Edward Snowden Denies Being An Espionage
Former NSA contractor, Edward Snowden has come out to deny ever working for the Russian government when he stole countless classified documents belonging to the United States.
In an interview with The New Yorker,
published on Tuesday evening on the magazine’s website, Snowden said
claims that he may have been working for the Russians as a spy were
“absurd.”
On NBC’s “Meet the Press” on
Sunday, Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Michigan, chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee, called Snowden a “thief.” Rogers said he believed somebody
must have helped Snowden steal the documents.
Rogers rejected the notion
that it was a coincidence that Snowden eventually found refuge in
Russia. But the lawmaker offered no proof that Snowden was working in
concert with Russian intelligence.
Snowden told the magazine
that he “clearly and unambiguously acted alone, with no assistance from
anyone, much less a government.” He said the allegations wouldn’t
“stick,” adding that they were false and that “the American people are
smarter than politicians think they are.”
The CIA’s Counterintelligence
Centre has been conducting an exhaustive investigation to determine
whether Snowden had help or whether someone assisted him unwittingly. So
far, the CIA and the FBI have not turned up evidence that another
country recruited Snowden to take the documents.
Senator
Dianne Feinstein, D-California, chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, also did not rule out that Snowden received assistance. “He
may well have,” she said on “Meet the Press.”
Speaking from Moscow, Snowden
said, “It’s not the smears that mystify me,” and wondered why media
outlets would report the congressman’s claims, because they amounted to
baseless speculation.
Snowden said he never
intended to make Russia his temporary home. He said he tried to go to
Cuba when the State Department cancelled his passport. He said the
United States has failed to demonstrate that the disclosures have harmed
US national security.
On Thursday, Snowden is
expected to answer more questions in an online chat and to respond to
President Barack Obama’s recent speech on reforms at the NSA. The chat
will be hosted by a group known as the Courage Foundation, which
describes itself as a trust established to provide legal support to
journalistic sources.
Snowden has accused Feinstein and Rogers of not providing adequate oversight of the NSA.
Comments