If you're part of the U.S. national security apparatus and you torture someone to death during an interrogation, you can rest easy. Two administrations have furnished get-out-of-jail cards absolving you of responsibility for your crime.
But if you're part of that same U.S. national security apparatus and divulge to the American people information about government activities that are unauthorized, illegal and quite possibly unconstitutional, you should expect no such mercy.
Commit crimes on behalf of the government? OK. Reveal secret abuses committed by the government? You must be joking. No one has been prosecuted for the dozens of detainees tortured to death by American military and intelligence personnel — but Edward Snowden faces certain indictment if he dares to return to American soil.
What did Snowden do? Through leaks to journalists, he let us know about surveillance programs that infringe on personal privacy, often ignore the legal requirements established by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and, according to a federal court ruling Monday, most likely violate the Constitution.
Wrote Judge Richard Leon, a George W. Bush appointee: "No court has ever recognized a special need sufficient to justify continuous, daily searches of virtually every American citizen without any particularized suspicion." The mass collection and examination of telephone records "almost certainly does violate a reasonable expectation of privacy."
After stories appeared based on Snowden's leaks of classified information, President Obama said he welcomed the debate on the National Security Agency's surveillance programs. Director of National Intelligence James Clapper agreed "that some of the conversations this has generated, some of the debate, actually needed to happen."
But the debate has taken place only because Snowden exposed the program, at serious risk to his own freedom and well-being. The court decision likely would not have occurred without him, since the lawsuit came in response to his disclosures.
A few days ago, the NSA official assigned to evaluate the damage from the leak said he would consider granting Snowden amnesty in exchange for Snowden's turning over all the documents he has. But the president has no use for that option.