U.S. officials tried really, really hard to catch Edward Snowden but still couldn’t do it
The Washington Post takes a fascinating look at how the U.S. tried -- and failed -- to catch the whistleblower
KATIE MCDONOUGH Follow
Edward Snowden (Credit: AP)
The Washington Post has a pretty fascinating piece looking at how the FBI, the CIA, the State Department and other agencies spent weeks trying — and failing — to catch Edward Snowden after he fled to Hong Kong and eventually landed in Russia. As Greg Miller’s reporting makes clear, the United States kept waiting for Snowden to miscalculate and expose himself to being apprehended, but it never happened.
“The best play for us is him landing in a third country,” White House homeland security adviser Lisa Monaco said of the agencies’ strategy, according to an official who spoke with Miller. “We were hoping he was going to be stupid enough to get on some kind of airplane, and then have an ally say: ‘You’re in our airspace. Land.’”
At one point, the FBI enlisted the help of Snowden’s father, who eventually stopped cooperating after he concluded that the U.S. was trying to depict his son as a traitor:
From the outset, the pursuit of Snowden was led by the FBI. Lon Snowden, the fugitive’s father, said FBI agents descended on his house within hours after a video of his son identifying himself as the source of the NSA leaks appeared on the Web site of the British news outlet the Guardian.
“I spoke to them approximately four hours on the 10th of June,” Lon Snowden said. Later, the FBI offered to send the elder Snowden to Moscow as part of an effort to deliver a scripted pitch to his son to turn himself in and return home. A former officer in the Coast Guard, Lon Snowden was initially cooperative with the bureau but became angered as his son was depicted by U.S. officials as a traitor.
“I came to know that they were not functioning in good faith” and turned down the trip, Snowden said.
Snowden’s exact location continues to evade security officials, even as he speaks with journalists and make public media appearances:
More here....
http://www.salon.com/2014/06/15/u_s...en_but_still_couldnt_do_it/?source=newsletter
The Washington Post takes a fascinating look at how the U.S. tried -- and failed -- to catch the whistleblower
KATIE MCDONOUGH Follow
- TOPICS: EDWARD SNOWDEN, WHISTLEBLOWER, FBI, CIA, STATE DEPARTMENT, RUSSIA, MOSCOW, HONG KONG, NEWS, POLITICS NEWS
Edward Snowden (Credit: AP)
The Washington Post has a pretty fascinating piece looking at how the FBI, the CIA, the State Department and other agencies spent weeks trying — and failing — to catch Edward Snowden after he fled to Hong Kong and eventually landed in Russia. As Greg Miller’s reporting makes clear, the United States kept waiting for Snowden to miscalculate and expose himself to being apprehended, but it never happened.
“The best play for us is him landing in a third country,” White House homeland security adviser Lisa Monaco said of the agencies’ strategy, according to an official who spoke with Miller. “We were hoping he was going to be stupid enough to get on some kind of airplane, and then have an ally say: ‘You’re in our airspace. Land.’”
At one point, the FBI enlisted the help of Snowden’s father, who eventually stopped cooperating after he concluded that the U.S. was trying to depict his son as a traitor:
From the outset, the pursuit of Snowden was led by the FBI. Lon Snowden, the fugitive’s father, said FBI agents descended on his house within hours after a video of his son identifying himself as the source of the NSA leaks appeared on the Web site of the British news outlet the Guardian.
“I spoke to them approximately four hours on the 10th of June,” Lon Snowden said. Later, the FBI offered to send the elder Snowden to Moscow as part of an effort to deliver a scripted pitch to his son to turn himself in and return home. A former officer in the Coast Guard, Lon Snowden was initially cooperative with the bureau but became angered as his son was depicted by U.S. officials as a traitor.
“I came to know that they were not functioning in good faith” and turned down the trip, Snowden said.
Snowden’s exact location continues to evade security officials, even as he speaks with journalists and make public media appearances:
More here....
http://www.salon.com/2014/06/15/u_s...en_but_still_couldnt_do_it/?source=newsletter