Moscow says security agency FSB is in talks with the FBI over
Snowden. But the whistleblower will not be extradited to the US, a
Kremlin spokesman said, adding he's sure the fugitive NSA contractor
will stop harming Washington if granted asylum in Russia. “Russia has never extradited anyone, and will not
extradite,” said Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry
Peskov. Follow
RT’s LIVE UPDATES on NSA leak fallout Russian President is not handling the case of the former CIA
employee Edward Snowden, as “Snowden has not made any request
that is subject to consideration by the head of the state,”
Peskov added. The issue of Snowden asking for temporary asylum “was not and
is not on Putin’s agenda,” Peskov continued, saying that it
lies in the sphere of the countries’ security agencies. Head of the FSB Aleksandr Bortnikov and FBI Chief Robert Mueller
are engaged in the discussion over Snowden, Putin’s spokesman
said Friday. Responding to the question of whether the former NSA contractor
will continue harming the US by leaking classified materials
while in Russia, and if the situation is going to undermine
Moscow’s ties with Washington, Peskov stressed that “the head
of state has expressed strong determination not to allow
this,” referring to Putin’s earlier statements. “I have no doubt that this will be the case, no matter how the
situation develops,” the spokesman added. Meanwhile, the US Senate threatened Thursday that it might impose sanctions
against any country that provides asylum to Snowden, including
revocation or suspension of trade privileges and
preferences. At the same time the US State Department does not believe that
imposing international sanctions because of Snowden would be of
any use, said State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki. “We have not seen the text of the proposed bill, but we feel
that in general legislation imposing sanctions under these
circumstances would not be helpful,” Psaki shared, adding
that she is not going “to make a prediction about any step we
may or may not take.”
“Our focus in this specific case is having Mr. Snowden
returned to the United States, and we still feel Russia has the
opportunity to do that and to take the right steps,” the
spokesperson stressed. The 30-year-old Snowden has been stripped of his US passport, and
is wanted by the United States on espionage charges for carrying
out one of the biggest security leaks in the
American history. The NSA leaker has been stuck in Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport
since his arrival from Hong Kong, and remains there while his
asylum plea is being reviewed by Russian immigration
authorities. His request followed weeks of searching for a way to leave the
country, which he had intended to pass through only briefly on
his way to another destination.
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