“Edward has said he took his final government contracting job with Booz Allen Hamilton in Hawaii to gain access to sensitive NSA information,” wrote Jerry Markon on Tuesday. “But his father said Edward told him that his previous contracting job had been eliminated because of the federal budget sequestration.”
“In a parallel universe in which there was no sequester, Snowden might be just another contractor collecting checks, instead of an internationally notorious fugitive camping out in the Moscow airport,” Emily Heil wrote today. “So much for those theories that the sequester had little impact.”
The timing is a bit odd: the sequestration
If true, the information shines a whole new light on Snowden’s motives, casting him less as a quiet and determined saboteur of the national security state and more as a young man reeling from a job loss—though it would also show Snowden attempting to more actively shape his public image by claiming he took the Booz Allen job intentionally to secure classified information.
It would also provide something of an ironic outcome to the sequester. The legislative maneuver was loaded with defense budget cuts to leverage lawmakers into a compromise, so as to avoid appearing to sacrifice national security for budget priorities. It backfired when House Republicans didn’t flinch at the spending reductions, happy to induce the government to operate more leanly.
But whether or not you buy the U.S. government’s argument that Snowden’s leaks are harmful to the country’s security interests—a real version of the endgame the sequester was only supposed to threaten—the sequester’s potential role in causing the leaks proves that capricious budget cuts can have consequences far beyond their impact on the federal government’s
Read the interview HERE, and the follow-up article HERE.
[h/t WaPo]
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