Beyond Snowden: NSA Reality Check

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Edward Snowden, a computer professional and former Central Intelligence Agency employee leaked extremely classified information from the National Security Agency in 2013 without authorization. His uncovering revealed a number of global surveillance programs, many run by the Five Eyes Intelligence Alliance and the NSA in collaboration with telecommunication companies and numerous European governments. The Article, Beyond Snowden: NSA Reality Check was written by Michael V. Hayden at the World Affairs News Journal, explains the massive amount of spying that the United States Government does, collecting information about phone calls, emails, friends and contacts, and how days and nights are spent. The NSA is the biggest culprit of this, …show more content…

I signed this paperwork when joining the United States Marine Corps. I wasn’t doing anything extremely classified but they made me sign it anyways. Edward Snowden was responsible for thousands of classified documents and the fact that he leaked them to the public because of his distaste for the United States is preposterous. The New York Times later in the article defends Mr. Snowden for whistleblowing on his own country by saying, “he deserves better than a life of permanent exile, fear, and flight.” In my opinion, he deserves this and I find it ironic that of all the countries he fled to, it was Russia. That just makes me think he was colluding with Russia the whole time and now they are protecting him. Many say he committed a horrible crime, but he did his country a great service. He DID commit a horrid crime by sharing secrets which could, in turn, compromise our national security. In regard to it being a great service to the country? I don’t think so. He could have come up with a more professional solution, such as contacting his leadership and the leadership of the NSA, who he was contracting with and let them know of his distaste for their actions and come up with a better …show more content…

Snowden leaked this information that provided whistle-blower protection to the intelligence community for the first time.” Although this executive order was signed it did not protect Snowden because he was not only an intelligence employee but a contractor for the NSA and therefore did not protect him from the repercussions of his actions. Explained later in the article were the secrets that Snowden revealed, in depth. He explains that the agency “broke into the communication links of major data centers around the world” but earlier in the article it states that the NSA and CIA had deals with these agencies. Why would you break into a data collection center that you had a deal

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