Trump says considering pardon for former NSA contractor Snowden

Reflecting on his decision to go public with classified information, Edward Snowden says, "The likeliest outcome for me, hands down, was that I'd spend the rest of my life in an orange jumpsuit, but that was a risk that I had to take."

US President Donald Trump says he is considering pardoning former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden who is currently living in Russia after he leaked secret documents about US telephone and Internet surveillance in 2013.

 Trump’s comments followed his interview with the New York Post earlier this week in which, while commenting on Snowden, he said, “there are a lot of people that think that he is not being treated fairly” by US law enforcement.

Snowden, who is wanted in the US to face a criminal trial on espionage charges, was granted asylum by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

During his tenure at NSA, he downloaded tens of thousands of classified top secret US documents and then published them. The documents exposed the huge extent of US spying across the world, on friends and foes alike.

The publication of the documents dealt a heavy blow to the US government, causing it an international scandal.

The new comments by Trump represents a sharp reversal as the Republican president called Snowden “a spy who should be executed” after he leaked the documents.

However, on Saturday, he told reporters that “I’m going to start looking at it,” referring to a possible pardon.

He went on to say that he believed Americans on both the political left and the right are divided on the former contractor.

“It seems to be a split decision,” he said at a news conference at his Bedminster, New Jersey golf club. “Many people think he should be somehow treated differently. And other people think he did very bad things.”

Snowden was praised by many, including civil libertarians, for disclosing the extraordinary scope of America’s digital espionage operations.

In 2016, the German city of Kassel, for instance, awarded him for the “courage and conscience” that he showed in spilling US classified information.

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