Asylum for Snowden won't stop Greenwald from publishing more leaks

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden has indicated that he is willing to halt his leakage of US secrets, a condition for gaining Russian asylum, though the journalist who first published information from those leaks intends to continue.
    Glenn Greenwald, a journalist working with both the British
    Guardian newspaper and Brazil’s O Globo, had been in direct
    contact with the now fugitive Snowden and coordinated with the
    former intelligence contractor ahead of publishing information
    on secret online surveillance programs.
    
    Russia's President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly said that
    asylum for Snowden would be offered only under the condition
    that he releases no further information that could prove
    damaging to the US. Greenwald, however, has indicated that he
    would consider the intelligence provided by Snowden already in
    his possession fair game.
    
    “There are many more domestic stories coming, and big ones,
    and soon," Greenwald wrote in an email to Politico on
    Friday.
    
    "Given everything I know, I'd be very shocked if he ever
    asked me that," Greenwald told Politico when asked if he
    would halt publishing any sensitive information if Snowden were
    to ask.
    
    "I'd deal with that hypothetical only in the extremely
    unlikely event that it ever happened, but I can't foresee
    anything that would or could stop me from further reporting on
    the NSA documents I have," he added.
    
    On Friday, Snowden said that he would remain in Russia until
    able to get safe passage to Latin America, where he has been
    offered political asylum by Venezuela as well as Bolivia and
    Nicaragua. Comments made during a meeting with human rights
    activists at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport Friday also
    indicated that he intended to renew a petition for asylum from
    Russia.
    
    "Snowden is serious about obtaining political asylum in the
    Russian Federation," said Vyacheslav Nikonov, a lawmaker
    who attended the meeting at the Moscow airport, reports The
    Guardian.
    
Most recently, Greenwald in conjunction with several reporters with O Globo published further information showing the existence of a wide array of surveillance programs tracking citizens of South American countries.

    O Globo cited documents this week indicating that from January
    to March of 2013, NSA agents carried out "spying
    actions" via the 'Boundless Informant' program, which
    collected telephone calls and Internet data. Agents also used
    PRISM from February 2 to 8 this year, O Globo said.
    
    Essentially all of Latin America is reported to be targeted for
    surveillance, including Argentina, Ecuador, Panama, Costa Rica,
    Nicaragua, Honduras, Paraguay, Chile, Peru and El Salvador. The
    most intense surveillance according to O Globo seems to have
    been directed at Colombia, a key US ally in the so-called War
    on Drugs, as well as Venezuela, Brazil and Mexico.
    
    Comments by Greenwald to Politico on Friday suggest that the
    journalist already has a backlog of leaks to work with, and
    that any agreement Snowden were to make with a foreign
    government in regards to conditions of political asylum would
    be independent of Greenwald’s publication of that information.
    
    Meanwhile, Snowden released a statement on Friday via
    WikiLeaks, which has orchestrated his legal defense as well as
    asylum petitions, to convey that he would accept all offers of
    political asylum made to him.
    
    “I announce today my formal acceptance of all offers of
    support or asylum I have been extended and all others that may
    be offered in the future,” Snowden stated during his
    meeting with rights activists and lawyers at Sheremetyevo.
    
    “I ask for your assistance in requesting guarantees of safe
    passage from the relevant nations in securing my travel to
    Latin America, as well as requesting asylum in Russia until
    such time as these states accede to law and my legal travel is
    permitted,” he told the meeting.
    













