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Post-WikiLeaks, Army Now Requires Troops To Report Suspected Leaks

ANNE FLAHERTY   10/ 5/10 06:26 PM ET   AP

Wikileaks Army Rules

WASHINGTON — The Army has updated its 17-year-old rule book on espionage to specifically require that troops alert authorities if they suspect classified leaks to the media.

The revision comes on the heels of the service's WikiLeaks debacle. Earlier this year, an Army intelligence analyst was charged with providing a classified video to WikiLeaks, an anti-war organization that runs what it describes as a whistleblower Web site.

The new Army regulation, released Monday, requires that troops alert authorities if they suspect that classified information has been provided to anyone who isn't authorized to have it. It also directs the Army to create a central system to collect threat reports.

The guideline identifies media leaks as a threat for the first time. Soldiers also are required to alert authorities if classified information has been removed from the workplace.

The guidelines are much more specific than the 1993 version, which requires that troops report cases of treason or attempted intrusions into automated systems.

Pfc. Bradley Manning is charged with leaking video of a 2007 U.S. Apache helicopter attack in Baghdad that killed a Reuters news photographer and his driver. WikiLeaks posted the video on its website in April.

Military investigators say Manning also is a person of interest in the leak of nearly 77,000 Afghan war records that WikiLeaks published online in July.

The Army regulation was first reported by the Federation of American Scientists' Secrecy News blog.

Steven Aftergood, author of Secrecy News, said he was somewhat surprised to see warnings of media leaks lumped in with cases of sabotage and subversion. The changes are most likely a reflection of the government's "increasingly aggressive posture" toward keeping its secrets from the public, he said.

"It's part of a larger picture of heightened sensitivity to external and internal threats," Aftergood said.

Lt. Col. David Patterson Jr., an Army spokesman, said the revision was not in response to the WikiLeaks case "but involved a comprehensive review and update process."

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WASHINGTON — The Army has updated its 17-year-old rule book on espionage to specifically require that troops alert authorities if they suspect classified leaks to the media. The revision comes ...
WASHINGTON — The Army has updated its 17-year-old rule book on espionage to specifically require that troops alert authorities if they suspect classified leaks to the media. The revision comes ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ver1tas
One nation under surveillance.
05:36 AM on 10/30/2010
There goes another freedom...yayy!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gevan
the pilgrim has landed
05:58 PM on 10/30/2010
"Freedom" in the army has always been a relative term. But turning our military into a soviet style informocracy is a move in a direction that won't turn out well.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
06:38 AM on 10/06/2010
"Military investigators say Manning also is a person of interest in the leak of nearly 77,000 Afghan war records that WikiLeaks published online in July."

Use of the phrase "person of interest" is intended to sidestep the legal rights of persons identified as "suspects."

I don't know that it has any practical impact in this case. Perhaps use of BS jargon just continues on mindlessly out of habit even after it no longer serves a purpose.
03:30 AM on 10/06/2010
Fighting for your freedom to not be informed. Thank god for the military!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Greatest Darthfruit
So, you the brains of this outfit, or is he?
02:38 AM on 10/06/2010
WikiLeaks rules!!!!
01:38 AM on 10/06/2010
...how about cracking down on those $900 hammers and such.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gus DiZerega
writer
01:13 AM on 10/06/2010
Mr. "Let's Have Transparency in Government" seems to be a fraud.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
wyldthings
as a young man I said I'd never get old an didn'
01:07 AM on 10/06/2010
I wonder how the hero Pfc Manning is doing in Military Custody. You know it's been a while since many here have mentioned his name or offered any concern for his welfare. He's about to go to prison for the rest of his life unless he gives them other persons. I also notice Julian is having problems all over the world from his own people and I'm talking his 2nd in Command.
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01:15 PM on 10/06/2010
Why are you wondering about Pfc Manning? Are you fantasizing about him being the victim of violence in prison?

Your other posts show that you have violent even murderous revenge fantasies....

Is that part of the "freedom" you fought for in the armed forces?
12:30 AM on 10/06/2010
Is leaking clasified documents not treason?
I would like to know if it is not
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freddychef
what the heck is this??????????
01:40 AM on 10/06/2010
but not even close to the bush administration outing active NOC Agent V. Plame in retaliation to her husband op-ed piece that bush lied about yellow cake as a means to start war with Iraq.
wouldn't you agree?
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02:54 AM on 10/06/2010
Yes, agreed.
09:04 PM on 10/06/2010
Agree that is bad however, the point I am trying to make is what he did was treason.
05:10 AM on 10/06/2010
What if the documents were illegally classified to hide wrongdoing? Which, in case you hadn't noticed, is precisely what happened in this case.
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12:05 AM on 10/06/2010
Whistleblowers should have federal protection! DANIEL ELLSBERG, BRADLEY MANNING & JULIAN ASANGE ARE HEROES!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JLB98
11:58 PM on 10/05/2010
Yeah, because the last thing we need is the truth getting out. You never know what could happen if the American people knew exactly what was going on. We might not approve.
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11:52 PM on 10/05/2010
Reuters made a Freedom of Information request to get this video. The military said they couldn't find it. Once it was leaked, they said it was classified.

Come on! This is not about security.

The military believes that the lesson of Vietnam is that the public should be kept in the dark about what's going on and receive only sanitized information about war. Apparently, an informed US public is now the military's greatest "security" threat.
11:51 PM on 10/05/2010
It is astonishing that there is not even a comment about the covering up of the killing of civilians that -- at the very least -- was incredibly reckless -- and at the very worst was mur der.
11:33 PM on 10/05/2010
And where is the public announcement of the crack down on "covering up illegal activities"? Where is that crack down Mr. Commander In Chief?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Clay4bc
11:26 PM on 10/05/2010
Welcome to fascism, my friends.
01:54 AM on 10/06/2010
Exactly
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01:50 PM on 10/06/2010
Wrapped in the flag? Check.

Carrying the Cross?? Check.
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dongarb
Give Up The Ground and Embrace The Void
11:21 PM on 10/05/2010
This is good news for everyone in the army who likes to rape, kill, steal and lie and get away with it. Their lives will be better when they can operate in the dark.