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Ex-CIA Director Says Snowden Should Be 'Hanged' For Paris Attacks (thehill.com)

SonicSpike writes with this excerpt from The HIll: A former CIA director says leaker Edward Snowden should be convicted of treason and given the death penalty in the wake of the terrorist attack on Paris. "It's still a capital crime, and I would give him the death sentence, and I would prefer to see him hanged by the neck until he's dead, rather than merely electrocuted," James Woolsey told CNN's Brooke Baldwin on Thursday. Woolsey said Snowden, who divulged classified information in 2013, is partly responsible for the terrorist attack in France last week that left at least 120 dead and hundreds injured. "I think the blood of a lot of these French young people is on his hands," he said.

22 of 486 comments (clear)

  1. Sounds like a psycopath. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Also, Snowden doesn't have anyone's blood on his hands. Nice try tho

    1. Re:Sounds like a psycopath. by JMJimmy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ya, especially since the attackers were communicating on an unencrypted cell network. This is a purely political statement to move their surveillance agenda along.

    2. Re: Sounds like a psycopath. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ... And cover their own asses. Afterall there has been no meaningful changes to protect our privacy in Europe from US/UK snooping. The US UK mass surveillance of France comms is still in place. Yet his mass surveillance DID NOT WORK. Terrorists still met, still talked, exchanged weapons and explosives all the while his $10 billion surveillance operation FAILED.

      People wonder why he was looking as internet browser history instead of tracking machine guns and explosives!

    3. Re: Sounds like a psycopath. by amiga3D · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The reason is that they don't concentrate their resources. They spy on everyone. Instead of concentrating on real threats they consider everyone a threat. Trying to find a terrorist out of a 100,000 suspects is one thing. Picking a terrorist out of 7.3 billion people is an entirely different thing. It's simple, they are incompetent. He should be fired with no pension.

    4. Re:Sounds like a psycopath. by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ya, especially since the attackers were communicating on an unencrypted cell network. This is a purely political statement to move their surveillance agenda along.

      You're spot on. There's a cadre of retired intel who, like aging Hollywood actors providing voice talent, get 'tapped' to emerge from retirement and give an press interview or two to drop 'venerable old spook' seed quotes that Opinion columns can churn. I really do believe these people are called up and someone says, "We have an assignment for you. Plant this idea."

      Retirees can emerge from the fog, drop their seeds and retreat, there is no unscripted follow-up. Politicians could not do this without having to field questions about their remarks at future press conferences. It is a bug in the human psyche that retired politicians are ascribed more credibility than those in power. They also become 'nonpartisan' in retirement and Opinion columnists of either party can pick up their remarks and without appearing to cross the line.

      Crisis: Snowden brand is becoming too popular, achieving folk hero status.
      Mission: Tie Snowden to Paris attacks, disingenuously if necessary. Be emotional, tactless and tearful.
      Target demographic: People who believe a retiree is 'leaking' old secrets for the betterment of man.
      Assigned to: R. James Woolsey, Jr., Director CIA under Clinton

      Remember the Clinton Administration and his hatchet-man Al Gore, who made the rounds to Congress trying to sell the idea that it was time to outlaw all non-escrow encryption and impose a single government standard? It's that Woolsey, trying to pull the Woolsey over our eyes again.

      There are others. Remember in the early days after 9/11, when Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz used practiced 'aggrieved old man scowls' to shut down questions they didn't like to hear at press conferences, leave them unanswered? And how the fawning press stopped asking those questions? The aggrieved old man bit really works, especially with young reporters.

      It distresses me to see the bumbling neocon idiots who built their entire careers on the Big Lie, disregarding their own CIA intel and deceiving the public about threat level (Documentary: The Power of Nightmares) are now being 'tapped' for Middle East analyst sound bites. Every time Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld, Chaney or Pearl are quoted the bile rises in my throat. Likewise do old Democrats like Woolsey whose attempted Orwellian schemes I, for one, will never forget.

      --
      <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
    5. Re: Sounds like a psycopath. by rmdingler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ack...he's ex-cia director. Too late to fire him.

      Exactly; he's an ex-director of the CIA. What would you expect him to say?

      "This whole nightmarish terrorist situation is all our fault, and it turns out we were asleep at the wheel."

      --
      Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

      Ernest Hemingway

    6. Re: Sounds like a psycopath. by TWX · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The news has reported that many of the attackers, prior to recent radicalization were shiftless layabouts with no particular interest in their religion and violated most of the popular tenets of it. They drank. They had sex. They did drugs. They obviously weren't praying on a schedule.

      This changed within the last few weeks to transform them from this into people willing to kill themselves. Find that catalyst and you not only find the people that masterminded the attacks but you also find the particular weaknesses that allowed these people that seemed to have nothing to do with their religion to be transformed into willing pawns for sacrifice. Maybe knowing what these weaknesses are can help societies identify hotbeds where this radicalization occurs and put a stop to it before the pattern repeats.

      I'll give you one hint, when people feel like they belong they're a lot harder to exploit. When they feel connections with their neighbors, with the government officials they elect, even to an extent with the police, they are much less likely to try to tear-down the system in which they live. That neighborhood in Brussels that's described as a major source of terrorist development clearly has something unhealthy going on if the residents do not have this connection. Figure out why they feel isolated. Is it jobs? Is it racism? Is it religious bigotry even if they aren't particularly subscribing to "their" religion? Is it feeling bad about themselves because they're unemployed while the non-Muslims are employed? Figure it out and address it and perhaps this problem will actually go away.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    7. Re: Sounds like a psycopath. by arth1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not understanding statistics is part of this, I believe.

      If a data mining program claims to identify 99% of all border-crossing e-mails between terrorists, with only a 1% false positive rate, the unthinking suit wearing managers and politicians will wet themselves with excitement.

      Now consider that there may be 1000 terrorists in the US that use e-mail.
      And an average e-mail users sends or receives a total of 10 e-mails across the border per day.
      And a (conservative) estimate of half a billion e-mails crossing the US borders every day.
      That means they'll "catch" more than five million suspicious e-mails every day, and less than 0.5% of those will be to or from a terrorist. Anyone "caught" in that drag will have a 99.5% chance of being innocent.
      Do they have the resources to investigate millions of people every day, and correctly identify the overwhelming number of false positives through other means?

      In reality, I expect the numbers are much much worse. Especially in the aftermath of attacks, where people are far more likely to mention key words like Syria, Kalashnikov, explosive, alluha akbar or Paris.

      Collecting more hay is not a good way to find more needles in haystacks.

  2. What a f@cking tool by mveloso · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hey DCI Woolsey, maybe we can blame your ass for spending too much time on sigint instead of humint. Then you can go to the gallows first.

    1. Re:What a f@cking tool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Being the ex CIA director, he needs a diversion, because if that blood is on anyone's hand it's the CIA's. ISIS is financed and supported by Saudi Arabia, which is America's lapdog in the middle east. It's also the direct result of the war in Iraq. Who delivered the casus belli for that? Weapons of mass destruction? The CIA had proof, right? Every bit of "geo politics" that the CIA has "supported" with their covert operations and propagandist lies has turned into a clusterfuck of epic proportions. So obviously he uses each and every opportunity to divert blame away from the CIA and consequently himself. These people don't believe in truth, only in manipulation.

  3. Only one responsible party by Rumagent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And that is the murdering bunch of facist, misogynist, islamic assholes, that uses bronze age stories to justify the slaughter of innocents.

    Fuck him for suggesting otherwise!

    1. Re:Only one responsible party by quenda · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And that is the murdering bunch of facist, misogynist, islamic assholes

      Oh I think we can add a few names for contributing - starting with the CIA for fabricating evidence of WMDs that lead to the invasion of Iraq, and a slaughter of civilians on a scale that makes ISIS look like a bunch of schoolboy puppy-stranglers.

      The CIA may well be nice guys compared to ISIS, but they have done far more damage.

  4. Re:How? by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's typical law enforcement mentality that makes him think anything goes as long as it can catch a bad guy. The idea that the ends justify the means. What Snowden did was reveal government misconduct, and judges are not a lot more strict and are pulling back on the anything-goes style. In other words, he feels they could have caught the terrorists if only they had been allowed to snoop on everyone. And by everyone this means everyone.

  5. In other news... by timrod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ex-CIA director attempts to prove relevance by making outrageous statements on current events, fails.

  6. Bodes Really Well for a Fair Trial by Kunedog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If anyone had any lingering hope left that Snowden could get a fair trial for the probable charges that aren't simply fabricated out of nowhere, surely this clears it up.

    1. Re:Bodes Really Well for a Fair Trial by amiga3D · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What difference would a fair trial make? He's guilty. Whether you think it was right or not it was certainly illegal.

  7. Snowden or someone else? by Hairy1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The suggestion that Snowden, in revealing the illegal practises of the US Government is somehow responsible for ISIS carrying out the Paris attack is patently ludicrous.

    But perhaps those making the accusations are trying to deflect their own responsibility? ISIS were established, at least originally, by Sunni Muslims from Iraq who had been alienated and excluded from the political process in Iraq. Without the Iraqi invasion ISIS would not exist. Didn't stop there either. In the attempt to supply the Syrian Free Army, which was in fact a number of groups including those who would become ISIS, with weapons and aid the Americans had not only given them fertile ground to harvest, but given them the tractors and machines to till the soil.

    And now the Americans complain that Putin is fighting the enemy of Assad; which is ISIS. ISIS for their part took the opportunity to take poorly defended US military equipment in Northern Iraq. Those fighting ISIS in Northern Iraq, the Kurds, have been given little support, and continue to be attacked by US ally Turkey. So how, given the facts on the ground, can the US in all seriousness try to condemn others for assisting ISIS, when without the US they would not exist?

    I am not saying the US has made ISIS do what they have. The reprehensible attacks across the world are the behaviours of morally vapid thugs who are totally responsible for their actions. Make no mistake that I have no sympathy for them. But the US cannot wash its hands of the part it has played, once again, in enabling this kind of tyrannical villainy.

  8. So, is lying to congress also treason? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If Snowden is to be punished so brutally for revealing crimes then what is in store for Woolsey for committing them?

  9. not like the CIA will accept that it's their fault by dltaylor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    70 years of incredibly stupid foreign blunders have left a large part of the world with utterly justifiable anger at the United States, and any and all allies. It's the CIA who should be hanged as traitors, if anyone.

  10. Re:Plenty people in power should be hanged.. by jcr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    islam as the root of all evil,

    So, that's why evil was completely unknown in the world before 570 AD, right?

    Get back on your meds, you tragic little troll.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  11. What US is focusing on by Parker+Lewis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What we know about Paris terrorists:
    - Not Syrian
    - Not refugees
    - No encryption

    What the US is focusing on:
    - Syrians
    - Refugees
    - Encryption

  12. Priceless. by Kevin+by+the+Beach · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1. Allied foreign intelligence provides name of terrorist year in advance.
    2. Ignore hard intelligence, because Skynet knows all
    3. SMS clear text and Facebook used to plan horrific crime

    Blame: Edward Snowden -- Priceless