Published
time: January 09, 2014 22:00
Edited time: January 11, 2014 09:17
Edward
Snowden.(AFP Photo / Wikileaks)
Edward Snowden
downloaded 1.7 million intelligence files from US agencies, the most secrets
ever to be stolen from the US government in a single instance in the nation’s
history, according to lawmakers who have viewed a classified Pentagon report.
Legislators
who saw the secret report claimed that many of the documents taken by Snowden
regarding military options could put personnel at risk, although they did not
delve into specifics.
“This
report confirms my greatest fears – Snowden’s real acts of betrayal place
America’s military men and women at greater risk. Snowden’s actions are likely
to have lethal consequences for our troops in the field,” Rep. Mike Rogers
(R-Mich.), chairman of the House Intelligence Committee said in a statement.
Rogers had recently ignited some controversy after joking that Snowden should
be placed on a military “kill list.”
The
whistleblower downloaded all of the material he would eventually leak while
earning over $100,000 annually and working at an NSA facility in Hawaii last
year. The Washington Post reported that if Snowden did indeed download 1.7
million he may have only released small percentages of that total to individual
journalists.
Rep.
Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Md.) – the ranking member of the House Intelligence
Committee – agreed with Rogers, claiming the amount of information Snowden took
could “gravely impact” US national security. Yet others, including
American Civil Liberties attorney and Snowden adviser Ben Wizden, say
government officials are overstating the risk.
“This
is straight from the government’s playbook,” Wizner said. “Remember, the
government told the Supreme Court that publication of the Pentagon Papers would
cause grave danger to national security. That was not true then, and this
report is not true now. Overblown claims of national security rarely stand the
test of time.”
Sources
came forward in August, two months after the press began reporting Snowden’s
leaks, to admit that authorities were unsure exactly how many documents Snowden
obtained.
Two
anonymous officials told NBC News at the time that the NSA was using poor
compartmentalization techniques - meaning that Snowden, an IT systems
administrator, was able to freely comb through agency networks containing a
wide range of data. NSA Director Keith Alexander said in August that the
government knew what Snowden had taken, while the NBC sources in fact said the
NSA was “overwhelmed” with trying to find out the details.
Alexander
said in an October speech that the documents were “being put out in a way
that does the maximum damage to NSA and our nation.” He also told the
audience that Snowden had far fewer documents to reporters than this week’s
Pentagon report described.
“I
wish there was a way to prevent it,” he told a Baltimore, Maryland crowd. “Snowden
has shared somewhere between 50,000 and 200,000 documents with reporters. These
will continue to come out.”
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