Admiral Michael Rogers

Person
Mentions
13
Relationships
3
Events
6
Documents
5

Relationship Network

Loading... nodes
Interactive Network: Click nodes or edges to highlight connections and view details with action buttons. Drag nodes to reposition. Node size indicates connection count. Line color shows relationship strength: red (8-10), orange (6-7), yellow (4-5), gray (weak). Use legend and help buttons in the graph for more guidance.

Event Timeline

Interactive Timeline: Hover over events to see details. Events are arranged chronologically and alternate between top and bottom for better visibility.
3 total relationships
Connected Entity Relationship Type
Strength (mentions)
Documents Actions
person General Alexander
Professional succession
9 Strong
3
View
person General Alexander
Predecessor successor
5
1
View
person General Alexander
Successor
5
1
View
Date Event Type Description Location Actions
N/A N/A Appointment of Admiral Michael Rogers to replace General Alexander. USA View
N/A N/A Admiral Michael Rogers replaces General Alexander to rebuild NSA capabilities. USA View
N/A N/A Admiral Michael Rogers replaces General Alexander at the NSA. USA View
2014-06-01 N/A New NSA director Admiral Michael Rogers confronts flagging morale at the agency. NSA View
2014-01-01 N/A Admiral Michael Rogers spoke at a public forum. Princeton University View
2013-01-01 N/A Appointment of Admiral Michael Rogers as NSA Director. Washington D.C. (implied) View

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019674.jpg

This document is page 186 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (authored by Edward Jay Epstein, indicated by the file name 'Epst'), produced as part of a House Oversight investigation. The text details the intelligence fallout from Edward Snowden's 2013 data theft, including the compromise of British GCHQ operations and the inability of the U.S. to track Russian troop movements in Crimea. It discusses the transition from General Alexander to Admiral Michael Rogers at the NSA and the long-term damage assessment regarding U.S. electronic intelligence capabilities.

Book excerpt / government production
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019614.jpg

This document is page 126 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (indicated by the subject matter and ISBN in the footer), likely authored by Edward Jay Epstein (unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein, though included in this document set). The text details the negative assessments of Edward Snowden's data theft by high-ranking US officials including Admiral Michael Rogers, General Martin Dempsey, and Lt. General Mike Flynn. The officials argue that the majority of files stolen were military secrets unrelated to domestic surveillance and caused significant damage to national security.

Book page / evidence exhibit
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020313.jpg

This document, stamped 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT', appears to be a narrative report discussing the aftermath of the Edward Snowden data breach on the NSA. It details the efforts of new Director Admiral Michael Rogers to address low morale and rebuild intelligence capabilities in June 2014. The text mentions comments from former directors Michael Hayden and Michael McConnell regarding the severity of the damage and the reliance on outside contractors.

Report / investigation narrative (house oversight committee document)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020304.jpg

This page, marked as a House Oversight document, details the fallout of the Edward Snowden leaks within the NSA. It describes General Alexander offering his resignation on June 30, 2013, taking responsibility for the security failures, though President Obama asked him to remain in the position for six months before appointing Admiral Michael Rogers as his successor. The text criticizes the NSA's defenses as catastrophically failed, comparing the administrative changes to rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.

Report / narrative (house oversight document)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020298.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a report or narrative regarding the aftermath of the Edward Snowden intelligence leaks. It discusses the skepticism of U.S. intelligence officials regarding Snowden's claims of protecting secrets, the assumption that Russia and China accessed the data ('keys to the kingdom'), and the role of Admiral Michael Rogers in rebuilding the NSA after replacing General Alexander. Note: Despite the prompt labeling this as 'Epstein-related,' the text on this specific page deals exclusively with National Security and the Snowden affair.

Report / narrative account (house oversight committee production)
2025-11-19
Total Received
$0.00
0 transactions
Total Paid
$0.00
0 transactions
Net Flow
$0.00
0 total transactions
No financial transactions found for this entity. Entity linking may need to be improved.
As Sender
2
As Recipient
0
Total
2

Impact of Snowden Breach

From: Admiral Michael Rogers
To: NSA/Public

Acknowledged lost capabilities but stated 'the sky has not fallen.'

Statement/observation
2014-06-01

Snowden

From: Admiral Michael Rogers
To: public

Stated Snowden is not a whistleblower.

Public forum speech
2014-01-01

Discussion 0

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity