A Snowden Pardon Could Have a Snowball Effect on Protecting National Security Secrets

commentary

(The National Interest)

American whistleblower Edward Snowden is seen on a screen as he delivers a speech during the Roskilde Festival in Roskilde, Denmark, June 28 2016, photo by Scanpix Denmark/Mathias Loevgreen Bojesen/via Reuters

Edward Snowden is seen on a screen as he delivers a speech during the Roskilde Festival in Roskilde, Denmark, June 28 2016

Photo by Scanpix Denmark/Mathias Loevgreen Bojesen/via Reuters

by Sina Beaghley and Marek N. Posard

September 4, 2020

Seven years ago, a government contractor named Edward Snowden first came on the international stage when he provided classified court records to the media about the National Security Agency's collection of phone records from U.S. companies for intelligence purposes. That was followed by more than a year of even more disclosures to the media of highly classified documents containing highly sensitive and detailed secrets about how and where the U.S. collects intelligence on its allies and adversaries. In total, an estimated 1.7 million classified documents were allegedly stolen by Edward Snowden, and he was criminally charged for their theft and unauthorized disclosure. Now, President Donald Trump is considering a pardon for Edward Snowden even though his own attorney general is vehemently opposed to the idea.

Snowden claimed his “sole motive [was] to inform the public as to that which is done in their name, and that which is done against them.” However, a 2016 House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence report (PDF) judged that Snowden caused “tremendous damage to national security,” and asserted the vast majority of the documents he stole had nothing to do with individual privacy interests but pertained to military, defense, and intelligence programs. The committee said Snowden's disclosures provided invaluable classified information to America's adversaries.

Some call him a traitor. Some call him a patriot. Some even call him a whistleblower.

On the whistleblower assertion, there are formal mechanisms for reporting wrongdoing. These are designed to hold the intelligence community accountable to the public it serves. The intelligence community's whistleblowing system is relatively young. The first whistleblower legislation was enacted in 1998 (PDF). It was designed to allow for reporting on potential wrongdoing and matters of “urgent concern,” and was later supplemented in 2012 with an Obama administration Presidential Policy Directive, which prohibited retaliation against intelligence community staff for reporting waste, fraud, and abuse to Congress. By no means is the current system perfect—and there have been questions raised in congressional hearings as recently as last year about how the intelligence community handles whistleblower complaints. But the fact remains that there is a whistleblowing system, and one Edward Snowden could have availed himself of before taking the actions he did. He did not do so.

Snowden has never denied that he has done exactly what he is accused of; in fact, he has since written a book about his actions…

The remainder of this commentary is available at nationalinterest.org.


Sina M. Beaghley is the associate director for the Cyber and Intelligence Policy Center at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation. Previously, she was the director for intelligence and information security issues on the National Security Council staff and a member of the White House Disclosures Task Force.

Marek N. Posard is a military sociologist at RAND Corporation and an affiliate faculty member at the Pardee RAND Graduate School.

This commentary originally appeared on The National Interest on September 4, 2020. Commentary gives RAND researchers a platform to convey insights based on their professional expertise and often on their peer-reviewed research and analysis.