http://20committee.com/2015/06/12/snowden-is-a-fraud/
Snowden is a Fraud

In the two years since the Edward Snowden saga went public, a handful of
people who actually understand the Western signals intelligence system have
tried to explain the many ways that the Snowden Operation
<http://20committee.com/2014/05/31/the-xx-committee-snowden-reader/> has
smeared NSA and its partners with salacious charges of criminality and
abuse. I’ve been one of the public faces of what may be called the Snowden
Truth movement, and finally there are signs that reality may be intruding
on this debate.

No American ally was rocked harder by Snowden’s allegations than Germany,
which has endured a bout of hysteria
<http://20committee.com/2013/10/27/nsa-germany-and-handygate-a-reality-check/>over
charges that NSA was listening in on senior German officials, including
Chancellor Angela Merkel. Although these stories included a good deal of bunkum
<http://20committee.com/2013/10/28/update-merkels-real-cellphone-is-secure/>from
the start, they caused a firestorm in Germany, particularly the alleged
spying on Merkel, which was termed Handygate by the media.

In response, Germany tasked Federal prosecutors with looking into the
matter and, they if determined there was sufficient evidence, to press
charges against NSA for breaking stringent German privacy laws. The
investigation, led by Harald Range, Germany’s attorney general, has been
slow and diligent, examining all possible evidence about NSA spying on
Germany. Here Snowden’s purloined information would play a key role.

However, the matter has become politically fraught. In the first place,
senior German security officials were circumspect
<http://20committee.com/2014/07/29/german-counterintelligence-and-the-american-threat/>
about the case, since Berlin is heavily dependent on NSA for intelligence
on vital matters like terrorism. Worse, follow-on Snowden revelations
showed that the BND, German’s foreign intelligence service, and NSA are
close partners, and the BND has itself been spying on EU neighbor states
that are friendly to Germany such as Austria
<http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-32596510>, Belgium, and the
Netherlands
<http://www.thelocal.de/20150530/belgium-netherlands-probe-german-spy-claims>
.

To top it off, last month’s major hack of the Bundestag, Germany’s
parliament, turns out to have been the work of Russians
<http://www.businessinsider.com/russia-accused-of-hacking-german-bundestag-2015-6>,
apparently state-sponsored. In reality, the major spy threats to Germany
are not NSA, but Russians and Chinese, as I’ve been saying for some time —
and, to be fair, so have German security officials
<http://20committee.com/2014/08/11/berlin-nsa-is-not-spying-on-german-industry/>,
though they got drowned out in the public hysteria over Snowden.

Now we learn that Range’s prosecutors are dropping their year-long
Handygate inquiry, for want of hard evidence. Federal prosecutors in
Karlsruhe aren’t saying much, beyond that they simply don’t have evidence
of spying that would stand up in court. Back in December, Attorney General
Range offered a warning about the dubious nature of much of the “evidence”
against NSA:

*The document presented in public as proof of an actual tapping of the
mobile phone is not an authentic surveillance order by the NSA. It does not
come from the NSA database. There is no proof at the moment which could
lead to charges that Chancellor Merkel’s phone connection data was
collected or her calls tapped.*

Got that? That’s the polite, legalistic way of saying the Snowden claims
are backed by faked NSA documents, as has been clear for some time to
anybody who understands counterintelligence and the SIGINT system. This
should surprise no one, since using fake or doctored Western intelligence
documents to embarrass democracies is a venerable tradition for Russian
intelligence
<http://20committee.com/2014/10/01/diamonds-and-disinformation-are-forever/>
— the proper espionage term is Active Measures
<http://20committee.com/2014/07/08/active-measures-havana-style/> — and
since Snowden’s been in Moscow for the last two years and shows no signs of
going anywhere else anytime soon, two and two can be added together here.

To make matters worse for Snowden’s fans, a report
<http://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschland/abgehoertes-merkel-handy-generalbundesanwalt-stellt-ermittlungen-ein-a-1038458.html>about
the Handygate inquiry being dropped in the magazine *Der Spiegel*, which
has been a key player in the Snowden Operation, includes the painful truth.
While some have clamored to get Snowden out of Moscow to testify before
prosecutors, Berlin understood how politically tricky that would be.
Moreover, prosecutors determined that Ed simply didn’t have much to say.

As a prosecutor explained, Snowden provided “no evidence that he has his
own knowledge” (*keine Hinweise dafür, dass er über eigene Kenntnisse
verfügt*). In other words, Ed doesn’t actually know what he’s talking
about. This is not news to anybody who understands how NSA and the Allied
SIGINT system actually work.

Snowden was an IT guy, not a SIGINT analyst, and in his final position he
was working as a contracted infrastructure analyst for NSA’s Information
Assurance arm, i.e. the Agency’s defensive side, which protects classified
U.S. communications networks. Snowden was never a SIGINTer, working on the
intelligence collection side of the house, and he doesn’t seem to
understand how that complex system, built over decades, actually functions.

This is why Snowden has made so many odd, contradictory, and even
outlandish statements over the past couple years about SIGINT, which have
caused those who actually understand how NSA works to scratch their heads … *Ed
doesn’t know any better*.

It’s been obvious for some time to insiders that, for reasons we still
don’t fully understand, Snowden decided to steal something like 1.7 million
classified documents from NSA servers through internal hacks. About 900,000
<https://news.vice.com/article/exclusive-inside-washingtons-quest-to-bring-down-edward-snowden>
of those documents came from the Pentagon and have nothing to do with
intelligence matters.

There’s no way Snowden could have read more than a tiny fraction of what he
stole, nobody has that much time, and it’s clear now that Ed, an IT guy and
a thief, who was never any sort of “spy” as he portrays himself, would not
have understood all those NSA documents he made off with anyway.

Snowden’s been living under the protection of Putin’s Federal Security
Service now for two years, functioning as a pawn of Russian intelligence.
When his secret relationship with the Kremlin started remains an open
question
<http://20committee.com/2014/05/31/when-did-snowden-go-over-to-the-russians/>,
but that he has one now can only be denied by the foolish (witness the weak
lies
<http://20committee.com/2015/01/12/snowden-and-russian-intelligence-an-update/>
told by his supporters about Ed’s FSB ties), since when you defect, you
wind up in the care of that country’s security service. That’s how it works
in America, and I don’t hear anybody seriously suggesting that Putin’s
Kremlin is more liberal in these matters than the FBI or CIA.

In light of these revelations from Germany, it’s worth pondering whether Ed
was always just a pawn, a talking head, for others with agendas to harm
Western security. As we’re now in the Cold War 2.0
<http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/03/new-cold-war-russia-104954.html#.VXrQsUbyvYA>
with Russia that I warned you about after Putin’s theft of Crimea, this
seems like a more than academic question.

For two years now, I’ve been trying to inform the public about what’s
really going on behind the Snowden Operation, using my understanding of how
the SpyWar
<http://nationalinterest.org/commentary/snowden-the-us-russian-spywar-8668>
actually functions, and I’ve gotten a lot of grief for it from Ed’s
hardcore fans. News out of Germany can’t help but lead me to point out
that, well … I told you so
<http://20committee.com/2015/05/28/i-told-you-so/>.


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Posted by: "Beowulf" <[email protected]>
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