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The hunt for Edward Snowden and the hypocrisy of the
West<http://www.marxist.com/hunt-for-snowden-and-hypocricy-of-west.htm>
Written by Niklas Albin SvenssonFriday, 28 June 2013
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<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/other/snowden.jpg>As Julian Assange
and Bradley Manning have discovered, being a whistle-blower is not for the
faint hearted. Now Edward Snowden has become the latest fugitive of US
imperialism, his only crime being that he told embarrassing truths about
the US government.
The spy programme “Prism”

[image: 
obama-prism]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/other/obama-prism.gif>Illustration
by LatuffEdward Snowden exposed, what has been known in many circles for
years. That is, that the US government together with the UK government has
been attempting to conduct surveillance over all internet traffic. This has
been going on for some time, since the very birth of the Internet itself.
It is worth remembering that ARPAnet, the predecessor to the Internet was
developed by the US military.

Obviously, most people were unaware of this. In particular they were
probably under the illusion that governments would only spy on “terrorists”
and criminals while leaving normal, law-abiding citizens alone. This has
now been shown to be false.

All internet traffic that go through either the UK or the US - and that is
almost all traffic - is being monitored. This is the kind of behaviour that
most people would expect from China or Iran, not from a western country.
Yet, this is really exactly the kind of behaviour we could expect from the
secret service. Their aim is to help politicians, army officers and
multinational corporations to get one up on the competition. The temptation
to listen in on all of the competitor’s communication which passes through
your country must be very great.

[image: snowden]
<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/other/snowden.jpg>Edward
SnowdenFurthermore the purpose of this is also to protect against the
“enemy within”, as they see it. They often make a lot of noise about
monitoring right-wing extremists (Nazis, religious fundamentalists etc.).
Yet, the main groups they worry about are left-wing groups. In Britain, *The
Guardian* has revealed, the London Metropolitan Police keeps a list of
9,000 activists who are under surveillance. Certainly, a few right-wingers
are among them, but given that the far-right in Britain can mobilise a
couple of thousand at most, it is undoubtedly mainly trade union activists
and other people active on the left that make up the bulk of these 9,000.
Incidentally, very few of these 9,000 have got a criminal record.
The diplomatic wrangle and hypocrisy

Just like Wikileaks, the Prism scandal has caused the US and the UK
significant domestic and international embarrassment. Undoubtedly other
countries operate similar systems. Details of the Chinese, Iranian and
Swedish systems are public but with all certainty the Russians, the French,
the Germans and all the other great powers do the same thing. In comparison
with the US and the UK, however, the others have a small problem, though.
Whereas the bulk of the world’s internet traffic passes through the former,
very little international traffic goes through Germany, Russia or China.

This fact is one of the main reasons behind the recent complaints by the
German government and the European Commission. They are not keen on the US
spying on them. For it is not only enemies that the US spies on, but also
allies. The French and Germans are trying to carve out an independent
position using the European Union.

Originally, in a typical bull-in-a-china-shop-fashion, the US government
demanded the Chinese give up Snowden when he was in Hong Kong. Once he’d
moved on to Russia, where he appears to be at the moment, they demanded the
Russians release this “criminal”. This was a rather foolish thing to do.
The Russians and the Chinese do not like being treated like play things of
US imperialism and they made this very clear in public statements.

The Russian foreign minister expressed his displeasure at the tone of the
US:

“We consider the attempts we are now seeing to blame the Russian side for
breaking US laws and being almost in on the plot totally baseless and
unacceptable, and even an attempt to threaten us.”

The Chinese and Russians can’t pass up a chance of poking a finger in the
eye of the US at the moment. The hypocritical remarks of US imperialism
regarding “democracy” and “human rights” in China and Russia have now
gotten a well-deserved response. The Chinese government, which is no friend
of human rights, or any other rights for that matter, declared through its
mouthpiece *The People’s Daily* that:

“In a sense, the United States has gone from a 'model of human rights' to
'an eavesdropper on personal privacy', the 'manipulator' of the centralised
power over the international internet, and the mad 'invader' of other
countries' networks”.

Incidentally, the Hong Kong authorities have now explained that the reason
they couldn’t arrest Snowden before he left China was because the paper
work submitted to them had the wrong middle name. If you believe that,
you’d believe anything.

Vladimir Putin, for his part, also took the chance to give the US a good
kick:

“Assange and Snowden consider themselves human rights activists and say
they are fighting for the spread of information,” he said. “Ask yourself
this: should you hand these people over so they will be put in prison?” (*The
Guardian*)

Putin certainly hasn’t suddenly become a convert to human rights. Rather he
has in mind the various political opponents of his that are wanted for
tax-fraud in Russia, but are currently living a life of leisure in the UK
and the US. Two can play this game, is what he is really saying.

The US, sufficiently reprimanded, had to retreat. John Kerry appealed for
“calm” from his Russian “friends”. If you wanted to be “technical”, he
said, there is no extradition treaty between the Russia and the US;
however, there are also “norms of conduct” and upholding “the rule of law”.

What happened to human rights and freedom of speech? Usually US secretaries
of state are very keen to raise such matters. Maybe Kerry is not so keen to
mention these things as he was visiting the arch-reactionary regime of
Saudi Arabia. Or, it might be because in this circumstance, he and his
government wanted to trample all over precisely such principles.

Incidentally, on the question of the “rule of law”, the British government
recently returned a Saudi Prince to his (Royal) family. He had been serving
a prison sentence for beating his servant to death in London. Now,
obviously, under the “rule of law”, if you are a Saudi Prince, you cannot
sit in a British jail like any other person. Rather, a prison exchange
agreement was hastily cobbled together, and the Prince was returned to
Saudi Arabia after serving only one year.

The hypocrisy of these people is astonishing.
The trial of Bradley Manning

If anyone would like to have an idea of what awaits Snowden if the US gets
hold of him, it’s enough to look at Bradley Manning. After arresting him in
May 2010 for having been the source of the Wikileaks’ cablegate documents,
the US military kept him under torture conditions. He was not allowed to
sleep, he was kept isolated from other prisoners, he was only allowed one
book and one magazine, and he was constantly harassed and humiliated. This
lasted for almost a year, until the pressure became too much for the US
government and it put him in more normal prison conditions.

It seems that this treatment broke his spirit because Manning has pleaded
guilty on most of the charges. He has also accepted part of his trial to be
held in secret. Apparently, the US government has magnanimously agreed a
maximum sentence of 16 years in return for Manning pleading guilty to 10
out of the 22 charges.

Still the state is actively pursued the remaining charges. The reason is
probably to prepare the ground for a trial against other people who are or
have been involved with WikiLeaks, like Julian Assange. The latter have now
effectively been under house arrest for a year.
Scandals and the struggle for socialism

Edward Snowden, Julian Assange and Bradley Manning are not Marxists. They
probably don’t consider themselves socialists either. Still, their leaking
must be seen in the context of the broader struggle against capitalism and
imperialism.

Is it a coincidence that the scandals that are rocking the establishment
are being revealed in the midst of the deepest economic crisis for decades?
How come Snowden manages to get so much attention for saying something that
has been widely known for more than a decade? Far from being a coincidence,
the scandals that are now being revealed are a symptom of the pressure that
is building up in society. The economic crisis is manifesting itself as a
crisis of the whole regime.

The scandals are gradually whittling away at the consciousness of the
masses. They remove the mask of democracy from capitalist states and expose
the naked class rule that lie beneath. This is the real crime of Assange,
Manning and Snowden. Something the Russians and the Chinese are not condone
either. They take the opportunity to score points against the US, yes, but
they are not prepared to grant Snowden anything other than safe passage.

Things are different in Latin America. It is true, of course, that Ecuador
is a capitalist state. Venezuela, which has been aired as another place of
refuge, also remains a capitalist state. Yet, after fifteen years of
revolutionary events on the continent, their governments have been pushed
to the left under the pressure of the masses.

The US put heavy pressure on Ecuador. It has threatened not to renew a
trade treaty which is set to expire in July. It is clear that losing the
concessions would be a blow to the Ecuadorian economy, which is highly
dependent on the US for its cut-flowers and fruit exports. It amounts to
saying that unless you hand over Snowden we will make tens of thousands of
workers in your country unemployed. Now, President Rafael Correa has come
out sharply against the US, and rightly so. The imperialist bullying is
completely disgraceful. He rejected the concessions and instead offered a
donation of $23 million for human rights education in the US. This is also
a response to the millions of dollars the US pour in yearly into so called
“human rights” groups in Latin America, who in reality are reactionaries of
the worst kind. The Ecuadorian government has taken a brave stand and the
labour movement across the world should support it in this.

*As Marxists we are not surprised by these revelations about spying. Any
class society has to rely on spies, informers, corruption and deceit in
order to keep a minority ruling over the majority. We support all those who
are fighting to expose the rotten system that we’re living in. Although we
might not agree with everything that Snowden and the other whistle-blowers
say, their revelations serve to remove the illusions of the masses. It
thereby objectively prepares the ground for the overthrow of the present
society.*

   - *No more threats to Ecuador!*
   - *Release Manning and Assange! Drop all charges against Snowden!*
   - *No more secrets! Open the records of the spy agencies!*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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