Thursday, August 22, 2013

NSA Snowden Leaks: UK Government Has Gone To A ‘Terrifying Place,’ Advocates Say


Though privacy and civil liberties advocates continue to agitate over recent revelations about the U.S. government’s surveillance programs, last night they turned their ire to the other side of the pond. In the last 48 hours, the U.K. government has taken unprecedented steps against reporting on the spy programs.

Alan Rusbridger, the editor of the British-based Guardian newspaper, which has been the primary outlet publishing the revelations from former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, charged in an opinion piece Monday that the U.K. government forced the paper to destroy hard drives holding documents from Snowden. In what Rusbridger describes as “one of the more bizarre moments in the Guardian's long history,” the paper smashed a set of hard drives in the basement of its London offices while two security experts from the government's GCHQ spy agency stood watch.

That incident, reported after British officials detained the partner of Guardian reporter Glenn Greenwald for nine hours at London’s Heathrow airport Sunday, reveal a level of intimidation and interference with the press that is rarely seen in the U.S. But some see the U.S. as complicit in the events.

“Combine Rusbridger’s revelations with news of the detention of Greenwald’s partner David Miranda by U.K. authorities,” Columbia Journalism Review's Ryan Chittum wrote, “and you have a DEFCON 2 journalism event.” (DEFCON 2 is U.S. military code for a state of high alert.) 

“We have the spectacle of communications between two American journalists-in-exile -- reduced to passing information via courier because their government is spying on everything they do online -- busted up by the U.S.’s top ally, apparently with no protest from the Obama administration, which was given a heads-up,” Chittum continued. Miranda, Greenwald’s partner, was returning to Brazil, where he and Greenwald live, from Germany, where documentary filmmaker and their partner in NSA reporting Laura Poitras is staying.

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