General Alexander

Person
Mentions
49
Relationships
16
Events
8
Documents
15

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Event Timeline

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16 total relationships
Connected Entity Relationship Type
Strength (mentions)
Documents Actions
person Kelley Vlahos
Quoted
10 Very Strong
1
View
person Admiral Michael Rogers
Professional succession
9 Strong
3
View
person Edward Snowden
Adversarial
6
2
View
person Admiral Michael Rogers
Predecessor successor
5
1
View
person Putin
Adversarial analytic
5
1
View
person President Obama
Subordinate superior
5
1
View
person Barack Obama
Subordinate superior
5
1
View
person Admiral Michael Rogers
Successor
5
1
View
person PRISM Program
Oversight defense
5
1
View
person Edward Jay Epstein
Interviewer interviewee
5
1
View
person Richard "Rick" Ledgett
Superior subordinate
5
1
View
person Edward Snowden
Subject of investigation
5
1
View
person Kelley Vlahos
Journalist quoted subject
5
1
View
person Edward Snowden
Adversarial strategic assessment
5
1
View
person President Obama
Superior subordinate
5
1
View
person Kelley Vlahos
Journalist source
5
1
View
Date Event Type Description Location Actions
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
N/A N/A Appointment of Admiral Michael Rogers to replace General Alexander. USA View
2014-06-06 N/A 45 terrorist attacks thwarted using PRISM data according to General Alexander. Global View
2014-01-01 N/A General Alexander issues warning about lost capabilities. USA View
2014-01-01 N/A General Alexander warned NSA was losing capabilities. USA View
2013-06-30 N/A General Alexander tendered his resignation. NSA (implied) View
2013-06-04 N/A General Alexander notified of The Guardian story while in Germany. Germany View

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019806.jpg

This document is a page of endnotes (p. 318) from a book authored by Edward Jay Epstein, likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets'. The notes provide citations for Chapter 14, 'The Crime Scene Investigation,' detailing sources related to Edward Snowden, the NSA, James Clapper, and comparisons to Lee Harvey Oswald. The page is stamped 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019806', indicating it was part of a document production for the House Oversight Committee.

Book endnotes / congressional document production
2025-11-19

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_019652.jpg

This document appears to be a page (164) from a book titled 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (likely by Edward Jay Epstein, given the filename 'Epst...'). The text analyzes Edward Snowden's defection, suggesting Vladimir Putin allowed Snowden into Russia not out of kindness, but to exploit him as an intelligence asset to disrupt US interests, similar to Cold War tactics. It also notes Snowden's awareness of the legal consequences he faced, citing his interest in the Bradley Manning trial. The page bears a House Oversight Committee stamp.

Book page / manuscript proof (page 164 of "how america lost its secrets")
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019648.jpg

This document appears to be page 160 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (likely by Edward Jay Epstein, implied by the filename 'Epst_...'), produced as part of a House Oversight investigation (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019648). The text discusses the timeline of Edward Snowden's potential recruitment by Russian intelligence, citing General Alexander's concerns about manipulation. It details the 'NSA Scenario,' suggesting Snowden may have been compromised as early as 2009 after leaving the CIA and incurring financial losses in Geneva.

Book page / discovery document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019623.jpg

This document appears to be page 135 from a book proof (likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein, given the ISBN and filename) included in a House Oversight Committee production. The text details the timeline of the NSA discovering Edward Snowden's theft of documents in 2013, the involvement of General Alexander and Booz Allen Hamilton, and the initiation of the damage assessment investigation led by Rick Ledgett. It tracks Snowden's movements from Hawaii to Hong Kong and the internal communications regarding his unauthorized absence.

Book proof / congressional record production
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019615.jpg

This document is page 127 from a book (identified by the ISBN in the footer as 'Filthy Rich' by James Patterson) stamped with a House Oversight Committee identifier. The text discusses the polarized views on Edward Snowden, contrasting his supporters' 'whistle-blower' narrative with the views of intelligence officials (Morell, Alexander) and politicians (Feinstein, Rogers) who view him as a traitor or foreign agent. While the page content focuses entirely on the Snowden leaks, the document metadata (Epst_... filename and House Oversight stamp) indicates this page was included in materials reviewed during the Jeffrey Epstein investigation.

Book manuscript page / house oversight committee submission
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_020375.jpg

This document appears to be page 223 of a House Oversight report (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020375) detailing the impact of Edward Snowden's leaks on NSA surveillance capabilities. It describes three specific programs compromised by Snowden: the '215' phone record program, PRISM (Section 702) which intercepted internet data, and XKeyscore which tracked digital fingerprints. The text also details Snowden's warnings regarding British GCHQ surveillance and the interception of data passing through the UK.

Government report / investigative summary
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020336.jpg

This document appears to be page 184 from a book (likely by Edward Jay Epstein regarding Edward Snowden) included in a House Oversight Committee production. It details Edward Snowden's arrival in Hong Kong in May 2013, his possession of critical NSA documents, and the geopolitical risks involved, specifically regarding China and Russia. The text analyzes Snowden as a 'single point of failure' for US intelligence and discusses the potential for hostile foreign intelligence services to access the stolen data.

Book excerpt / congressional record (house oversight)
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

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020297.jpg

This document appears to be page 145 of a House Oversight Committee report discussing the intelligence fallout from Edward Snowden's leaks. It details the impact on US foreign relations (specifically with Germany regarding Chancellor Merkel's phone), the potential sharing of 'Level 3' NSA documents with Russia and China, and the resulting loss of US and British intelligence capabilities in monitoring adversaries. Note: While the user requested an 'Epstein-related' analysis, this specific page contains no references to Jeffrey Epstein or his network; it is entirely focused on national security and the Snowden affair.

Government report / investigative narrative (house oversight committee)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020282.jpg

This document, page 130 of a larger report (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020282), analyzes the intelligence implications of Edward Snowden's flight to Hong Kong and subsequent move to Russia. It details the strategic calculations made by Vladimir Putin and Russian intelligence to accept Snowden, not out of sentiment, but to capitalize on the disruption to US interests. The text also draws parallels between Snowden's situation and the harsh treatment of Bradley Manning, suggesting Snowden knew he could not return to the US without facing similar imprisonment.

Investigative report / congressional record
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020433.jpg

This document is page 281 of a report, specifically the endnotes for 'Chapter Thirty: The Consequences for the War on Terror'. It lists nine sources, primarily news articles and interviews from 2013-2015, concerning NSA surveillance, Edward Snowden, and counterterrorism efforts. The document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein.

Book/report endnotes
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020418.jpg

This document is page 266 of a larger work, likely a report or book, and consists of a list of endnotes or citations. The citations reference articles and interviews from 2013-2015 concerning the NSA, Edward Snowden's revelations, cybersecurity topics like the Sony hack, and interviews with various sources. The footer "HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020418" suggests it may be part of materials related to a U.S. House of Representatives committee.

Bibliography / endnotes page
2025-11-17
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As Sender
6
As Recipient
2
Total
8

Investigation

From: General Alexander
To: Author (Edward Jay Eps...

Interview regarding the Snowden case.

Interview
N/A

Snowden and Russia

From: General Alexander
To: The Australian Financi...

Discussion regarding Russian involvement with Snowden and potential manipulation.

Interview
N/A

NSA capabilities

From: General Alexander
To: Unknown

Warning that NSA was losing capabilities due to disclosures.

Warning
2014-01-01

Resignation

From: General Alexander
To: Unknown (General State...

I'm the director... Ultimately, I'm accountable.

Statement
2013-06-30

Resignation

From: General Alexander
To: President Obama

Alexander offered to resign; Obama declined and asked him to stay for 6 months.

Resignation tender
2013-06-30

Resignation

From: General Alexander
To: Chain of Command (impl...

General Alexander offered to resign due to the Snowden breach.

Resignation tender
2013-06-30

Request to stay in role

From: President Obama
To: General Alexander

Obama asked Alexander to stay on for another six months to avoid resignation during the crisis.

Verbal request
2013-01-01

Resignation timing

From: President Obama
To: General Alexander

Asked him to stay on for another six months.

Conversation
2013-01-01

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