How America Lost Its Secrets: Edward Snowden, the Man and the Theft

Front Cover
Alfred A. Knopf, 2017 - Biography & Autobiography - 350 pages
"A groundbreaking, compelling investigation that convincingly challenges the popular image of Edward Snowden as hacker-turned-avenging angel, while revealing how vulnerable our national security systems have become. In the wake of the scandal that emerged after details of American government surveillance were made public by WikiLeaks in 2013, Edward Snowden, formerly an employee of an outside contractor at the NSA facility in Hawaii, became the controversial center of an international conversation about the limits of power and privacy. Had the U.S. government overstepped important boundaries in its anti-terrorism efforts? Was Snowden's theft of information legitimized by the nature of the secrets being kept from the American people? We learn in How America Lost Its Secrets that Snowden stole a great deal more than documents relating to domestic surveillance. He also stole secret documents from the NSA, the CIA, the Department of Defense, and the British cipher service revealing the sources and methods they employed in their monitoring of adversaries. He then transported these state secrets to an adversary country, Russia, without authorization. Which raises the question: Who is Edward Snowden--hero, traitor, whistle-blower, spy? Edward Jay Epstein brings a lifetime of journalistic and investigative acumen to bear on this question and more. Retracing Snowden's steps from disgruntled tech worker to international notoriety, he seeks to understand both how we lost our secrets and the man who took them. Along the way, we discover Snowden's sometimes troubling pseudonymous writing on the Internet, as well as aspects of his private and public life previously elided. We see that by outsourcing parts of our own security apparatus to private companies in order to save money, the government has made classified information far more vulnerable to theft and misuse. Snowden, working for one of these private companies, ultimately sought employment precisely where he could most easily gain access to the most sensitive classified information. He claims to have acted to serve his country, but in his new home, Moscow, he is treated as a prized intelligence asset in the new Cold War. With unerring insight, meticulous reporting, and the pacing of a thriller writer, Epstein follows the Snowden trail across the globe, unearthing revelations that shed a whole new light on one of the most controversial and fascinating events of the new millennium."--Dust jacket.
 

Contents

Hong Kong 2014
3
PART ONE SNOWDENS
13
Tinker
15
Secret Agent
22
CHAPTER 3
28
Thief
38
Crossing the Rubicon
44
Hacktivist
49
PART THREE THE GAME OF NATIONS
195
The Rise of the NSA
197
The NSAs Back Door
209
The Russians Are Coming
220
The Chinese Puzzle
234
A Single Point of Failure
241
PART FOUR MOSCOW CALLING
249
Off to Moscow
251

String Puller
59
Raider of the Inner Sanctum
74
Escape Artist
81
Whistleblower
89
Enter Assange
99
Fugitive
105
PART TWO THE INTELLIGENCE CRISIS
111
The Great Divide
113
The Crime Scene Investigation
134
Did Snowden Act Alone?
147
The Question of When
157
The Keys to the Kingdom Are Missing
169
The Unheeded Warning
187
Through the Looking Glass
258
The Handler
265
WALKING THE CAT BACK
273
Snowdens Choices
275
The Espionage Source
285
The War on Terror After Snowden
291
Epilogue The Snowden Effect
299
Acknowledgments
305
Notes
307
Selected Bibliography
329
Index
333
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2017)

EDWARD JAY EPSTEIN is an investigative journalist who earned his PhD under James Q. Wilson and Edward Canfield at Harvard. He has taught political science at MIT and UCLA. He is the author of many books, including Inquest: The Warren Commission and the Establishment of Truth, News From Nowhere: Television and the News, and Dossier: The Secret History of Armand Hammer, and has written for publications including The New York Review of Books, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, and The New Yorker.

Bibliographic information