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Covert Channels. Whistleblowers Who Changed History From Ellsberg to Snowden at Great Personal Cost
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- Nombre de pages143
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-45541-6
- EAN9783565455416
- Date de parution23/05/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
This book investigates how covert channels of backroom diplomacy influence the choices and sacrifices of whistleblowers from Daniel Ellsberg to Edward Snowden, exposing the hidden mechanisms that magnify personal cost and shape historical outcomes. It explores how secrecy systems within intelligence and diplomatic institutions generate recurring tensions between institutional loyalty, moral responsibility, and public accountability.
Three interconnected mechanisms drive this tension.
First, information flow patterns within intelligence bureaucracies create compartmentalized silos where analysts encounter fragmented but alarming data without broader contextual oversight. This structure can produce moral dissonance when classified operations appear to contradict publicly stated policies or democratic principles. Second, hierarchical decision making concentrates classification authority at senior levels, leaving lower ranking officials with limited channels for formal dissent.
When internal criticism is blocked or ignored, individuals are forced to weigh personal conscience against institutional obedience, transforming disclosure into both an ethical and existential choice. Third, incentive structures reward secrecy through career advancement, security clearance protection, and institutional trust while punishing disclosure through legal prosecution, reputational destruction, and exile.
These systems effectively calibrate the personal cost of whistleblowing, ensuring that leaks carry consequences extending far beyond the initial act itself. Together, these mechanisms reveal how covert diplomatic and intelligence frameworks repeatedly shape whistleblower trajectories across different historical periods. In German and broader European contexts, where debates over privacy, state surveillance, and democratic accountability remain highly sensitive, these patterns continue to influence how institutions balance secrecy with demands for transparency.
First, information flow patterns within intelligence bureaucracies create compartmentalized silos where analysts encounter fragmented but alarming data without broader contextual oversight. This structure can produce moral dissonance when classified operations appear to contradict publicly stated policies or democratic principles. Second, hierarchical decision making concentrates classification authority at senior levels, leaving lower ranking officials with limited channels for formal dissent.
When internal criticism is blocked or ignored, individuals are forced to weigh personal conscience against institutional obedience, transforming disclosure into both an ethical and existential choice. Third, incentive structures reward secrecy through career advancement, security clearance protection, and institutional trust while punishing disclosure through legal prosecution, reputational destruction, and exile.
These systems effectively calibrate the personal cost of whistleblowing, ensuring that leaks carry consequences extending far beyond the initial act itself. Together, these mechanisms reveal how covert diplomatic and intelligence frameworks repeatedly shape whistleblower trajectories across different historical periods. In German and broader European contexts, where debates over privacy, state surveillance, and democratic accountability remain highly sensitive, these patterns continue to influence how institutions balance secrecy with demands for transparency.








