Snowden asylum before the whistleblower accepted temporary sanctuary in Russia, President Barack Obama would appear on national television and unrepentantly announce the former Soviet Union had slip[ped] back into Cold War thinking and a Cold War mentality. Amid public discussion on whether Snowdens actions might become analogous to Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austrias assassination leading to the First World War, desperate to dilute the positive public opinion of the American exile and with the aid of the worlds leading news source, the Capitol would stage a faux global terror threat. It would order bombings half a world away in hopes of wagging the dog.

Washington had its hands very, very full.

Introduction

IT IS NO SIMPLE MATTER to write a book about a trained spy. It is more difficult when that spy goes to great lengths to cover his tracks. It is a whole different monster to attempt to pin down a spy that was so good at keeping in the shadows, he collectively duped the greatest intelligence agencies the world has ever known. To make matters worse, a lot of what could be known about Edward Snowden will remain locked in olive drab filing cabinets. The U.S. government will make sure of that. It will use the excuse his information must remain classified because he worked for the CIA and NSA. However true, his records will also stay tightly sealed because Washington wants the public to know as little as possible about the embarrassing particulars. Needless to say, when I first approached the project, there were a lot of holes and a monumental amount of questions that needed to be answered. Hopefully I have filled some of those gaps, but many remain.

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