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WikiLeaks Cablegate LIVE Updates

First Posted: 11/30/10 11:49 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:15 PM ET

Wikileaks

WikiLeaks' Cablegate, the latest dump of confidential documents by WikiLeaks, has the website prominently in the news again this week. (Scroll down for live updates.)

WikiLeaks began releasing the first set of 250,000 secret State Department documents on Sunday, including cables related to Iran and its nuclear program, leading to numerous reactions.

HuffPost's Sam Stein reports that the Obama administration is not ruling out taking legal action against WikiLeaks after the online site's latest leak. In July, WikiLeaks released more than 90,000 Afghan war logs. Iraq war logs were released last month. WikiLeaks Founder Julian Assange says the next dump will target a U.S. megabank.

We'll be live blogging the latest WikiLeaks updates below. Send us story tips anytime at world@huffingtonpost.com.


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According to a recently released cable, a facility in Yemen holding nuclear material was left unsecured after its one guard was removed and a security camera broke, according to the AP. The cable quoted one official as saying, "Very little now stands between the bad guys and Yemen's nuclear material."

Assange was asked about the decision to release cables that identified sites vulnerable to terrorist attacks when Katie Couric interviewed him on Friday. Assange told her:

We are an organization that attempts to promote human rights by revealing abuses that are concealed. So, of course we never want to be in a position where through our releases we are actually causing harm to indivduals, or at least more harm than the good we are causing.

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In case you missed any WikiLeaks cable highlights last week, here's a quick guide to get you up to speed. It covers Tom Cruise on Scientology, Castro on Obama and everything in between.

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The Today show interviewed WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on Friday after his release from prison on bail Thursday afternoon. During the interview, he described his recent court appearances as "not the beginning of the end, rather it is merely the end of the beginning."

Assange confirmed that he has heard there will be espionage charges filed against him in the U.S., and denied knowing Bradley Manning, the U.S. Army intelligence analyst accused of providing WikiLeaks with information. The U.S. is allegedly putting together a case against Assange on conspiracy charges.

You can watch the entire interview here.

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Assange is reportedly preparing himself for a U.S. indictment on espionage charges. Reports Sky News:

Speaking upon arrival at the Suffolk country mansion where he was bailed to by the High Court, he said the American legal action "had yet to be confirmed" but was "very serious".

Sky also quotes Assange as saying, "We have heard today from one of my US lawyers that there may be a US indictment for espionage for me coming from a secret grand jury investigation."

The New York Times reported yesterday that the U.S. is trying to build a conspiracy case against Assange, focusing on proving that he "encouraged or even helped" Bradley Manning with the leak.

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The Independent has an interesting article by Vaughan Smith, the man sheltering Assange after his release. Smith describes how he came to the decision to open what is being called his "British country mansion" to the beleaguered WikiLeaks founder. Writes Smith about:

They made him out to be the internet’s Bin Laden. The likeness might be poor, but that was OK because the colours were familiar and bright. Now the focus is on Julian’s court fight, instead of on the opaque political system that his leaks have exposed. The charges that Julian faces have already been dropped once, from a Swedish court that even Glenn Beck, the incendiary US Fox News TV host, rubbishes.

Julian is different to most of us. He is clever and obsessive but also funny and self-deprecating. But he has started something seismic but inevitable, a consequence of modern communications that cannot be stopped.

You can read Smith's entire piece here.

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Now that he's free, what will the WikiLeaks founder do next? Cast your vote for Assange's next move here.

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Reuters is reporting the text of Assange's speech outside the court. It reads in part:

During my time in solitary confinement in the bottom of a Victorian prison I had time to reflect on the conditions of those people around the world also in solitary confinement, also on remand, in conditions that are more difficult than those faced by me. Those people also need your attention and support.

And with that I hope to continue my work and continue to protest my innocence in this matter and to reveal, as we get it, which we have not yet, the evidence from these allegations. Thank you.

You can listen to Assange speaking on a live audio recording here.

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Assange has emerged from court and is speaking. According to Sky News, he declared, "It's great to smell the fresh air of London again."

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Julian Assange has just been released, the Guardian is reporting.

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ABC is reporting that Assange's paperwork the only possible holdup to his release, is complete. @jimsciuttoABC tweeted:

We're told Assange's paperwork is complete and going to court clerk now

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Christine Assange said outside the courthouse that "I had faith that the British justice system would do the right thing... and that faith has been confirmed," according to CNN. The report also states that she "'could not wait' to see him 'and to hold him close.'"

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High Court Justice Duncan Ouseley ordered Assange free on bail because he had a compelling reason to return to court. Assange will now be released to an English "country mansion." Reports the AP:

Prosecutors had argued there was a risk the 39-year-old Australian, who faces sex-crimes allegations in Sweden, would abscond if he was freed. But Ouseley said if Assange fled "he would diminish himself in the eyes of many of his supporters" – and make famous backers like filmmaker Michael Moore look foolish.

"I don't accept that Mr. Assange has an incentive not to attend (court)," Ouseley said. "He clearly does have some desire to clear his name."

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According to Guardian correspondent Vikram Dodd, Assange may not be released until tomorrow. Dodd reports the hold-up revolves around the surety documents. Many well-known figures pledged to provide bail for the WikiLeaks founder, but they must now physically go to a police station to fill out the official documentation, reports Dodd.

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You can hear an audio report on the decision from Guardian correspondent Luke Harding here. In the audio update, Harding says:

"I would expect him to be freed. Whether that takes hours or a little bit longer, I don't know, but it seems that he's going to be out."

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A British judge has denied the bail appeal, meaning that Assange will be freed, according to the Guardian.

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WikiLeaks' Cablegate, the latest dump of confidential documents by WikiLeaks, has the website prominently in the news again this week. (Scroll down for live updates.) WikiLeaks began releasing the ...
WikiLeaks' Cablegate, the latest dump of confidential documents by WikiLeaks, has the website prominently in the news again this week. (Scroll down for live updates.) WikiLeaks began releasing the ...
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08:36 AM on 12/17/2010
''the focus is on Julian’s court fight, instead of on the opaque political system that his leaks have exposed.''

That is one way to control history's narrative.
11:49 PM on 12/16/2010
Free Assange!!
08:25 AM on 12/16/2010
Harding says:
"I would expect him to be freed. Whether that takes hours or a little bit longer, I don't know, but it seems that he's going to be out."

Being tethered to a GPS tracker for surveilance and under house-arrest after curfew and having to report to the police station once a day is hardly being free. I would restate that to being out of jail, but, not free.
08:08 AM on 12/16/2010
''Justice Department officials are trying to find out whether Mr. Assange encouraged or even helped the analyst, Pfc. Bradley Manning, to extract classified military and State Department files from a government computer system.''

Nobody needs help to copy readily available files to a CDROM and thumb-drive. But, Assange probably helped in ways to securely receive them once these files were extracted, which is probably not an offense. WikiLeaks helps all its informants/whistleblowers get their files to them in a secure manner using TOR Onion Routing. So, given that that probably won't stick they will attempt to get Assange on the selling of stolen property, except that WikiLeaks doesn't sell, it gives away. But most of the news outlets he forwarded these leaked cables are commercial news entities, meaning that these charges would apply more to them. Except that it could be argued that the Pentagon papers were analogously ''stolen''/leaked and teh New York Times won that case which establishes a precedent for these charges not sticking either.

What the justice department will probably do is try to make Assange's life as difficult as possible while other entities may concentrate on making life impossible if they get the chance.
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multidoc
Re-animating the dead since 1922
01:48 PM on 12/14/2010
North Korea wants Eric Clapton?
09:40 AM on 12/14/2010
''Assange guards his privacy so ferociously that when he turned himself in to British police in connection with the Swedish sex case, he refused to be fingerprinted, photographed or swabbed for a DNA sample.''

GOOD FOR HIM! Would be nice if others took a stance against biometric fingerprinting of the accused. Whatever happened to innocent until proven otherwise?? IMHO, the State is going overboard with its use of biometric profiling. To the extent that, In accordance with WikiLeaks disclosed cables, State Department ''diplomats'' were following CIA directives to take biometric samples of the UN Secretary General and other UN diplomats. For what reason?? That has yet to be disclosed. And these people weren't even charged or accused of anything, yet we do this. IMHO, this is a violation of ones person without their consent.
09:27 AM on 12/14/2010
What comes to mind is US officials have immunity and impunity in international criminal areas.

In the case of US soldiers ki||ing two journalists in 2003, WikiLeaks cables show that the US fought to suppress charges in the Spanish court, also saying: ''the US has taken the position that its soldiers are not liable to foreign jurisdictions, particularly when carrying out their duties in war zones.''

This is a typical case of do as I say and not as I do: The US invaded the Republic of Panama and brought its leader, General Manuel Antonio Noriega to US justice and recently extradited him to France where he is being tried for the same infractions as he just finished serving in the US under US law. And now with the attempt to hunt down and apprehend Julian Assange for laws he might have broken in the release of the secret documents; and if they can't find any laws, the US is willing to amend its laws to see fit. Meanwhile there are two Interpol warrants for the arrest of Dick CH3N3Y and nothing is being done in the US about it as well as I'm sure the US won't permit for foreign agents to capture Mr. CH3N3Y in the same manner as Noriega and Assange to bring him to justice.
09:27 AM on 12/14/2010
In an unprecedented turn, the family of one of the journalist cameramen that were killed in Iraq has asked that the cables released by WikiLeaks be admissible in court to show the undue influence the US had with the Spanish government to have these charges dropped. This is the first time that Wikileaks information is used in court, but probably not he last. The accused now also include members of the Spanish government mentioned in the WikiLeaks disclosures as having colluded with the US diplomats including Condi Rice.

For more info, please see:
http://news.google.com/news/search?aq=f&pz=1&cf=all&ned=us&hl=en&q=Relatives+of+Spanish+cameraman+killed+in+Baghdad+use+WikiLeaks+to+press+for+justice
09:21 AM on 12/14/2010
''The AP is reporting that cables claim Brazil is vulnerable to terror attacks due to cumbersome procedures related to shooting down aircraft.''

...like the one we probably shot down over Pennsylvania: Flight 93.

Connecting the dots. :T
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ver1tas
One nation under surveillance.
05:34 PM on 12/12/2010
Comment removed by the US government.
08:06 AM on 12/10/2010
A group who refers to itself as Anonymous has as taken credit for a recent string of high-profile cyber attacks against the websites of businesses, banks and politicians that have either spoken out against or stopped doing business with WikiLeaks.

He also said the group was not responsible for any coordinated attacks or hacks on Sarah Palin, although she claims to have been a target.

“We don’t really care about Sarah Palin that much, to be honest. I don’t really know what she’s trying to accomplish or what attention she is trying to gain. We personally don’t care about Sarah Palin,” he added.

http://rt.com/usa/news/anonymous-wikileaks-hackers-assange
08:36 AM on 12/10/2010
In your statement, who is ''He''?

Sarah Palin said that Julian Assange should be hunted down like the Taliban.

IMHO, Palin is a hungry attention-getter.
08:45 AM on 12/10/2010
He's “Anonymous” Oilygarch.
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multidoc
Re-animating the dead since 1922
12:47 PM on 12/10/2010
I had been wondering why on earth Anonymous would stoop to "attacking" an unimportant politician like Half-Governor Palin, and was waiting for a statement from them to the effect that it was NOT they who were attacking her -- if indeed she was being attacked at all. Now here it is. Hah!
04:19 AM on 12/10/2010
I'm not at all surprised HP uisn't covering the Pfizer document leaks.

After all our POTUS just made a backdoor deal with them.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
graymatters
I carry a gun because a cop is too heavy
03:20 AM on 12/10/2010
I was people would see this for what it is. These people aren't for truth or holding governments accountable, they want anarchy and revolution.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AussieEconomist
"Curiosity is the lust of the mind." Hobbes
02:48 AM on 12/10/2010
Free Julian. F*k the extra-legal attempts to lock him up. This is the battle for freedom of speech/press of our age. I'm an ageing cynic, but there's no line being drawn here that I wouldn't end up on the pro-Assange side of.

Anyone who doesn't wish to be lied to and oppressed by their own government ought to come down in support of Mr Assange as well.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AussieEconomist
"Curiosity is the lust of the mind." Hobbes
02:04 AM on 12/10/2010
Australians are marching for Mr Assange.

http://melbourne-leader.whereilive.com.au/news/story/wikileaks-protest-kicks-off-in-city/