America is at war. But this is not a conventional war waged with tanks, battleships and planes in conventional battlefields –at least, not yet. It is a secret, insidious type of war whose battleground is its people, democracy and truth.
'Remember, any state, any state, has a primary enemy: its own population.' ~ Noam Chomsky
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The
federal government forced Verizon to turn over information on the phone
calls of millions of innocent Americans and forbade them from telling
anybody about it, The Guardianreports. Kudos to Glenn Greenwald, Ewen MacAskill, and Spencer Ackerman for the impressive scoop, and for posting the evidence here.
Who helped the journalists obtain that "top-secret" court order?
Hopefully, that's going to stay secret for a long time. As Charlie Savage and Edward Wyatt note in the New York Times, "The
order was marked TOP SECRET//SI//NOFORN, referring to
communications-related intelligence information that may not be released
to noncitizens. That would make it among the most closely held secrets
in the federal government, and its disclosure comes amid a furor over
the Obama administration's aggressive tactics in its investigations of
leaks." In other words, it was likely leaked by someone who took a personal risk exposing it.
Why? It
is impossible to know. But it isn't hard to identify likely motives.
Perhaps the leaker felt morally repulsed by the knowledge that the
government is spying on millions of innocent citizens in secret,
something normally associated with Communist and fascist regimes, not
democratic republics. (It's true that the order doesn't cover the
content of calls, and that a separate warrant is needed to connect the
information to actual users -- not that we'd know if they sought those,
or if officials now or in the future just ignored that legal requirement
to spy on individuals. One wonders what Richard Nixon would've done
with access to all that information.)
Perhaps the spying
offended the leaker's patriotism, since it transgresses against
traditional American values. Perhaps the questionable legality of the
warrantless spying prompted the leaker to act.
The motive
could've been the leaker's perception that secretly vesting the
government with the power to know who is calling whom, when, and perhaps
even from what location, invites abuses so severe that they obviously
outweigh whatever legitimate benefits come from this practice.
Finally,
the leaker might think that if the government is going to spy on a
massive scale, it ought to be something the polity knows about and
debates, not the secret machinations of a segregated ruling class doing
things that would shock many who they're paid to represent.
Any
of those motives would cause me to regard the leaker as a hero. If one
of them explains the leak, then thank you, unknown American. May you
inspire future leakers to follow their consciences when government is
transgressing against basic norms of justice (and to exercise good
judgment and due caution to refrain from releasing information that
really ought to stay secret.) Anyone uncomfortable with the government
secretly obtaining information about all of your phone calls,
possibly including your physical location when you make them, should
remember this case the next time Team Obama talks about the
perniciousness of national-security leaks.
Some leaks are pernicious -- but certainly not this one.
There
would be fewer leaks if the Bush and Obama administrations hadn't
improperly hid so much of consequence from the American people,
including policies that made federal employees uncomfortable or ashamed,
usually because they're illegal, immoral, or at odds with American
values.
As a first-term Illinois senator turned president-elect once put it,
"often the best source of information about waste, fraud, and abuse in
government is an existing government employee committed to public
integrity and willing to speak out. Such acts of courage and patriotism,
which can sometimes save lives and often save taxpayer dollars, should
be encouraged rather than stifled. We need to empower federal employees
as watchdogs of wrongdoing and partners in performance." Just as we
celebrate Daniel Ellsberg of Pentagon Papers fame, recognizing that his
leak made America stronger rather than weaker, I hope and trust we'll
one day celebrate the War on Terror leakers who kept reminding Americans
that their national security state is out of control.
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