President Obama and the NSA brass have exhibited a basic flaw that has been exposed throughout the Snowden revelations, they make bad (I mean really bad) decisions and don't own up to them. The US Press is still giving cover with soothing editorials, in one particularly mild, and offensive,
NY Times article, they find no fault or deficiency in the decisions made, and in fact imply the NSA is out of control, totally ignoring the excuses President Obama has made for their actions. It's clear that these were decisions made by Presidents Bush and Obama, not some out of control bureaucracy. The NY Times helpfully offers this advice.
A good way out of this mess would be for Washington to take up the proposal made Friday by Germany and France to negotiate a formal pact that would set mutually acceptable surveillance guidelines.
The US press ought to be calling for blood on the floor, all the brass at the NSA, Feinstein, Chambliss, and all the rest of the toadying hawks on the Intelligence Committees. The president has an opportunity to be presidential, but he's behaving like a school child caught shoplifting a pack of gum. As for the NSA brass, General Keith Alexander is mouthing off that it's the fault of the press.
Glenn Greenwald and the Guardian have the only coverage fit to print.
Speaking of an inability to maintain claims with a straight face, how
are American and British officials, in light of their conduct in all of
this, going to maintain the pretense that they are defenders of press
freedoms and are in a position to lecture and condemn others for
violations? In what might be the most explicit hostility to such
freedoms yet – as well as the most unmistakable evidence of rampant
panic – the NSA's director, General Keith Alexander, actually demanded Thursday that the reporting being done by newspapers around the world on this secret surveillance system be halted (Techdirt has the full video here):
The
head of the embattled National Security Agency, Gen Keith Alexander, is
accusing journalists of "selling" his agency's documents and is calling
for an end to the steady stream of public disclosures of secrets
snatched by former contractor Edward Snowden.
"I think it's wrong
that that newspaper reporters have all these documents, the 50,000 –
whatever they have and are selling them and giving them out as if these –
you know it just doesn't make sense," Alexander said in an interview
with the Defense Department's "Armed With Science" blog.
"We ought to come up with a way of stopping it. I
don't know how to do that. That's more of the courts and the
policy-makers but, from my perspective, it's wrong to allow this to go
on," the NSA director declared. [My italics]
There
are 25,000 employees of the NSA (and many tens of thousands more who
work for private contracts assigned to the agency). Maybe one of them
can tell The General about this thing called "the first amendment".
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