When it comes to Edward Snowden, it's reasonable to expect a little hard talk from former NSA and CIA chief Michael Hayden. After all, it is HIS baby that’s been shamed by Snowden’s leaks.
But hinting that there are ‘lists’ on which Snowden should
be is taking things to a new level.
Speaking at a panel discussion on Thursday, the ex-NSA director
made it clear that he’s aware of Snowden's nomination for a
European Human Rights Award.
But Hayden revealed that he’d rather see the NSA whistleblower on
a kill list than a short-list:
"I must admit in my darker moments over the past several
months, I'd also thought of nominating Mr. Snowden, but it was
for a different list," Hayden said during a cybersecurity
panel hosted by the Washington Post.
As the audience laughed, US lawmaker Rep. Mike Rogers, chairman
of the House Intelligence Committee, offered Hayden his support:
"I can help you with that," he said.
Psychopath: former CIA & NSA Director https://t.co/Ja2x3a18mj
— Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) October 3, 2013
Though Hayden didn’t specify exactly what list he had in mind, the idea was crystal clear and fits with the threatening tone of previous statements he’s made on Snowden. He has previously equated Snowden’s hacktivist supporters to terrorists, dubbing them “twentysomethings who haven't talked to the opposite sex in five or six years” and labeled Snowden himself a ‘morally arrogant young man’ who will probably ‘end up like an alcoholic’.
Regardless, this latest 'kill list' remark is the most sinister of all Hayden’s thinly veiled threats towards Edward Snowden.
The NSA whistleblower has recently made the shortlist of
finalists for this year’s Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought.
Snowden is wanted in the US on espionage charges, after leaking
secret documents revealing the US surveillance program PRISM used
to gather private data.
In August, he was granted temporary asylum in Russia, where he
currently resides.
UPDATE: Mr. Hayden elaborated on his comments on
Thursday via email to RT's Marina
Portnaya.
"The quote is correct," writes Hayden. "I was
intentionally broad and undefined and it was never a proposal."
"I never suggested he be put on any list. I simply reflected
ruminations in my darker moments," he adds.