TED 2014 Two days after NSA leaker Edward Snowden addressed the latest TED
technology jamboree in robot form, the US intelligence agency has also
made an appearance – with deputy director Richard Ledgett dialing in by
video link.
Ledgett said the NSA's core problem was that it was
lousy at PR, rather than that it was invading innocent people's privacy.
The bigwig said that the former US President James Madison, one of the
key writers of the US Constitution, "would be proud" that the checks and
balances he helped install still worked in today's digital age.
"I think there's an amazing arrogance to the idea that [Snowden]
knows better than the framers of the Constitution how the government
should be designed to work in terms of separation of powers," he told TED 2014. "That's extremely arrogant on his part."
Snowden
gives whistleblowers a bad name, Ledgett asserted, and the techie
should have gone to his line manager if he had complaints. This ignores
the fact that, as a contractor, he had no whistleblower protection under
the law, not to mention was aware of what happened to other NSA staff
who complained – such as William Binney, who was arrested at gunpoint in
his shower and spent five years in legal limbo.
Ledgett said that
the documents Snowden was responsible for leaking were full of
"half-truths and distortions." As a result, the intelligence-gathering
facilities of the US had been damaged.
"The actions that he took
were inappropriate because of the fact that he put people's lives at
risk in the long run. The capabilities [of the NSA] are applied in very
discreet, measured, controlled ways," the deputy director said.
"Unconstrained
disclosure of those capabilities means that as adversaries see them,
they move away and say, 'Hey, I might be vulnerable to that.' We've seen
that. The net effect is our people who are overseas…are at greater risk
because we don't see the threats that are coming their way."
Ledgett
did acknowledge that he could see why the sudden exposure of the
abilities of the agency to intercept and record the metadata and content
of people's private communications worldwide. But that was a PR issue
the agency could address, he said.
"There are things that we need
to be transparent about, our authorities, our oversight," he said. "We
at NSA have not done a good enough job at that, and I think that's why
this has been so sensational in the media."
He claimed the agency
only slurped the communications of targeted individuals, and said that
the vast majority of people who weren't on the target list had nothing
to fear from his spies. This is contradicted by NSA inspector general Dr
George Ellard, who found plenty of cases where NSA staff had abused their privileges, even going so far as to check out potential dates in so-called LOVEINT operations.
“We
don’t sit there and grind out metadata profiles of average people. If
you’re not connected to one of those intelligence targets, you’re not of
interest to us,” Ledgett insisted.
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