Edward Snowden 若い男は、米国領事館でCIAの拠点の近くに、香港のホテルで引用されたレポートを漏洩3人
Una película de espías de serie B
El joven citó en un hotel de Hong Kong, cerca de la base de la CIA en el Consulado de EE UU, a las tres personas a quienes filtró los informes
ESPECIAL Caso de espionaje en EE UU
Yolanda Monge Washington 11 JUN 2013 - 22:45 CET
A spy movie series B
The young man quoted in a hotel in Hong Kong, near the base of the CIA in the U.S. Consulate, the three people who leaked the reports
SPECIAL espionage case in the U.S.
Monge Yolanda Washington 11 JUN 2013 - 22:45 CET
Those exposed to the world the technological guts of the secret services and secret programs that control of the privacy of communications of citizens do not usually use any of these methods to interact with their brokers or their sources. Internet is nobody's friend. It's not a journalist if the competent authorities decide to trace their sources, it is not the administration, as evidenced by the current crisis facing the Obama administration, and it is, of course, of an agent of the intelligence services of any country in the world that still use the classic preferred bank in a park to pass information to send an email or use a mobile phone.
Edward Snowden was considered a spy despite not having those stripes thereby acting as such, means away and entering could trace in his meeting with his contacts would touch it for a spy movie of B if Hollywood had opted for the script. The young expert on espionage left clear instructions for the three people who cited a particular corner of a hotel in the city of Hong Kong (not far from the base of the CIA at the U.S. consulate, by the way).
Glenn Greenwald, a lawyer and civil rights expert blogger since last year is a columnist for the British newspaper The Guardian-, Laura Poitras, documentary filmmaker specializing in surveillance-, and Ewen MacAskill, editor of the British newspaper Greenwald same-should be in the vicinity of a hotel of that Chinese territory and ask about how to get to another part of the hotel out loud, as recounted yesterday the New York Times. If all went as planned, says the New York newspaper, the source will be ahead of them, walking and carrying in their hands a Rubik's Cube.
The trio met the tax protocol and before them appeared Snowden, colorful Rubik's cube in hand. According Greenwald has reported, was impressed by the youthful appearance who was about to deliver the programs classified communications surveillance by the U.S. administration, a man who seemed much less than the 29 years that his birth certificate says he. The Guardian columnist perhaps waiting for someone with the image in his time, or even today-was Daniel Ellsberg, the man who leaked the famous Pentagon Papers in 1971 proving that the Johnson Administration had lied to the country about the progress of the Vietnam War. Ellsberg was then 40. Today sum 82 and the specter of treason hanging over his head.
If all went as planned, Edward Snowden will be ahead of the people who deliver the information walking and carrying in his hands a Rubik's Cube
"I am aware that I will suffer for my actions and for distribution to the public of this information means my end," Snowden wrote in early May, when he still lived the comfortable life that guaranteed a salary of $ 200,000 annually in payroll of the secret services and their neighboring companies. For one month, the young analyst noted that journalists who uncover their history would also be in danger by publishing it. "The U.S. intelligence would not hesitate to kill you if you think that just gets final filtration and keeps information on its unique power," Snowden wrote.
The latest computer-savvy informant put against the ropes the U.S. Government-Private Bradley Manning faces court these days by WikiLeaks-made filtration also contacted a former Washington Post reporter who offered the secrets of espionage in exchange about the daily requirements of the nation's capital would not ensure-post on a certain date and provide a cryptographic key in your website to prove that he was the source of the documents.
Edward Snowden used the codename Verax, which tells the truth, in Latin, to approach former reporter Barton Gellman Post, a pseudonym used by two British writers, one of the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries another. This second shot to fame in his time. The first died in the Tower of London.
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