| ® || 34 | HOW AMERICA LOST ITS SECRETS a retreat that qualified her to be a yoga instructor. She had been liv- ing on and off with Snowden during the previous two years abroad, including while he worked at the CIA in Switzerland and the NSA in Japan, and now she moved in with Snowden again. The twenty-five- year-old Mills posted on Instagram, “Finally in our first US place together.” She also put pictures online of him in bed with her, affec- tionately referring to him in her posts as a “computer crusader.” He worked on problem solving for corporate clients at Dell head- quarters in Annapolis. In preparation for his new corporate role, Snowden shaved off his facial hair and, with Lindsay’s help, bought a Ralph Lauren suit. His corporate clients were assisting the NSA, the CIA, and the DIA. Consequently, Snowden dealt with a wide range of intelligence officers and gave presentations on the vulnerabilities in computer security at the DIA-sponsored Joint Counterintelligence seminar. In February 2011, he attended a black tie Valentine’s Day gala sponsored by corporate members of the Armed Forces Commu- nication and Electronics Association. The guest speaker was Michael Hayden, who had headed the CIA when Snowden was abruptly © forced out two years earlier. Nevertheless, Snowden joined the cue re) to have his photo taken with the former director, a perk of the char- ity event. These dealings in no way mitigated his resentment of the intel- ligence establishment. What began at the CIA in 2009 as objections to what he saw as the incompetence of his superiors grew into well- articulated disapproval of the way the U.S. government conducted its intelligence. He found NSA surveillance particularly worrisome, later telling The Guardian, “They [the NSA] are intent on making every conversation and every form of behavior in the world known to them.” He claimed after defecting to Moscow that he had voiced his concerns about what he considered illicit surveillance to te