Roger Cohen with an
important column at NYT, including a handy list of all that Edward Snowden has done (after the usual love him or hate him intro). Cohen concludes that history will judge him kindly. Here's why. Without him:
We would not know how the N.S.A., through its Prism and other programs,
has become, in the words of my colleagues James Risen and Eric
Lichtblau, “the virtual landlord of the digital assets of Americans and foreigners alike.”
We would not know how it has been able to access the e-mails or
Facebook accounts or videos of citizens across the world; nor how it has
secretly acquired the phone records of millions of Americans; nor how
through requests to the compliant and secret Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court (F.I.S.A.) it has been able to bend nine U.S.
Internet companies to its demands for access to clients’ digital
information.
We would not be debating whether the United States really should have
turned surveillance into big business, offering data-mining contracts to
the likes of Booz Allen and, in the process, high-level security
clearance to myriad folk who probably should not have it. We would not
have a serious debate at last between Europeans, with their more
stringent views on privacy, and Americans about where the proper balance
between freedom and security lies.
We would not have
legislation to bolster privacy safeguards
and require more oversight introduced by Senator Patrick Leahy,
Democrat of Vermont and the chairman of the Judiciary Committee. Nor
would we have
a letter from two Democrats to the N.S.A. director,
Gen. Keith B. Alexander, saying that a government fact sheet about
surveillance abroad “contains an inaccurate statement” (and where does
that assertion leave Alexander’s claims of the effectiveness and
necessity of Prism?).
In short, a long-overdue debate about what the U.S. government does and
does not do in the name of post-9/11 security — the standards applied in
the F.I.S.A. court, the safeguards and oversight surrounding it and the
Prism program, the protection of civil liberties against the devouring
appetites of intelligence agencies armed with new data-crunching
technology — would not have occurred, at least not now.
All this was needed because, since it was attacked in an unimaginable
way, the United States has gone through a Great Disorientation.
Institutions at the core of the checks and balances that frame American
democracy and civil liberties failed. Congress gave a blank check to the
president to wage war wherever and whenever he pleased. The press
scarcely questioned the march to a war in Iraq begun under false
pretenses. Guantánamo made a mockery of due process. The United States,
in Obama’s own words, compromised its “basic values” as the president
gained “unbound powers.” Snowden’s phrase, “turnkey tyranny,” was over
the top but still troubling.
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