Mon Dec 23, 2013 11:35pm EST
(Reuters) -
Former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden, who revealed
extensive details of global electronic surveillance by the U.S. spy
agency, said in an interview published on Tuesday that he has accomplished what
he set out to do.
"For
me, in terms of personal satisfaction, the mission's already
accomplished," he told the Washington Post. The newspaper said it spoke to
Snowden over two days of nearly unbroken conversation in Moscow , "fueled by burgers, pasta, ice
cream and Russian pastry."
It was the
first extensive face-to-face interview Snowden has granted since arriving in Russia in June
and being given temporary asylum there.
"I
already won," Snowden said. "As soon as the journalists were able to
work, everything that I had been trying to do was validated. Because, remember,
I didn't want to change society. I wanted to give society a chance to determine
if it should change itself."
Last week,
a White House-appointed panel proposed curbs on some key NSA surveillance
operations, recommending limits on a program to collect records of billions of
telephone calls, and new tests before Washington
spies on foreign leaders. The panel's proposals were made in the wake of
Snowden's revelations.
President
Barack Obama later tried to strike a middle ground, saying some checks were
needed on the NSA's surveillance, but "we can't unilaterally disarm.
In the
interview, Snowden denied he was trying to bring down the NSA. "I am
working to improve the NSA," he said. "I am still working for the NSA
right now. They are the only ones who don't realize it."
Snowden
left his post in Hawaii in May and went public
with his first revelations about the NSA from Hong Kong
a few weeks later. Later in June, he left for Russia
and stayed at Moscow 's
Sheremetyevo airport until the Kremlin granted him temporary one-year asylum
after nearly six weeks.
Called a
champion of human rights by his admirers and a traitor by critics, Snowden
lives at an undisclosed location in the Russian capital. The Washington Post
said he was unaccompanied when he met the reporter for the interview, and did
not try to communicate furtively. He said he has had access to the Internet and
to lawyers and journalists throughout his stay in Russia .
"INDOOR
CAT"
Snowden
called himself "an indoor cat", and says he rarely leaves his house.
"I just don't have a lot of needs," he said. "Occasionally
there's things to go do, things to go see, people to meet, tasks to accomplish.
"But
it's really got to be goal-oriented, you know. Otherwise, as long as I can sit
down and think and write and talk to somebody, that's more meaningful to me
than going out and looking at landmarks."
Snowden
said he was an ascetic and lived off ramen noodles and chips. He has visitors
and many of them bring books, but they pile up, unread.
He denied
he had loyalties to Russia
or China .
"I
have no relationship with the Russian government," he said. "I have
not entered into any agreements with them. If I defected at all, I defected
from the government to the public."
(Writing by
Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing by Ian Geoghegan)
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