
The White House on Tuesday stopped short of branding Edward Snowden, a 29-year-old American who leaked details of a vast US telephone and internet surveillance programme, a “traitor”.
US President Barack Obama’s spokesman Jay Carney fended off all questions about Snowden, who was last known to be in Hong Kong, on the grounds that a legal investigation was under way.
“I won’t characterise him or his status. We believe it is the appropriate posture to take to let the investigation move forward,” he said.
Carney said the White House would leave it up to the FBI and the Department of Justice to make judgments on Snowden’s conduct.
Asked what government employees who believe they detect waste or illegal activity in government programs should do, Carney said the Obama White House has introduced new protections for so-called whistle-blowers.
He said that Obama had signed an executive directive requiring protections for intelligence community whistle-blowers who use “appropriate” channels – implicitly not leaks to newspapers as Snowden did – to expose alleged wrongdoing.