Snowden Derails Putin's Shirtless Summer Tour
By: Rachel Marsden
Russian President Vladimir Putin is normally trolling the global media at
this time of year by posing shirtless and engaging in various camera-friendly
summer sports like swimming and fishing. But this summer, he's being out-trolled
and is stuck answering questions about an entitled American twerp living in
Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport.
Secret-leaking former NSA contractor Edward Snowden recently attended a press
conference inside the airport's transit zone and indicated that he would seek
asylum in Russia -- well, until something better comes along. The fugitive with
a revoked passport who has yet to secure asylum said that he intends to travel
to all the countries that have thus far offered him refuge, out of the more than
20 to which he has applied to date, to thank their governments and people.
Putin must have had trouble holding down his breakfast. Welcome to the club,
Vlad. It's one thing for Putin to leverage Snowden's de facto
multiple-jurisdictional defection to stick it to the West, but it's another
thing to have to put up with the insulting shenanigans of a disloyal
opportunist.
If Snowden is to remain free, it will be strictly by Putin's good grace. So how
rude or divorced from reality would you have to be to say aloud, while on
Russian soil, that you'll take Russia's offer of asylum along with any and all
others, thank you very much, and will also be planning a world tour to visit all
the jurisdictions hostile to America that have offered to leverage your theft of
intelligence in exchange for safe haven?
Here's the thing about defectors that Putin no doubt understands as a former FSB
director and KGB chief: There are those who defect out of allegiance to the
enemy, and those (mainly fugitives on the lam) who are straight-up opportunists.
Putin doesn't seem to suffer any delusions over which category Snowden fits,
explaining to the media how Snowden's position jibes with Putin's asylum
condition that Snowden stop leaking intelligence.
"He is familiar with the conditions of granting political asylum, and judging by
the latest statements, is shifting his position. But the situation has not been
clarified yet. ... [Snowden] said, 'I want to continue my activity, fighting for
human rights. I think the U.S. is violating certain international regulations
and intervening in private lives and my goal is to fight this.'"
Right -- people with actual morals and convictions rather than just a finger in
the wind tend to be clear. Much like they are willing to face a jury of their
peers if they are truly acting out of personal conviction and objectively in the
public interest. Whatever Snowden is doing, it manifestly isn't that.
Meanwhile, everyone knows that defectors are only supposed to leak intel to
their new overlords in exchange for protection, and this guy wants to blow out
of Russia as soon as he can and go on an international tour?
Putin must be at his wit's end trying to balance all of his interests in this
affair. Does anyone believe that if Snowden was a defector from Russia, he'd be
permitted to loiter around the pre-customs area of a Moscow airport as if he
were under diplomatic immunity? An airport isn't an embassy. Pretending that it
is merely serves as a convenient rhetorical buffer for Putin while he figures
out how to balance three competing interests: wanting to stick it to the West,
denouncing treason in general, and trying to prevent Snowden from hijacking
Russia's foreign policy position vis-Ã -vis the United States.
Putin's trying to do as much as he can with rhetoric, giving himself and Snowden
the space they both need to serve their respective agendas, but apparently only
one of them is astute enough to realize it. Never before has Putin so often
spoken of "our American partners," yet he refuses to arrest or detain the
American fugitive who's been loitering in the airport for several weeks. Words
aren't consistent with actions. It's reminiscent of the 2011 Russian
parliamentary elections, after which authorities promised increased transparency
by trotting out actual transparent ballot boxes.
The rhetorical cover is the standard modus operandi of Russian intelligence. And
it should be noted that one of the "human rights advocates" appearing at the
Snowden press conference, Olga Kostina, founded the human rights organization
"Resistance" but is also a Russian domestic intelligence agent, as explained in
Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan's 2011 book, "The New Nobility: The
Restoration of Russia's Security State and the Enduring Legacy of the KGB."
Russian parliament member Ruslan Gattarov recently told the New York Times, "We
need to quickly put these huge transnational companies like Google, Microsoft
and Facebook under national controls. This is the lesson Snowden taught us."
Nice blowback, Ed -- now Russia wants access to the private data of American
companies, too.
Snowden is way out of his depth in this house of mirrors, and increasingly he
has something in common with Putin's usual summer wardrobe: They're both at risk
of getting doffed.
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN