You decide which seems more plausible.
I am old enough to have lived through the Pentagon Papers disclosures, when a lot of people were calling for the execution of Daniel Ellesberg. Now, only right wing whackos don't acknowledge that Ellesberg served interests of US citizens.
EDIT: I am not being critical of you. I appreciate your comment, thanks.
Compare this situation to a British citizen a few years ago who sold sensitive state secrets for money, and got the MAXIMUM PENALTY by UK law: 2 years in prison. Snowden who rightly or wrongly is acting from I believe are his own moral goals, may get the death penalty, tortured like Manning, or life in prison.
"desperately wanted fugitive"? I am curious about you, and why you use a phrase like this. Seriously, please explain your position on this.
But I'm not sure why you're confused. You disagree that he is a wanted fugitive? Or with my characterization that he's "desperately" wanted? I think the US would very much like him to return and face charges.
I am confused by responses such as yours that only consider Snowden and not the public release of information about the NSA. I don't argue that Snowden should not get a year in jail after a fair trial. I personally think he has done the world a service and should get a walk, but a minimal jail sentence would be fair.
The NSA leaks are a big deal, and I believe an opportunity for our country to get its act together. Anyway, thanks for your comment.
So, I assume that you don't agree that our government would coerce foreign politicians. I wish that I could agree with you, but I can't.
"Those who tell us to trust the US's secret, privatised surveillance schemes should recall the criminality of J Edgar Hoover's FBI."
-Barret Brown
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/jul/01/cyber-in...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/jun/24/surveill...