The Rest Is Classified - 43. The Leak That Changed The World: Snowden Hacks the System (Ep 1)
Episode Date: May 4, 2025Who was Edward Snowden? Was he an ideologue or a disgruntled employee? And what led him to orchestrating the biggest leak in modern American history? Join David McCloskey and Gordon Corera as they ...discuss Edward Snowden, his life inside the American secret state, and his momentous decision to act against it. ------------------- To sign up to The Declassified Club, go to: therestisclassified.com To sign up to the free newsletter, go to: https://mailchi.mp/goalhanger.com/tric-free-newsletter-sign-up ------------------- Order a signed edition of David's latest book, The Seventh Floor, via this link. Pre-order a signed edition of Gordon's latest book, The Spy in the Archive, via this link. ------------------- Get our exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ www.nordvpn.com/restisclassified It’s risk-free with Nord’s 30-day money-back guarantee! Exclusive INCOGNI Deal: To get an exclusive 60% off an annual Incogni plan, go to https://incogni.com/therestisclassified Email: classified@goalhanger.com Twitter: @triclassified Assistant Producer: Becki Hills Producer: Callum Hill Senior Producer: Dom Johnson Exec Producer: Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to The Rest Is Classified, I'm Gordon Carrera.
And I'm David McCloskey.
And before we get to today's episode on Edward Snowden and the biggest leak of government
secrets in modern American history, David and I have got an announcement.
Drum roll, David.
That's the drum roll, is it?
That's right.
If you can, if that hasn't been edited out, I'm doing a drum roll on David. That's the drum roll, is it? That's right. If that hasn't been edited out,
I'm doing a drum roll on my desk. And the reason is, we're launching the Declassified Club.
That is right. It's been Declassified as of right now by Gordon Carrera, who is announcing it.
We are launching a club. Why, dear listeners? And the answer is that we have tried to make this podcast the place for spy content, we want to show
how the world of espionage really works. And the idea, I
think it's fair to say Gordon with the club is that we want to
do a lot more of that. And so it's important to note, dear
listeners, we are not taking away any of the episodes or any of the content that we have been delivering so far.
The club is more stuff for club members.
That's right. The two episodes a week will still be there for everyone.
But for those who want even more inside access to this world, we're going to be providing all kinds of things.
So it's going to include early access to the mini series.
So this Snowden series we're just starting,
members who sign up now will have access straight away
to all of those episodes.
That's gonna be the case in the future,
the future series we do also live show tickets.
That's right, that's been declassified here and now
unredacted by Gordon Carrera. When we start doing live shows, you'll have early access to live show tickets. That's right. That's been declassified here and now unredacted by Gordon Carrera.
When we start doing live shows, you'll have early access to live show tickets.
You'll also have, of course, ad free listening.
And then I think this part, Gordon, we're both really excited about.
We are going to be doing weekly bonus episodes for club members where
we'll do insider kind of Q and A's where Gordon and I will field questions
and reveal all of the dirty secrets of the spy world. We're also going to do a series of exclusive interviews. We've got
a couple former directors of the CIA, former director general of MI5. We've got some people
who led tradecraft at CIA. So a really interesting, I think, group of people
who will provide even more insider detail
and colorful stories to really build out
this world of espionage.
And oftentimes Gordon, I think, will connect
these interviews, these bonus episodes,
to the series we're doing.
So at the end of this series on Snowden,
we will do an interview with someone,
we won't reveal who that is now, who is intimately and directly connected in the Snowden story.
And there's plenty more as well. There's going to be live streams, book discounts,
a weekly newsletter, and that's going to do a deep dive into the world of espionage.
And for those who aren't signing up to the club, there's also going to be a free newsletter
available as a kind of taster. The Namuse Bouche in French. Thank you for that David.
We're going to create a monthly book list on topics relevant to the show. Exclusively of our
own books. Isn't that right? That's not right. It's actually the opposite. No, our books will not be
on there at all. This will be a book list of titles you can read if you want to go deeper into the stories
that we're covering on the pod.
There's also going to be a private Facebook group
for members to chat about the show
and give Gordon direct feedback.
There's also a rumor that there will be a prize draw
for club members, exclusively for club members,
in which we are going to give away a signed copy of a spy related book.
It of course is a book chosen entirely at random.
And the first one is going to be Gordon Carrera's upcoming new book, The Spy in the Archive.
He will sign it and then I might sign it too.
Or anytime I see your book in a bookstore, I sign it and put it back on the shelf.
But we're going to sign these, right?
We might even do yours eventually as well, David.
That's right.
Signed by Gordon Carrera.
So anyway, lots of exciting things for those who want that extra level of inside access.
Potentially life changing.
Potentially life changing.
That's right.
So we're really excited about it and we think it's going to be great.
So if you want to join, sign up for the Declassified Club and you can do that at
therestisclassified.com, therestisclassified.com and take advantage of our discounted launch price.
That's right. And now on to the show.
My name is Edward Joseph Snowden. I used to work for the government, but now I work for
the public. It took me nearly three decades to recognize that there was a distinction,
and when I did, it got me into a bit of trouble at the office.
But welcome to The Rest is Classified. I'm David McCloskey.
And I'm Gordon Carrera.
Now that was Edward Snowden, the start of his memoir, Permanent Record,
and Edward Snowden is the man responsible
for probably the largest leak of US secrets ever.
And I can't believe that you've made me open this episode
with lines from his memoir, Gordon.
There will be retribution for this.
I think somewhere down the line,
we're gonna do an Osama Bin Laden series,
and it's gonna be episode after episode of Osama Bin Laden poetry to open that one up.
I look forward to that already, but the Edward Snowden story, it is an amazing story because
it's fair to say, I think you may not be the biggest fan of Edward Snowden as a former
CIA officer. He may not be your favorite person, I'm guessing.
Well, despite these lines that you put in the script, which I should note here for
people listening, Gordon wrote, this is for me to read as a former CIA officer.
I'm a huge fan.
I think he's great.
I was hoping you'd just read it.
It's not true.
It's not true.
Is it?
But I mean, and that goes to part of the Snowden story, isn't it?
Which is he's often, and particularly at the time in 2013, when all this happened
was seen as hero or villain.
That was the kind of question that everyone was asking.
And you kind of had to put him into one category or the other.
And I think it's a bit more complicated than that.
And I think it is definitely true that there's a kind of a fascinating individual
at the center of this story, which we're going to look at, you know,
who goes on a very dramatic journey and whose motives are definitely complex and we can unpick.
But I think it's also bigger than that as well, isn't it, this story? Well, and on the hero or villain point, I will say that I do have
over the course of this series, five deadly sins that Edward Snowden committed that I will reveal
in time as we get through the story. But to the point on not prejudging, you know, sinners go to
heaven too, Gordon. So, okay, he could be a hero who's just very flawed, but there are kind of, I think on that point,
really five terrible things he did along the way.
But it is, I think it's fascinating because it has become,
I think in particular in the 12, 13 years
since those revelations,
with just the incredible advancements
in technology all around us,
it's become a much bigger story about,
I mean, I guess really the nature of
what does privacy actually mean in a world
where we're all carrying smartphones around
and really what level of surveillance,
what level of passive collection by our security services
and tech companies are we all really comfortable with?
And I think his revelations,
they didn't start that conversation,
but they added immensely to it
and created a lot of color around it
that we didn't otherwise have.
That's right.
I think he shaped that conversation
and the way it evolved.
And I think it is very consequential for how we think,
I think it's consequential for geopolitics
because I think it changed how Russia and China
acted as well.
So I think there's lots of very interesting strands which we can pull out over these episodes.
I mean, for me, it was a big story.
I was a journalist covering it day in, day out.
And one little tease, if you do stay to the end of the episodes, I will reveal, I know
you're the former intelligence officer, but I will reveal the closest thing I ever came
to doing a clandestine mission, which was to do with the Snowden story many years ago, but that comes towards the end of this story. But it's one that as a journalist
was one of the biggest stories I covered. And I think was one of the biggest stories of the last
25 years really, when it comes to intelligence. There have been a lot of intelligence stories
that are headline news, you know, over the past 25 years, but this one, there were headlines breaking
pretty consistently
because of the massive amount of information
that came out the way that he leaked it to journalists.
I mean, you had headline news for weeks.
And also you think about the reverberations
in really kind of film and television.
I mean, there was an Academy Award winning documentary,
Citizen Forum, made about Snowden
by the filmmaker Laura Poitras. And
there was an Oliver Stone movie starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt called Snowden. So it is good,
bad, ugly, and there's a lot of that, all of those things in this story. This series
of revelations, the man himself really was one of the biggest intelligence stories of
the past generation, I think.
Now with a bit of time passing, hopefully we can kind of, I think, you know, look at it in a
different perspective and I think reveal some things that people might find new or surprising
about it. Should we start with the man? Let's start with the man. Yeah, so Edward Joseph Snowden,
born 1983, grows up first in North Carolina, then when he's nine moves to Maryland. Solid
middle-class family with interesting public service is kind of part of the ethos.
Both of his parents, I found this fascinating, had top-secret clearances.
His mother at one point works as a clerk doing benefits and insurance for intelligence employees,
and his father works on electronics in the Coast Guard.
His father clearly is a bit of a tinkerer into this kind of world of early
computers. And he remembers when he's very young, one night his dad comes home with a box, his dad
unwraps the box and inside is an early home computer. His dad sets it up and starts playing
really early computer games, Tetris and another one where you rescue people on a helicopter called
Choplifter and Snowden. It's really interesting in his memoir, he says he's spied on his father doing this, watching it. And one time his father
catches him spying on him, playing the games, and he thinks he's in trouble, but his dad pulls him
in to play it with him. And this is a kind of big moment for the young Snowden. I think it's the
start maybe of an interest in spying, but also of a kind of love affair with computers. And it's also
an era where home computers and computer games are really just
arriving and Stoden is, is in the middle of that era.
Yeah.
This is kind of the very, I mean, early days of the internet, right?
Yeah.
But he's starting to have this love affair really with the online world,
right?
Devices tinkering, that kind of thing.
So, I mean, he gets into computer games,
he's playing a lot of Nintendo.
He's got this great quote here where he says,
you know, a computer would wait forever
to receive my command,
but would process at the very moment I hit enter.
No questions asked.
Nowhere else had I ever felt so in control.
I think, you know, maybe we see kind of in these early days,
the first sense that he is more of himself in the online world
than he is in the physical world.
Which is something we associate now much more, but then was much newer. And I do remember this,
I'm a bit older than Snowden, but you know, the excitement of the first dial-up modems,
I know people remember these, these are ones where you had to literally dial the phone number,
nice sound effects.
Exactly.
And you get these tones.
Someone called the house, it was busy.
You're using your phone line to kind of connect to the internet and dial a number.
And so he moves online in this and onto these online platforms and bulletin boards, which
are just emerging.
And it's really interesting, I think, because the internet was a very different place at
this time.
It was less controlled by, you like corporations you were going on to facebook or whatsapp youtube or anything else you just going on to these bulletin boards which people run.
And you can go on in those days really anonymous sleep in a way that's much harder these days.
on a different name, you can take on a different identity. You can play computer games, you know, he talks about it used to play Ultima fantasy computer game, which I slightly remember
I may have played a couple of times. You know, he could be a wizard in Ultima and roam around
online and interact with other people under a completely different character. And clearly,
this was something that he reveled in.
Did you have hamster dance over here, Gordon? Do you remember hamster dance?
I have no idea what you're talking about.
Snowden's a few years older than I am,
but you would go to hamsterdance.com.
I think it's probably gone now.
And there would just be a screen of these sort of cartoon
hamsters dancing.
That's my first image of the internet,
the promise of the early internet
was very cheerful hamsters dancing around on screen.
But Snowden, he was also playing a game called Tekken.
You remember Tekken?
Yeah, yeah.
You know, at risk of over-psychologizing him.
I mean, the whole point of Tekken
is you are the leader of a clan
and you go out and defend
or sort of represent your group in single combat.
You know, there's stories of Snowden kind of going
to these, you know, fantasy, kind of these role-playing
games, right? And going to these conventions and things like that. And he's deeply in this world,
right? I mean, he is kind of an anime and video computer game geek as a kid.
And quite a solitary figure, I think. You know, you get that sense. And he goes, I guess,
even more inwards when his parents divorce, when he's a teenager. And he describes it's a family in which everyone has been keeping
secrets from each other.
And he clearly doesn't like school.
He talks about kind of sleeping through his lessons.
He rejects authority.
He doesn't want to do his homework.
You know, he wants to play his games and be who he is online and in the tech world.
Quite smart, but bad at school.
Exactly.
Yeah, exactly.
So he drops out.
He doesn't finish high school.
He's self-taught. He basically learns what he wants to learn. And as you, exactly. So he drops out, he doesn't finish high school. He's self taught, he basically
learns what he wants to learn. And as you said, I think he's smart. And it seems like he's almost
living on his own from the age of 16, the way he describes it and kind of just doing his own thing,
but very much in this online world and going on bulletin boards, often expressing some pretty
trenchant views, the kind of level of sometimes vitriol and argument on these bulletin boards could be pretty extreme. And that was this world as well. By the time you
get to the kind of nineties, I think.
There's obviously now, if you just Google him, you'll see plenty of video and there's
a whole documentary made about him. He looks like an IT guy. He's very slight. He is sunlight
deprived. I think it's fair to say.
He's got hair just a bit like yours, I can't, you know, I can't, I can't stomach parallels, Gordon.
But yeah, he looks like, you know, a guy who's coming by your desk to fix your computer.
And so he's then kind of moving into a world.
He's not finished high school, not gone to college in a regular sense, goes to a community
college, do some courses on designing websites.
Then a lot of random courses, random courses.
Yeah.
And then like for so many people, 9 11, September the 11th, 2001, those
attacks on the U S are a kind of turning point in his life.
It's traumatic.
You know, he's worried if people have been killed.
He's in Maryland too.
Yeah.
So he's in this atmosphere, close to government facilities, you know, so
it's all happening around him. And America's going to war, the kind of war on terrorists starting and he wants to be part of it. And I think, you know, it's interesting, isn't it? He is a true believer at this point in taking part of that. What does he do? It's kind of interesting. He joins the army. It feels like he wants to feel like he's contributing. And also he's good at something more than just computers. So he actually applies for special forces training, which is maybe surprising, but it's what he wants to do. But it goes wrong.
So he says that during training, he's up a tree or he's, you know, out there and he falls badly,
breaking his legs. Now other people have said that's not quite true. And that he just required
shin splints. Well, this is the first sin., okay? Because it's, thou shalt not lie.
It's the eighth commandment,
but it's the first of David McCloskey's
five deadly sins committed by Edward Snowden.
And this is, I think, a point in the story
where we should interject that he has a track record
of fabrication.
And when you look at the House Intel Committee report
that went back and looked at this said said shin splints, not legs broken.
Okay.
So I think I'll put this doubt as a marker here of this guy has gone back and sort of
edited the permanent record.
You raise a good point with this because what we're going to see, I think, as we do his
early life, particularly is two different narratives about him. There's his narrative and there's the narrative of those who are basically also, it's fair to say, not entirely
neutral about him, who are trying to paint him in a certain way. I think we'll see this, and it's
really interesting as we go on, him presenting himself basically as an ideologically motivated
figure and other people seeing him as a kind of aggrieved and a bit of a loser, which is
the kind of image pointed by that, you know, Intelligence Committee report. And we can lay
both out, we can see which one we agree with, but it's worth saying there were these two different
interpretations. And you're right, this is the first time we start to see them diverge.
And I do think it's worth stating that, I mean, I have no interest in sort of painting him with an
entirely negative brush.
I just think that what has happened
is you do have a lot of content out there.
His memoir being one of them,
a lot of the work done by Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwald
that has really painted him as a very, very positive figure
and has sought to kind of whitewash some of the stuff
that he did fabricate in the past. So I would describe
my approach as fact-based. I would say there are people out to get him and mine is fact-based.
There are people out to get him. So let's park that there and we'll come back to that.
We're both fact-based is the lesson from this. Fair and impartial. So anyway, he's out of the
army, which is he's tried something and it's not worked, which is clearly a kind of source of
frustration to him.
So I know you feel like he thinks, if I want to do service, I'm going to use my computer
skills.
That's the obvious thing to do.
And he'd almost been trying to avoid that.
But now he comes to it.
And where does he end up in the CIA or working for the CIA?
Where else?
The obvious, the next step from washing out of the army. Because doesn't he, he winds up there through a
kind of, I guess it's, it seems like from the outside, maybe a little bit of a bizarre route,
but he kind of essentially shows up at like a contractor job fair and ends up getting in
at kind of the literally basement level of a tech job initially, right?
That's right. And so it is interesting because he is working for the director of support of the CIA.
And you can maybe explain to us what that is. But he is basically an IT guy rather than a spy.
And he is also at this point, working through a contractor for the CIA.
So for a lot of people outside of the intelligence community, it's always amazing how many contractors there are.
Because you kind of think, you know, either you're a cleared and you're
inside or you're outside, but there's this whole category of people who work for the
US intelligence community who are contractors. And he's one of them at this point. And he'll
most of his coming years, he'll be a contractor. Why have them as contractors?
Yeah, we call them green badgers, because the staff at CIA would have a blue badge that
you'd wear around on a lanyard all the time, it would have a blue badge that you'd wear around
on a lanyard all the time. It would have your picture on it. I never had my picture updated.
So all the time I'm there, I have a picture of me as like a 19 year old that I took during
my initial days there. But yeah, green badger contractors, it does seem to be a particular
quirk, I guess, of the US intelligence community versus let's say Britain's yeah, because there are tens of thousands of
Blue badge employees at CIA. There's probably an equal number of
Green badgers contractors of contractors that are doing the same jobs as the blue badgers. We even had analyst
Green badgers. I remember when I joined, I was working Syria.
We had counterparts doing counter-terrorism issues on kind of Syria CT.
And there was an analyst working in our counterpart team in the
counter-terrorism group who had been brought in by a contractor, had the
green badge, but she's writing intelligence pieces and doing analysis
almost just like everybody
else.
And the reality is if you're a contractor, you might be paid a little bit more, but you're
also, you can be hired and fired much more easily.
Even though you're inside the wire, it's a slightly looser relationship.
So back to Snowden, I mean, he's working, I mean, he describes it as working just past
the help desk where people who'd forgotten their passwords would call up.
But then at night, he's there at night on the night shift.
And he said it's kind of vast and this kind of sense of it being empty and the escalators
stop working. So you have to use them as stairs. But it also feels like he's doing quite a
banal job on this IT support desk. I mean, I like this. He says, the only adult supervision
was a guy in his 50s who spent his shifts reading paperbacks by Robert Ludlam and Tom
Clancy. He did no work for the best part of a decade. He would boast, just sit around and read thrillers and play
solitaire. If the phone rang as there was a problem, he'd just report it to the day
shift.
We'll know the type.
We called them road warriors. Did you have this term?
No, no, no.
R-O-A-D, retired on active duty.
There were somewhat senior officers at CIA
who might be like perpetual GS-14s kind of riding it out
on a government salary.
Now, GS-14, government scale 14, it's the pay scale.
It goes up to 15.
You could become after 15 an SIS, part of the Senior
Intelligence Service.
So a GS-14 kind of riding it out,
I think is the nexus of sort of mediocrity, laziness,
but you're not, you know, you haven't been fired, obviously.
It's very hard to fire people.
So it's a way to kind of ride things out
on a pretty decent government salary.
And I can attest to the post-apocalyptic environment
at Langley at night, because six months after I joined,
this is a classic sort of goat rope that the CIA does
where they bring you in as an analyst
and then they send you on a night rotation
for like six months after you join.
And so I was doing night shifts on the PDB staff,
the president's daily brief,
kind of compiling the articles and things like that.
And it was a 10 PM to 6 AM shift, six nights a week.
And that place at night is kind of creepy. 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. shift, six nights a week.
And that place at night is kind of creepy. I mean, the escalators are off.
There are these kind of weird help desk people
sitting around who are literally reading
or like watching movies.
It has a very bizarre environment.
And I would imagine I don't ever miss a plug
for the RIP and memoriam Langley hot dog vending machine.
But I actually think that Snowden was probably sitting not too far from that down there in the basement.
So at this point, he decides that he wants to get a staff job.
He wants to be on the inside and I guess go abroad.
At that point, let's take a break and see where life takes Edward Snowden next.
Welcome back.
So we are in the story of Edward Snowden.
It's 2007, which by the way is round about the time that I joined CIA.
Edward Snowden and I have our agency identification numbers because his has come out since both
start with two, three, four.
Wow.
So yes, we joined it around the same time.
One of many similarities.
One of one similarity.
The hair, the ID numbers.
That's right.
So it's 2007.
Now Snowden has joined, he's gone from being a contract kind of tech employee, now to a full blue badger.
He's a staff CIA employee.
He is a telecommunications information systems officer, TISO, but we would call
that he's a commo guy, right?
He's a commo guy and commo guys or gals spend a lot of their career overseas.
And he is headed out to Geneva, Switzerland.
Which is actually a really interesting place to go. I mean, historically, including during
the Cold War, Geneva was actually quite a hotspot because you have everything from kind of bankers
to UN agencies all coming through the city. So it was a place where if you're CIA or MI6,
you'd be a rich targeting environment in terms of looking for people you might be able to recruit.
In his memoirs and his discussions about it, this is where he gets a bit of a feel for
human intelligence.
He's out in the field.
He also suggests that he saw the slightly darker side of human intelligence.
He has this story that someone else told him from the agency team there about the CIA targeting a banker
to who they want to recruit. They get him drunk in Geneva, then he gets arrested for
drink driving, and then they use the arrest and try to help him out to recruit him as
an asset.
I could see that happening. I mean, and I do think this is also where, and I've gone
into the personnel files a little bit here, Gordon.
Okay. Not literally.
It's important, I think, to note here that, you know, by this point, Snowden, he's actually already gone
to the CIA Inspector General.
And do you know what it's about?
No, it's a complaint.
It's a complaint? Is it about alleged surveillance of Americans?
No.
No. It is about morale and retention issues
for his fellow combo guys.
So he thinks there's kind of a morale problem and he's sending emails all around kind of getting people riled
up. Feels like he's not being heard. Sends an email actually this is gonna be
another wonderful Snowden kind of habit over the course of his career is he has
a great habit of sending emails and everybody loves people like this at work.
Sending emails like six levels above
where they should go to elevate issues.
And so he has actually sent an email
and this won't perhaps resonate immediately with listeners,
but to me as a former CIA guy, it sounds insane.
He's actually gonna include the head
of the Directorate of Support on one of these notes,
which is almost unthinkable to do something like that.
And then Snowden's gonna basically say to the IG,
I feel pretty disenfranchised
because supervisors didn't listen.
He's kind of talking about the process
for overseas assignments
and the difficulty of kind of laterally transferring.
IG basically tells him to pound sand.
Inspector General.
But this is going to be a feature of his employment at CIA and NSA.
It kind of starts even before Geneva, now interestingly,
in Geneva.
So between October of 2007 and April of 2008,
he has six counseling sessions, nearly one per month,
with supervisors out in Geneva.
And as soon as he's out in Geneva,
he's actually applied for a much more senior position as a regional combo guy. So it's sort of the equivalent of like, getting in at a new job and then immediately applying for a job that is like two levels above your boss.
Okay, so we get the picture you're painting, which is, you know, a guy-
Which is fact based. is ambitious, you know, ideas above his station, as you'd put it, and clearly clashing with his bosses. And I think he gets a derogatory or a black mark on his file, if that's right,
about his, you know, kind of behavior, which he's clearly aggrieved about.
Well, ambitious, I would say delusional, because ambition would be somebody who understands
the work to be done ahead of them and does it more quickly than others. But this is more somebody who feels that he should be significantly beyond where he is.
Now, I will say that DROG that gets put into the system.
Now the system is going to be important later.
The system is called Scattered Castles.
It is the essentially security, like the TSSEI top secret special or sensitive compartmented information database that allows
for intelligence community agencies to understand, like if CIA has cleared somebody for TSSCI
clearance, NSA can look in that system and see if the clearance is still active for how
long, what type of clearance it is and all that.
And that DROG that gets put in there, that's a big deal.
And it gets put in there, I think,
although a lot of this is kind of even in the House Intel
report has been redacted.
Because what happens with Snowden out in Geneva
is that number one also,
there's a PAR, performance appraisal reviews.
They were the old annual review done at CIA
of your job performance. He
had gone into the actual software and modified the font as kind of like a little practical
joke. Yeah, which of course pissed people off. Right? Classic classic and totally totally
innocent. Right? Yeah. People are kind of like, Whoa, why did you do that? But it's
fine. But he ends up because because of all these counseling sessions,
because of problems out,
essentially just working with people out in Geneva,
he ends up going home short of tour,
allegedly for medical issues, doesn't come back to Geneva.
Geneva has to pack up all of his stuff and send it home.
And at the end of this, he's got the D-Rog
in his scattered castles account.
You're giving the negative cynical view of it.
I mean, one thing I would say is, you know,
he doesn't like authority.
He is the kind of person who doesn't play the system.
He's also a hacker.
I mean, this is the kind of stuff hackers do.
And you could make the case that these are the kind
of people you might want as an intelligence community,
people who know how to subvert systems, who play play with fonts, and rather than a kind of strictly bureaucracy, which doesn't have the kind of room or space for someone like that.
It just doesn't fit. I mean, I also think you can see this one view, which is, you know, he's just an aggrieved worker. The other view is he has got an ideology here. You can see from these times of these chat logs that he had pretty deeply held libertarian
views. So libertarian believing in the freedom of the individual, that government is a problem and
government should largely get out of the way of the individuals. He's not super party political,
but the politician around this time he seemed most close to and whose views he liked most was
Senator Ron Paul, who is this libertarian
figure, free market, anti-socialist, anti-big government, anti-foreign intervention, anti-surveillance.
That seems to be Snowden's worldview. It's interesting. He has some hopes for Obama who
comes in but then comes in like him. Interestingly enough, a book from the journalist, Luke Harding,
suggests that one of the reasons is because Obama wanted to ban assault weapons.
And Snowden is a kind of constitutionist.
He wants the second amendment.
Yeah, he wants the right to bear arms.
So you get a picture of someone who is also motivated by a certain set of beliefs.
And we'll come back to how significant they are and how they play.
But you're right, by 2009, he's clearly out of the CIA. One person from the spy world said to me he wanted to be Jason Bourne. No one's Jason Bourne.
Whatever reasons, he's out. Well, again, this is, I think, part of deadly sin number one of Edward
Soden. This kind of retroactive revisionist kind of fabrication because he's going to say, look,
I resigned after I saw the reality of the secret state.
I didn't like all this dirty stuff I saw in Geneva.
I didn't like how the government was spying on us.
I think, again, this is garbage.
This guy washed out because it's not like he's not smart.
I think modifying the par system, whatever, right?
I agree with you.
That's kind of hacker stuff. You do to some degree want people like that. But this is a guy who's also not able
to work in teams with people. And it just kind of makes sense actually, that you'd wash out of a
big bureaucracy with that kind of person. Hang on a sec. The fascinating thing is by 2009,
he's out the CIA, but he's still in the US intelligence community despite all of this.
So now he's back to being a contractor for Dell, the company or a company that was owned
by Dell.
And I say actually looked in scattered castles.
Yeah.
And listeners should note how many times will I say scattered castles over the course of
this podcast.
They looked for CIA had put the D-Rog in.
Okay, let's let's explain.
He's working for a contractor Dell, which in turn is working for something called the
NSA and we should explain to people what the NSA is because some people will know very
well, some people won't.
National security agency or no such agency as it was known for many years because it
was so secret.
In the UK, the equivalent is GCHQ.
So it's the organization which intercepts and collects communications
from around the world and, you know, has done it historically, you know,
intercepting Soviet radio in the Cold War, moving into the digital age is
trying to collect communications there.
They're the techies, but they're a big organization.
I mean, they're bigger than CIA, aren't they?
But perhaps less well known.
They're also, they're headquartered at Fort Meade, not too far from
where Snowden grew up.
Yes, well known. They're also, they're headquartered at Fort Meade, not too far from where Snowden grew
up.
So we work very closely with our NSA counterparts and they would come to CIA a lot.
We would go out to Fort Meade and I'm not interacting with any of the NSA people that
we're going to talk about in the story, but I'm interacting with the team that's basically
doing a lot of the intercept work in the Middle East.
And this headquarters at Fort Meade, first of all, if you look at pictures of it,
it is essentially a gigantic-
Black cube.
Black cube with an absolutely Soviet looking
parking lot around it.
And the headquarters itself, I mean,
there are aspects of CIA, you know,
we were talking about the kind of apocalyptic feel at night.
NSA feels apocalyptic during the day. And it's
because it is a absolutely, at least when I was there, like really just
decrepit place at terrible cafeteria, I'll say. And what? Yeah, exactly. But
the people are very colorful. Because, I mean, I remember one of the guys on the
team that we would interact with,
whenever we went over there,
and it could have been on a Monday morning at nine,
it could have been on a Friday afternoon at four,
he would be wearing cargo shorts, sandals,
he would wear Mickey Mouse hats and Hawaiian shirts.
Like there-
It's quirky.
It's a very quirky place.
And there's a joke that always makes the rounds
and it's a cliche because it's true that, you know, at NSA, the
extroverts look at other people's shoes when they talk,
right? Instead of their own.
There's a similar joke for GCHQ. I did visit NSA once, I went to
do an interview there, a TV interview, and it's kind of
usual, we're allowed to take a TV camera and interview the
deputy director. And you obviously have to leave all your
electronics out in the parking lot. And then we start the
interview. and so you
know it's with a very senior figure and a security guard just literally walks in interrupts the
interview and he just says someone here is emitting. What it was was some my the cameraman had not
taken off his kind of apple watch or his fitness tracker and clearly their systems have picked it
up and they were like you know that's got to go. So the world of electronics data emitting, that's the NSA.
And so here we have Snowden.
He's actually not in Fort Meade.
He's in Japan.
It's an interesting place to be working on developing.
It looks like a backup of their systems for NSA.
So again, he's not a kind of classic spy.
Is he in this role?
He's not, he's not an intelligence analyst who's actually going through the data looking
for targets and trying to work out what they're saying. He's working on the systems. He's a
systems analyst here doing a backup of all the files. So if something goes down, they can still
run NSA basically. And we'll just say it's 2009. He's 26 years old. He's a contractor. He's working
for Dell. And I think, again, I'll just add in my very fact-based first sin of him as a serial fabricator
that he's going to talk about his work here as being under corporate cover when he starts
to make his revelations.
But he's a contractor at the NSA working for Dell.
He's doing this backup.
So it's not the most exciting job, but he's exploring the files because he's backing them up. So this is where it starts to get interesting, I think, particularly when it comes to his journey into taking information and releasing it. Because he starts looking at the files, you know, rather than just backing them up. And in one case, he finds what appears to be a very classified draft file, which he was supposed to delete,
it looks like, but instead, which you read, which I'm guessing is not something you're
supposed to do.
That's frowned upon.
That's frowned upon in the secret file.
But let's stand back and look at this, because I think this is the first chance we get to
look at one of these very top secret programs which the NSA was running, and which is actually
at the core of his initial revelations.
And it's a program which is best known as Stellar Wind.
That's the code name to it.
The code names, by the way, that we're going to talk about are great for this entire series.
I mean, muscular.
Everyone should note their favorites down and Stellar Wind is a great one.
It's a classic.
And so what is Stellar Wind?
Well, this all goes back to after 9-11 and September 11 attacks, the view was it exposed a failure to connect the dots between different bits of intelligence the US had, particularly between foreign intelligence, the CIA and NSA might have and domestic work the FBI was doing.
And the fact that some people linked to Al-Qaeda had come into the US and were communicating with people outside the US.
had come into the US and were communicating with people outside the US.
So immediately after 9-11, a new program is launched within weeks.
And it's something very interesting because it collects domestic phone records.
Now, what it does is not the content of what people are saying on the phone, but what's called the metadata, which is the information about the call.
So it's which numbers are connecting with which other numbers for how long and when.
And so what's being done now for the first time is that there's an order telling phone
companies to hand over all of the data about domestic phone records.
The reason why this is particularly significant for NSA to be doing this is NSA is supposed
to be a foreign intelligence agency.
It's part of the Department of Defense.
It's not supposed to spy on Americans. The reason it looks like they're doing this is what 9-11 showed was
the problem was the point at which domestic and foreign met each other because you had a foreign
plot coming into the US or people in the US connecting with foreigners. Whether it was a
legal problem or whether it was just basically intelligence agencies weren't willing or able to share, they'd missed stuff.
And this was part of the, well, we have to make sure we don't miss it again in the future.
So we're going to collect all the domestic phone records.
And then what we can do is we can analyze that database.
And if we get a number which we think is connecting to a foreign phone linked to Al-Qaeda, we
can then look at which other phones it connects to and start to trace that through.
What's interesting is it goes to NSA rather than FBI, who'd be the obvious
people doing domestic, it looks like because NSA basically a better at
computers and data analysis.
Cause I think you're going to tell me the Phoebs aren't that good at computers.
Whereas NSA are the data people.
Sure.
That's right.
And the intelligence use case for this would be, let's say the CIA, because this is what's
going on in 2001, 2003.
Let's say the CIA takes down an Al Qaeda safe house in Pakistan and collects phones.
They want to be able to look and say, okay, are those phones in contact with phones in
the States?
Could be a US person, could not be, and then be able to run that train, right?
To be able to understand who's talking to who.
And then do what are called hops to see who that person's.
And previously you didn't need warrants, would have been a more carefully controlled, but
they want to do it in a different way through data analysis.
And this is super secret, we should say.
So there is a legal authorization for this.
So it's not, if you like, illegal, you know, it's been authorized.
Why are you using the scare quotes?
Because people will question its legality and its constitutionality and all those things.
It's illegal. The congressional oversight committee is what we call the gang of eight inside
the Senate in the House that kind of really know about the oversight of the intelligence
communities. They know about it. It's illegal. Elected representatives are read into it and understand what's going on.
Normal, even well-educated Americans have absolutely no idea.
Exactly. I mean, that's the point about it is Americans do not know that their domestic
phone records are being collected, kept and stored at NSA. And you know, the authorization
for the program is locked in a safe in the early days in the director of NSA's own office with only a few
people allowed to see it. So that's how secret this program is. So I think it's worth saying
that there is a really interesting difference of opinion here about this what's called bulk
collection and its implications for privacy. Privacy for our American listeners and maybe some others as well. So these big
databases are being acquired, but in NSA terminology, they're only acquired when people
search for something and extract the data from them. Whereas Snowden's view and the view of quite
a few privacy or privacy activists is that the surveillance occurs not when people look at the data, but
when the data is acquired in the first place, when it's gathered together, that is the
point at which privacy is impacted rather than the queries of the database when something's
extracted from it.
In the Snowden worldview, this is the moment when he starts to see this stuff from 2009, where he says he starts to worry about a world in which everyone and everything can be surveilled. And his love of the internet and his libertarian views come into conflict with what he is seeing the secret state is up to.
his chronology here. I can accept that he's seen some reports inside NSA, but he's already been to the CIA IG. It's not about this. He's going to work at NSA for a few more years and never
raise any issues around it. I mean, is this part of his kind of retroactive
memoir to kind of make it look like a clean journey to the point where he leaks? Or do you really
think in this period that it started to matter to him?
I think it does because I think you can see a consistent worldview from his earliest days
in terms of his views about what the internet and what the electronic world, the digital
world represents. And I agree, it's strange that he's working in that world, but his view
is that it's somehow being corrupted by the state.
And that does also fit with his political ideology.
We do know he's got libertarian views at that time.
That's not retrospective because I think he gives money and it's known that he gives money to Ron Paul in 2008.
So he clearly does have these views.
But you are right that it is going to take a few years for him to act on them because we talked about him going into
this contractor job in 2009, but it is going to not be until 2012 that he makes his move.
And I think there with Edward Snowden right in the heart of the secret state, this person who loves
the internet, who's also had a difficult career, is ideologically driven, also aggrieved. He has now got access to some of the US and UK's most
closely held secrets. And in our next episode, we'll look at the
journey that takes him to reveal them to the world.
And Gordon, if you want to hear that episode straight away, you
can do so by joining our new Declassified Club, where you'll
get access to the entire Edward Snowden series
plus a whole host of other benefits and access to this week's bonus episode where we are going to
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That's right. Thanks for listening and we'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time and we will find out if Ed Snowden recovers from his shins once.
He's so mean to Ed. Young Ed, I'm just, I'm gonna, anyway, young Ed, come on.
Young Teddy.