NSA Closely Involved in Guantánamo Interrogations, Documents Show
The files, from Snowden, show the NSA worked daily with the CIA and military on interrogations at Guantánamo and supported renditions.
Whistleblower Edward Snowden provided founders of The Intercept with documents from the National Security Agency and its counterparts around the world. Here are the stories we were able to publish as a result.
The files, from Snowden, show the NSA worked daily with the CIA and military on interrogations at Guantánamo and supported renditions.
We combed through more than 160 internal NSA documents and found disclosures about interrogations at Guantánamo, the Iraq War, satellite-communications monitoring, the challenges of spying on the internet, and much more.
A document from the Snowden archive is described in Eric Fair’s new memoir, <em>Consequence</em>, which reckons with the abuse of Iraqi prisoners.
Agents monitored military operations in Gaza, watched for a strike against Iran, and kept tabs on drone technology.
“Snapshots” from Israeli drone feeds offer a rare glimpse at a closely guarded secret.
Voices
In light of last month's Juniper news, we examined previously published NSA documents about encryption, with particular attention to a controversial redaction, and decided that it was warranted to un-redact that passage.
<em>The Intercept</em> is posting a mind-bending spy quiz — normally not available to the public — from the archive of documents provided by Edward Snowden.
GCHQ acquired the capability to target 13 different models and, with NSA help, exploited several networks in one year.
A top-secret NSA document describes how an analyst stumbled across internal communications from the state-owned Petróleos de Venezuela, highlighting serious issues with the agency's indiscriminate collection practices.
In 2005, Costas Tsalikidis was found dead of an apparent suicide, just days after the company he worked for discovered a bugging operation targeting Greek government officials.
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