The article is filled with biased and false comments. Manning and Snowden EXPOSED ILLEGAL ACTIVITIES conducted by the US governments. Toture, killing of innocent civilians, illegal tapping of phones and emails and many more. Under a just system, revealing wrong doings is not only allowed but COMPULSORY. If you don't reveal these evidences, it means that you are a part of the evil doers. These young men just do what they were trained to do, report what is wrong and illegal.
Is the Snowden case Manning, Part II? Not quite, experts say
August 2, 2013 -- Updated 0127 GMT (0927 HKT)
A tale of two accused leakers
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- WikiLeaks leaker Bradley Manning was convicted of violations of the Espionage Act
- Edward Snowden disclosed sensitive programs run by the National Security Agency
- While they both leaked, their circumstances -- and future -- could be far different
What did they do?
United States Army Pvt.
Bradley Manning leaked hundreds of thousands of classified documents
about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and sensitive correspondence
written by U.S. diplomats -- information that WikiLeaks published. Some
of that information was also analyzed and reported by The New York
Times, Der Spiegel and The Guardian newspapers as well as other news
outlets. A military judge acquitted Manning on Tuesday of aiding the
enemy, but convicted him of violations of the Espionage Act. The
proceedings for his sentencing could take days or even weeks. He could
get 136 years.
Photos: NSA leaker Edward Snowden
Julian Assange: Manning is a hero
Crowley: Ellsberg only whistleblower
How much damage did Snowden, Manning do?
Edward Snowden, a former
CIA employee and National Security Agency contract employee, told a
Guardian journalist that the NSA was operating classified surveillance
programs that track cell phone calls and monitor the e-mail and Internet
traffic of virtually all Americans. To tell his story, he left his job
and life in Hawaii, fled to China and is now in Russia, where he has
been granted temporary asylum.
How did they do it?
Manning had access to
intelligence while working as an analyst stationed in Iraq. Snowden
worked for NSA contract firm Booz Allen Hamilton, a job that gave him
access to the sensitive programs.
What are their stated
motives? When Manning entered his guilty pleas on certain charges in
February, he spent more than an hour in court reading a statement about
why he had leaked the information. He said that the information he
passed "upset" or "disturbed" him, but none of it, he thought, would
harm the U.S. if it became public.
Manning said that he thought the documents were old and that the situations they referred to had changed or ended.
"I believed that if the
general public, especially the American public, had access to the
information ... it could spark a domestic debate on the role of the
military and our foreign policy in general as it related to Iraq and
Afghanistan," he said, according to a statement that Manning's lawyer,
David Coombs, posted a link to on his site.
Manning's statement also explains why he enlisted: "my natural interest in geopolitical affairs."
Snowden has said that he just wanted the public to know what the government was doing.
"Even if you're not doing anything wrong you're being watched and recorded," he said.
Explaining his motivation to Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald in an edited video published on the newspaper's website in June, Snowden said the NSA's activities were tantamount to "abuses."
He also revealed to The
Guardian that he had access to everyone working at the NSA, the entire
intelligence community and undercover assets around the globe.
"I'm just another guy
who sits there day to day in the office, watching what's happening, and
goes, 'This is something that's not our place to decide.' The public
needs to decide whether these programs or policies are right or wrong,"
he said.
How much damage did they do?
Manning was acquitted
Tuesday on the most serious charge of aiding the enemy, and experts say
that clearly illustrates that the government did not provide convincing
evidence that he helped enemies of the United States through his
leaking. He was convicted on several other counts and now probably faces
a lengthy term in a military prison.
At Manning's sentencing
proceeding, the prosecution called retired Army Brig. Gen. Robert Carr,
who at one point had headed up the Information Review Task Force, which
assessed the possible damage that Manning's actions had caused.
Carr testified that
there were concerns about some 900 Afghans who were identified in some
way in the documents. But he didn't say if any of those Afghans were
harmed.
Asked if Manning had
made the jobs of junior intelligence analysts more difficult by damaging
their superiors' trust in them, Carr said it was "hugely important to
empower these young intel analysts."
But experts outside the
courtroom say the mere fact that sensitive information was able to be
leaked by an Army private damaged the image of the U.S. and its ability
to influence global affairs.
"Manning's leaking of
classified cables made diplomats and officials wonder, 'Well, if I talk
to an American, will whatever I say wind up in the newspaper or
published online?" said James Lewis, director and senior fellow of technology and public policy program at the Center for Strategic & International Studies.
"It suggested to the world that we couldn't keep secrets and we couldn't control people with access to secrets."
Much of the information contained in Manning's leaks was outdated, Lewis points out. Some of the cables were years old.
Snowden case is different
Snowden's case is
different, officials say, because he disclosed how the government
actually collects telephone and online information, leaving the NSA to
try to reassemble its surveillance networks.
Justice Department and security officials have said that the surveillance programs were necessary to combat terrorist threats.
In an interview with CNN, Secretary of State John Kerry called Snowden "an individual who threatened this country and put Americans at risk."
"People may die as a
consequence of what this man did," Kerry said. "It is possible the
United States will be attacked because terrorists may now know how to
protect themselves in some way or another, that they didn't know
before."
In congressional testimony, NSA Deputy Director John Inglis said that Snowden's acts "constituted an irresponsible and real damage to the capabilities" of the NSA.
Former CIA chief Michael
Hayden had some of the harshest language for Snowden. In a CNN op-ed,
Hayden said that Snowden far eclipsed the damage that Manning caused.
"First, there is the
undeniable operational effect of informing adversaries of American
intelligence's tactics, techniques and procedures. Snowden's disclosures
go beyond the "what" of a particular secret or source. He is busily
revealing the "how" of American collection," Hayden wrote.
..."there are already
reports of counter-terrorism targets changing their communications
patterns. And I would lose all respect for China's Ministry of State
Security and Russia's FSB if they have not already fully harvested
Snowden's digital data trove."
Military law attorney Eugene Fidell
told CNN that there is some good that can come of Snowden's leaking,
though the former president of the National Institute of Military
Justice is quick to add that he has little sympathy for Snowden.
His leaks helped lead to
congressional hearings and a re-examination of how much intelligence
gathering is appropriate and when it may be venturing into abusive
territory.
"The public knowing, at
least being aware, of the powers of the FISA court showed new and
sweeping powers being exercised by the executive branch," Fidell said.
"This is a democratic
country, a democratic society. An informed electorate is essential. Not
every voter should know everything," he said. "But there is increasing
concern across the political spectrum" that those powers may be
overreaching.
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