Drake writes: "As an already-accepted speaker, I viewed the extraordinary pressure to block me - a week before the start of a high visibility public interest conference on cybersecurity - as a most alarming and Orwellian development and a distinct form of brazen censorship for the express purpose of outright silencing me."



Thomas Drake. (photo: Adam Berry/Getty Images)

How a Government Censored an NSA Whistleblower

By Thomas Drake, Reader Supported News

t was the head of the Australian Cyber Security Centre who finally admitted before an Australian Parliament committee that she had unilaterally directed and pressured the CyberCon conference to drop me and an academic research professor (an Australian citizen) from the University of Melbourne as speakers.

As an already-accepted speaker, I viewed the extraordinary pressure to block me — a week before the start of a high visibility public interest conference on cybersecurity — as a most alarming and Orwellian development and a distinct form of brazen censorship for the express purpose of outright silencing me.

The head of the ACSC misled the committee when she said she wanted my talk canned because of a proposal for me to participate on a panel with Edward Snowden that never went forward.

It appears she dissembled and used the apparent floating of the idea of a proposed Edward Snowden panel (for which I had NO prior knowledge whatsoever) as a convenient cover to justify barring me as a speaker from CyberCon with the heavy hand of her “higher authority” as the head of the ACSC over the conference organizers (Australian Information Security Association).

In addition, the reason she gave before the committee is not the reason given to me when I formally followed up with the AISA organizers.

In a phone call from the AISA Board director, I was told that I was no longer a speaker on the conference agenda but could still attend the conference as a delegate, and that they (AISA) would honor the flight and accommodations arranged for me many months earlier.

I followed up formally and asked for the specific reason I was dropped as a speaker from CyberCon. I was informed on October 7, in an e-mail from the Board director, that “AISA works with a conference partner in respect of CyberCon. Our conference partner has determined your presentation is incongruent with the conference.”

Furthermore, this egregious canning of me as a speaker fed right into the current debate in Australia about press freedom and whistleblowing laws because their public interest disclosure process (their legal way for public servants to blow the whistle) has been described as “impenetrable” by their Federal Court.

The current debate in Australia regarding press freedom and whistleblowing laws strikes at the heart of any country claiming it is a democracy.

The recent raids by the Australian government against major media outlets and whistleblowers have exposed the tension between openness and transparency versus secrecy and closed-door government too often hiding itself (and its actions) from accountability and the public interest.

Something has to give. The debate centers on the public knowing what the government is doing behind closed doors and often in secret in the name of — and under the veil and banner of — national security.

The dramatic Right to Know campaign on October 21 — with the redacted front pages on all major newspapers in Australia as I woke up in Melbourne before returning to the United States that very day — demonstrates beyond the shadows of secrecy, censorship, and press suppression that sunshine is the best antidote when a healthy and robust democracy is increasingly held hostage by the national security state.

Efforts from on high seek to justify the actions of that national security state under the color of public safety for more and more autocratic powers — while stoking fear and hyping the danger to society — while going after whistleblowers who disclose actions that clearly rise to the level of wrongdoing, violations of law, coverup and endangering public safety, health, and the general welfare.

What is happening in Australia is most concerning to me as fundamental democratic values and principles are increasingly under direct attack around the world from the rise of autocratic tendencies and raw executive authorities bypassing, ignoring, and even undermining the rule of law under the exception of national security and government fiat.

Australian public interest disclosure laws are also a mixed bag — a conflicted patchwork with huge carve-outs for national security and immigration. Nor do they adequately protect a whistleblower from reprisal, retaliation, or retribution.

It is quite clear that not all disclosures (even when done in the public interest) are protected by law in Australia, and the whistleblower is in danger of exposure as a result.

At the federal level, whistleblowers face career suicide for public interest disclosures. And if deemed by the government to be unauthorized disclosures, those disclosures are even considered criminal.

As it happened, my removal as a speaker from CyberCon is the first time I was ever censored anywhere.

The trend lines of increased secrecy around the world by governments does not bode well for societies at large. History is not kind.

What I do see improving is public concern regarding just how far government can or should go. People are discussing what society sacrifices in the name of secrecy and national security when too often the mantra is that the ends justify the means — and when government says to just trust us, while secret power is too often unaccountable, even to itself.

The price I paid as a whistleblower was very high. I just about lost it all and came close to losing my liberty and freedom. I was declared indigent by the court, am still in severe debt, and have no pension. My career and personal life were turned inside-out and upside-down because the government treated me as a traitor for my whistleblowing on the mass domestic surveillance program that violated the U.S. Constitution. I also exposed 9/11 intelligence failures and subsequent coverups plus massive multibillion-dollar fraud, waste, and abuse. The government then turned me into an insider threat and Enemy of the State and prosecuted me as a criminal for allegedly violating the U.S. Espionage Act.

If it is left up to the government to determine what are state secrets, then the government is perversely incentivized to declare as state secrets any disclosures made in the press it does not like. This thinking can only lead to more prosecutions of publishers to protect the state. In the absence of meaningful oversight of the secret side of government, how can the public trust its own government to operate and function in the public interest and not for special or private interests?

But then again, if the press is not doing its job holding government and the public sector to account, why should they be surprised when the public holds even the media in lower regard?

Government should earn the public’s trust and not take it for granted or abuse that trust. The heart of democracy rests on a civil society that is not undermined by the very government that represents it.

Once the pillars of democracy are eroded away, it is quite difficult to restore them. The misuse of the concept of national security — as the primary grounds to suppress democracy, the press, and the voices of whistleblowers speaking truth to and about power — increases authoritarian tendencies in even democratic governments.

The real danger to civil society in Australia is that these same tendencies give rise to extralegal autocratic behavior and state control over the institutions of democratic governance under the blanket of national security with the excuse of protecting the state.

Thomas Drake is a former senior executive at the National Security Agency, where he blew the whistle on massive multibillion-dollar fraud, the widespread violations of the rights of citizens through secret mass surveillance programs after 9/11, critical 9/11 intelligence failures and coverups hiding behind veil of secrecy and national security. In 2010, he was charged by the Obama administration as their signature case under the draconian Espionage Act for his oath to support and defend the U.S. Constitution. In 2011, the government’s case against him collapsed and he went free in a plea deal. He is featured in the documentary “Silenced” as well as the U.S. PBS Frontline special “The United States of Secrets.” In 2017, Drake received his PhD in public policy and administration. His dissertation, “Eyewitness to History in Devolution of Democracy and Constitutional Rights Following 9/11,” focused on the centrality of the post-9/11 security-driven world and the price paid by those who speak truth about the abuse of power and the erosion of our rights and freedoms. He speaks widely on privacy and security issues and the critical need to protect our inalienable human rights. Drake has a varied career background that includes teaching, information technology, systems and software engineering, code analysis, and military and intelligence experience. He is now dedicated to the defense of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.