³ÉÈËXÕ¾

SEATTLE NEWS ARCHIVES & FEATURES

Rooting for Snowden, against my better judgement

Jun 25, 2013, 8:35 AM | Updated: 10:37 am

I find myself hoping Edward Snowden has a clean getaway – maybe because I’ve seen too m...

I find myself hoping Edward Snowden has a clean getaway - maybe because I've seen too many classic 1970's paranoia thrillers like Robert Redford's "Three Days of the Condor."

Does there seem to be a consensus building that Edward Snowden is more traitor than patriot? I think so.

So am I wrong to be rooting for Snowden to escape the clutches of the American government?

Probably.

But I find myself hoping he has a clean getaway from Russia and makes his way to Ecuador anyway.

Maybe it’s because I’ve seen too many classic 1970’s paranoia thrillers like Robert Redford’s “Three Days of the Condor” (or Warren Beatty’s “The Parallax View.”) In the Condor movie, Redford plays a bookish CIA researcher
who discovers a secret operation within the U.S. government that is wiping out certain CIA personnel and he’s next. His last act in the film is to drop off a bunch of secret files incriminating the killers.

It’s a very qualified happy ending: Redford has to stay off the grid for his own protection but at least the word is out about government misdeeds.

The parallel with Edward Snowden is admittedly wobbly and using Hollywood to explain the world is never a good idea. Nonetheless, there is something dramatic and admirable about a lone individual who’s willing to take on his own government for what he thinks is right.

Snowden has risked it all in order to expose the massive surveillance of its own citizens that our government, whether inadvertently or not, is involved in. And he has been pilloried and praised for what he’s done – being called everything from traitor to hero, from grandiose narcissist and arrogant punk to a man of honor and noble motives.

You’d think that anyone who could earn the condemnation of both President Obama and Dick Cheney must be a pretty bad dude. But – on the left – Daniel Ellsberg of Pentagon Papers fame (the Edward Snowden of the 1970’s perhaps?) sings Snowden’s praises for exposing an “executive coup” against the U.S. Constitution. And on the right, Kentucky Senator Rand Paul praises Snowden for being a truth-teller (as opposed to National Security adviser James Clapper, who Paul slams as a liar for his testimony denying what Snowden eventually revealed.)

The U.S. government considers him an outright spy, having charged Snowden with three counts of espionage.
His lawyer in Hong Kong considered that absurd, since he never spied for any other country but his own. But no one disputes that Snowden has broken the law with his release of classified, top secret documents. What has to be weighed in this case is whether the value of exposure trumps the need for secrecy.

This is where we, the general public, have to make hunches. We just don’t have enough information to judge this properly. The chair of the House Intelligence Committee, Republican Mike Rogers has complained that Snowden is looking at 3 or 4 pieces of a thousand piece puzzle and jumping to the wrong conclusions. That may very well be true.

But the public has even fewer pieces than that. How are we to know whom to believe? I suppose, ideally, we would all trust our government to be doing the right thing but that doesn’t come easily to most Americans. Nor should it. Skepticism is always in order to some degree and whistleblowers ground that skepticism.

When so many of the authority figures in Washington line up on one side of the ledger – condemning Snowden – I can’t tell if they are doing that to protect us or simply to save face. Clearly, Snowden has embarrassed the powers that be. But until the Obama administration can demonstrate some actual harm done to us as a result of Snowden’s revelations, I’ll remain skeptical. We seem to have survived the Pentagon Papers just fine.

I guess I want a few MORE pieces of the puzzle before I consign Snowden to a life behind American bars.

Related:

Dave Ross: America, the punching bag

Seattle News Archives & Features

A wildfire burning near Lake Cushman has grown by about 200 acres over five days. (Map: Courtesy U....

Tom Brock

Bear Gulch Wildfire near Lake Cushman growing in size

A wildfire burning near Lake Cushman continues to grow in the Olympic National Forest.

17 hours ago

Associated Press

Seattle man charged with string of burglaries at the homes of NFL and MLB stars

SEATTLE (AP) — A Seattle man was charged Friday with a string of burglaries at the homes of prominent current and former football and baseball players, marking the latest example of well-known athletes being targeted in home thefts. Earl Henderson Riley IV, 21, was charged with several counts of residential burglary in both occupied and […]

1 month ago

Associated Press

Campgrounds closed along Pacific Crest Trail in search for man wanted in daughters’ deaths

SEATTLE (AP) — Authorities have closed a wide swath of popular campgrounds and backpacking areas along the Pacific Crest Trail in Washington as they search for a former Army soldier wanted in the deaths of his three young daughters. Dozens of additional law enforcement officers from an array of agencies joined the investigation and search […]

1 month ago

In this undated photo released by the Thurston County Sheriff's Office, a cache of military weaponr...

Associated Press

2 arrested with arsenal and Nazi paraphernalia after base robbery were ex-military, prosecutors say

SEATTLE (AP) — Two men arrested in Washington state with an arsenal that included grenade launchers and body armor, along with Nazi paraphernalia, were former military members who attacked a soldier with a hammer while stealing gear from Joint Base Lewis-McChord last weekend, investigators say. Levi Austin Frakes and Charles Ethan Fields were arrested Monday […]

2 months ago

Associated Press

Authorities are searching for a Washington state father of 3 dead girls

WENATCHEE, Wash. (AP) — A Washington state father is wanted for murder after his three young daughters were reported missing and then found dead. Police on Tuesday asked the public for help in finding the father of the girls, Travis Decker, 32. He is wanted for three counts of murder and kidnapping, the Wenatchee Police […]

2 months ago

Expand Autoplay Image3 of 5 Burien car crashes through home Burien car crashes through home (photo:...

³ÉÈËXÕ¾ 7 News Staff

Driver sails through Burien homes after launching off curb, officials say

A driver crashed into two Burien homes Monday afternoon causing significant damage.

2 months ago

Rooting for Snowden, against my better judgement