Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Snowden Says He Was Spy Specializing In Electronic Surveillance

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Snowden Says He Was Spy Specializing In Electronic Surveillance

    SNOWDEN SAYS HE WAS SPY SPECIALIZING IN ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE

    May 28, 2014 - 13:40 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - Fugitive U.S. intelligence leaker Edward Snowden
    has described himself as a trained spy specializing in electronic
    surveillance, dismissing claims he was a mere low-level analyst,
    BBC News reported.

    In an interview with NBC, he reiterated that he had worked undercover
    overseas for the CIA and NSA. He said the U.S. got better intelligence
    from computers than human agents.

    Snowden, 30, fled the U.S. in May 2013 and has been living under
    temporary asylum in Russia.

    Last year, he fed a trove of secret NSA documents to news outlets
    including the Washington Post and the Guardian.

    Among other things, the leaks detailed the NSA's practice of harvesting
    data on millions of telephone calls made in the U.S. and around the
    world, and revealed the agency had snooped on foreign leaders.

    The revelations have sparked a debate in the U.S. over the appropriate
    role of the NSA and the extent to which it should be authorized to
    conduct such broad surveillance.

    President Barack Obama has asked Congress to rein in the program by
    barring the NSA from storing phone call data on its own and to require
    it to seek a court order to access telecom companies' records. Last
    week, the U.S. House passed such legislation, sending it to the U.S.

    Senate.

    In excerpts of an interview with NBC, Snowden said he had trained as
    a spy "in sort of the traditional sense of the word in that I lived
    and worked undercover overseas - pretending to work in a job that
    I'm not - and even being assigned a name that was not mine".

    But he described himself as a technical expert who did not recruit
    agents.

    "What I do is I put systems to work for the U.S.," he said. "And
    I've done that at all levels from the bottom on the ground all the
    way to the top. Now, the government might deny these things, they
    might frame it in certain ways and say, 'Oh well, you know, he's -
    he's a low-level analyst.'"

    But he said he had worked for the CIA and NSA undercover, overseas,
    and lectured at the Defense Intelligence Agency.

    When Snowden fled the U.S., he had been working as a technician for
    Booz Allen, a giant government contractor for the National Security
    Agency.

Working...
X