Laura Poitras, an American documentary film maker, has been instrumental in exposing NSA surveillance programs. (photo: Olaf Blecker)
By Laura Poitras, Spiegel Online
27 August 13
The detention of David Miranda - partner of the
Guardian journalist involved in the NSA revelations - and the destruction of
hard drives in the British newspaper's basement reveal one thing: Governments
do not want their citizens to be informed when it comes to the topic of
surveillance.
I woke up last Sunday in Berlin to an email from Glenn Greenwald with only
one sentence: "I need to talk to you ASAP."
For the past three months, Glenn and I have been
reporting on the NSA disclosures revealed to us by Edward Snowden.
I went online to the encrypted channel that Glenn and
I use to communicate. He told me that he had just received a call telling him
that his partner David Miranda was being detained at London's Heathrow airport
under the Terrorism Act. David was traveling from Berlin where he had come to
work with me. For the next six hours I was online with Glenn as he tried to
find out what was happening to the person he loves most in the world.
Glenn's reporting on the NSA story is made possible by
the love and courage of David. When Glenn and I traveled to Hong Kong to meet
Edward Snowden, Glenn and David spoke daily. Reporting on the most secret
abuses of governments does not come without moments of fear. There was a
turning point in Hong Kong before Glenn published the first story about the
Verizon court order that exposed the NSA's spying on Americans. It was David
who told Glenn: "You need to do this. If you don't do this, you will never
be able to live with yourself."
As Glenn and I exchanged messages between Rio and
Berlin, David was being interrogated in London about our NSA reporting. Glenn
said several times: "I actually cannot believe they are doing this."
I kept thinking I wish it were me. Having documented and reported on abuses of
government power post 9/11, we both thought we'd reached a point where nothing
would shock us. We were wrong - using pernicious terrorism laws to target the
people we love and work with, this shocked us.
Attack on Press Freedom
Reporting on this story means some things can only be
said in person, and still it is hard to know you can escape surveillance. David
was traveling to meet me on behalf of the Guardian newspaper, which has taken
the lead on publishing the NSA stories. We now know that David's detention was
ordered at the highest levels of the British government, including the Prime
Minister. We also know the US government was given advance warning that David
would be detained and interrogated.
The NSA has special relationships with the spy
agencies from the so-called "Five-Eyes" nations, which include Britain's GCHQ. Weeks before David was detained, agents from GCHQ
entered the offices of the Guardian newspaper and oversaw the
destruction of several hard drives which contained disclosures
made by Snowden.
This action was also authorized at the highest levels of the UK government. Included
on those drives were documents detailing GCHQ's massive domestic spying program
called "Tempora."
This program deploys NSA's XKeyscore
"DeepDive" internet buffer technology which slows down the internet
to allow GCHQ to spy on global communications, including those of UK citizens.
Tempora relies on the "corporate partnership" of UK telecoms,
including British Telecommunications and Vodafone. Revealing the secret
partnerships between spy agencies and telecoms entrusted with the private communications
of citizens is journalism, not terrorism.
The UK government's destruction of material provided
by a source to a news organization will surely be remembered as of the most
blatant government attacks on press freedom.
Border Interrogations
As the hours went by on Sunday, Guardian lawyers
searched to find where David was being held; the Brazilian ambassador in London
could get no information; and Glenn struggled with whether he should go public
or work behind the scenes to make sure David would be released and not
arrested. I have never been through a hostage negotiation, but this certainly
felt like one. David was finally released after nine hours. He was forced to
hand over all electronics.
Using border crossings to target journalism is not new
to me. I experienced it for the first time in 2006 in Vienna, when I was
traveling from the Sarajevo Film Festival back to New York. I was put in a van
and driven to a security room, searched, and interrogated. The Austrian
security agents told me I was stopped at the request of the US government. When
I landed in New York I was again searched and interrogated.
Since then I have lost count of how many times I have
been interrogated at the US border all because of my reporting on post 9/11
issues. I've had electronics seized, notebooks photocopied, and have been
threatened with handcuffs for taking notes. I moved to Berlin to edit my next
film because I do not feel I can keep source material safe in my own country.
At the moment I live in what used to be East Berlin.
It feels strange to come to the former home of the Stasi to expose the dangers
of government surveillance, but being here gives me hope. There is a deep
historical memory among Germans of what happens to societies when its
government targets and spies on its own citizens. The public outcry in Germany
to the NSA disclosures has been enormous.
Threat To Democracy
Because of the disclosures made by Edward Snowden, we
have for the first time an international debate on the scope of government
surveillance. Almost daily for the past three months citizens learn of new
unlawful surveillance programs being secretly run by their governments. All of
our reporting has been in the public interest, and none has caused harm.
David's detention and the destruction of the hard
drives in the Guardian's basement reveal one thing: Our governments do not want
citizens to be informed when it comes to the topic of surveillance. The
governments of the United States, Britain, Germany, and others would like this
debate to go away. It won't.
Glenn and I, with the full support of David and
others, will continue to work on the disclosures made by Snowden, as will the
Guardian, SPIEGEL, the Washington Post, their reporters and their loved ones,
and many other news organizations who believe vast unchecked secret government
surveillance powers are a threat to democracy.
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