US sanctions likely on any country harbouring Snowden
26 Jul 2013
A US move to impose sanctions against any country offering asylum to Edward Snowden, the 30-year-old National Security Agency contractor wanted for leaking the NSA's massive global surveillance programme PRISM, advanced through Congress on Thursday even as Russia weighed a request for him to stay there permanently.
Snowden has been holed up in a Moscow airport for almost a month now while seeking asylum in several countries.
The measure introduced by Sen Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina, demands that the State Department coordinate with lawmakers on setting penalties against nations that seek to help Snowden avoid extradition to the United States.
The Senate Appropriations Committee approved the proposal unanimously by voice vote as an amendment to next year's $50.6 billion diplomacy and international aid bill.
Officials fear that Snowden gained access to sensitive files that outline espionage operations against Chinese leaders and other critical targets.
''I don't know if he's getting a change of clothes. I don't know if he's going to stay in Russia forever. I don't know where he's going to go,'' Graham said. ''But I know this: that the right thing to do is to send him back home so he can face charges for the crimes he's allegedly committed.''
Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua have offered Snowden asylum since his arrival at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport a month ago, shortly after identifying himself as the source of a series of news reports outlining the NSA's programme to monitor internet and telephone communications. It was believed he would then fly to Cuba. The US has cancelled his passport, stranding him, with Russia yet to authorise his request for temporary asylum or allow him to fly on to another destination.
Snowden wants permission to stay in Russia, his lawyer said on Wednesday after delivering fresh clothes to his client. It's unclear how long the Kremlin will take to decide on the asylum request.
Graham said Snowden's revelations have had ''incredibly disturbing'' implications for national security.
The Obama administration says the surveillance has foiled a number of terrorist plots against the United States. It says the public outing of its programmes are helping terrorist groups change their tactics.
The case also has sparked tension between Moscow and Washington at a sensitive time, less than two months before President Barack Obama's planned talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow and again at a G-20 summit in St Petersburg.
White House press secretary Jay Carney said Wednesday the US was ''seeking clarity'' about Snowden's status. The head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen Robert Menendez of New Jersey, warned that ''providing any refuge to Edward Snowden will be harmful to US-Russia relations''.
The relationship is already strained by a Russian crackdown on opposition groups, American missile-defence plans in Europe and the former Cold War foes' opposing views of the civil war between Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime and rebels.