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'Inside WikiLeaks' Portrays Assange As 'Emperor'

KIRSTEN GRIESHABER   02/10/11 11:48 AM ET   AP

Inside Wikileaks
WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, arrives at Belmarsh Magistrates' Court in London, Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2011. Assange is accused of sexual misconduct by two women he met during a visit to Stockholm last year and Swedish authorities want him extradited to face the allegations. A two-day hearing that begun Monday will decide Assange's legal fate. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

BERLIN — A tell-all book by a former WikiLeaks insider casts founder Julian Assange as an "emperor" who has become just the kind of public figure he is trying to expose.

Daniel Domscheit-Berg, the former WikiLeaks spokesman who left the secret-spilling website after a bitter dispute with Assange, writes about his euphoria at the website's spectacular rise as well as his disillusionment with a leader he describes as delusional and power-crazed.

He said one of his motives for writing the book was that he wanted to clarify the events that led to the falling-out.

"We need to set the record straight before Assange turns into a cult, a pop phenomenon," Domscheit-Berg told reporters in Berlin on Thursday at the launch of his book.

The Associated Press reviewed a German-language copy of "Inside WikiLeaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website" ahead of its release Friday in 16 countries.

"WikiLeaks turned pale computer geeks, whose cleverness otherwise would not have been noticed by anybody, into public figures, who put fear into politicians, CEOS and military chiefs around the world," he writes in the book.

But Domscheit-Berg, who last month launched a rival website called OpenLeaks, also traces the arc of an increasingly fraught relationship that eventually erupts into conflict.

WikiLeaks' original mission to "control the power executed behind closed doors and to create transparency, where it was being denied" deteriorated into a situation in which the group was "gradually corrupted by power and secrecy itself," he writes.

Disputes sprang up over money, lack of transparency and Assange's belief in conspiracy theories, he claims. Assange was certain "we wouldn't be safe walking down the street, that our mail and suitcases were being X-rayed, that we had to go underground ... and needed bulletproof vests," the book says.

The breakup came in September after Domscheit-Berg challenged Assange's leadership qualities. The former spokesman – who then went by the alias Daniel Schmitt – claims his rebellion got him kicked out of WikiLeaks, something Assange has publicly denied.

"A leader communicates and cultivates trust in himself. You are doing the exact opposite. You behave like some kind of emperor or slave trader," Domscheit-Berg recounts telling Assange in their final computer chat. WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson said he had no immediate comment.

Domscheit-Berg, a 32-year-old German computer scientist, told the AP in an interview that "Assange became exactly the kind of person he despised and wanted to fight."

"It is therefore very important that it is made clear how everything went down and why, in the end, we decided to leave the project – and that is something that Mr. Assange has described the wrong way," Domscheit-Berg said.

Domscheit-Berg's book will be released in Germany, Australia, South Korea, Britain and 12 other European countries on Friday. In the United States, it will be published four days later, on Feb. 15. Other countries including Japan, Brazil, and Russia plan publication soon.

WikiLeaks touched off an international uproar in April 2010 when it released a classified helicopter video showing a U.S. attack that killed two Reuters journalists in Iraq. It later began publishing tens of thousands of U.S. military documents on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and classified U.S. diplomatic cables whose revelations angered and embarrassed the U.S. and its allies.

Assange told a London audience in September that the German had been suspended – although he declined to go into details. He denied there had been a dispute over his management. "It was about a different issue," Assange said. He refused to elaborate.

Several reporters from The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel, who were involved in their news outlets' publication of leaked WikiLeaks documents, have also written books on their dealings with the group and Assange that will be published soon or are already available.

Assange, who is currently fighting an extradition trial in London over rape allegations in Sweden, is also planning to publish his own version of events in April.

Domscheit-Berg has not publicly commented on the rape allegations against Assange, but in the book he describes the Australian's attraction to women as "very simple: 22. They should be young. And it was important to him that they did not challenge him."

In launching OpenLeaks, Domscheit-Berg said he planned to give whistleblowers more control over the secrets they spill. He has criticized WikiLeaks for both receiving documents and aggressively vetting how they are presented to the public.

"At OpenLeaks, we want to learn from the mistakes that we made during the last three years at WikiLeaks," he said.

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BERLIN — A tell-all book by a former WikiLeaks insider casts founder Julian Assange as an "emperor" who has become just the kind of public figure he is trying to expose. Daniel Domscheit-Berg, ...
BERLIN — A tell-all book by a former WikiLeaks insider casts founder Julian Assange as an "emperor" who has become just the kind of public figure he is trying to expose. Daniel Domscheit-Berg, ...
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07:49 PM on 02/14/2011
when power doesnt want to discuss something always diverts to ad hominem campaigns and physical violence against the 'carriers of bad news. Bottom line is they 'work'.
www.cerntruth.com
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
12:36 PM on 02/13/2011
Feel free to upload your classified documents to this guy. You can rest assured that he will protect your anonymity.

Did I mention he wrote a tell-all book?
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bascombe
Send the kids off to die, bleed their country dry.
09:13 AM on 02/12/2011
keeping the smears going:
http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/02/11/campaigns/
no truth-teller will escape their view or their wrath.
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SmolderingRuin
"All governments lie!" I.F. Stone
02:48 AM on 02/12/2011
Bitter? Jealous? Launching a new website and hyping a book? Daniel is hardly a disinterested party.
02:39 PM on 02/13/2011
so those people who have absolutely no direct information on the subject are ready to claim the guy is lying?
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SmolderingRuin
"All governments lie!" I.F. Stone
10:27 PM on 02/13/2011
Pointing out the obvious fact that he is not a disinterested party is not the same as "claiming the guy is lying". Get a grip.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
08:25 AM on 02/11/2011
Hey HuffPO. There is more happening in the world than just Egypt. Important as that is and yes I am following that coverage. You should be reporting on this like the BBC has.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-12427839
08:11 AM on 02/11/2011
Australian Broadcasting News Corporation is reporting that in his 20's Julian Assange used his computer skills to assist police in breaking up child porn rings and catching peadophiles.
That is the type of person the US government is attacking.
02:41 PM on 02/13/2011
no, the US government is attempting to limit the damage caused by reckless publishing of stolen classified documents and prevent it from happening again. but so many people here are breathtakingly naive thinking the government should not have secrets.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stefan Bast
Just a punk from Hamburg, Germany.
07:13 AM on 02/11/2011
Assange was the perfect celeb, to remind the US, that the outside world is not all about us vs them. He is a fighter, that has been through one too many battles, but he is a honorable person.
Without his truly terrifying presence, the US Media would have never started to debate, wether transparency is a choice or a reality.

Free Private Mannings, end infinite detentions. return law and order to the courtroom. And take care of those bought judges.

Btw, mr. Obama, torture is even torture, when an american does it, for a supposedly good reason. And America has an international obligation to prosecute torture.
There will have to be a good idea, how to solve that legal problem, before your second term ends.
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TheBaffler
a long the riverrun
03:53 AM on 02/11/2011
The only ones turning Assange into a cult figure are his detractors. The ones whining about how much attention he personally gets are the ones giving him the most attention.

Those who admire Assange are more interested in WikiLeaks and in the substance of the lies and crimes it exposes. No one worships Assange.

The defenders of privilege and of power have sought to defame Assange in order to discredit the work WikiLeaks does. They've made him as publicly known as he now is. He never sought this publicity.
09:53 PM on 02/10/2011
This book appears to be one guy's attempt to settle old scores and get a nice pay day in the process. Still, that being said, I think the allegations are probably true. Assange does display a great deal of callous, ideological self-righteousness. And this is coming from numerous independent sources who've dealt with him. It's my hope that Wikileaks ditches Assange and reforms itself to take a little more regard for other individual's safety and well-being. The group has provided some useful information. I just wish they'd do it with a bit more responsibility and integrity.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mandalay007
09:59 PM on 02/11/2011
you and I are on the same planet on this guy----------oddly, a lot of people on this site seem to think he is super hero--------
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cye
05:41 AM on 02/12/2011
Thank you. At last some balance on this issue. The issue of responsibility is one that I think gets lost in this entire debate. As you say, WikiLeaks has released a lot of valuable information - but there seems to be this idea that the release of all and any classified information is inherently good. I don't know that we can be so absolute about it. Some of the information released (esp. diplomatically sensitive information) was of no real "public interest" value and served only foment resentment and embarrassment between governments. But amongst all the cheering and criticism of Assange and Wikileaks, there seems to be no room in the debate for these kinds of concerns.
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Susan Shaffer
tell me from the beginning
08:03 PM on 02/10/2011
if danny dombschitt has the transcript of his conversation with assange then that will prove who is telling the truth
04:24 PM on 02/10/2011
The security companies that are attacking Assange should be shut down by force.  We should organize protests that block their entrances and make sure they cannot function.
04:19 PM on 02/10/2011
There are certain security companies that are actively trying to demonize Assange and ruin his reputation.  They are doing it through misinformation and by bribing former and current Wikileaks employees.  They are trying to divide and smash the organization.  All attacks on Assange should be viewed with extreme suspicion.
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SusanElizabeth1949
My micro-bio may be empty but my head isn't.
05:34 PM on 02/10/2011
This sounds exactly like the thinking and views expressed within so many cults.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan Shaffer
tell me from the beginning
08:05 PM on 02/10/2011
i know! a friend of mine got sucked into scientology. i tried to help her get out and honestly!! talk about psychos thinking everyone is out to get them.
i told my friend to walk away and forget them.
she worried about a letter that was written.....all too complicated than it needed to be
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ElBruce
08:49 PM on 02/10/2011
Except that the powerpoint slides of this plan have been publicized.

http://www.thetechherald.com/article.php/201106/6798/Data-intelligence-firms-proposed-a-systematic-attack-against-WikiLeaks
fredgladys
Your Micro-bio is empty, I know, stop nagging.
03:48 PM on 02/10/2011
Maybe I'm too cynical but if those in power can't get Assange legally the next move might be to do a little character assassination to try to destroy his credibility.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cye
05:44 AM on 02/12/2011
The information is already in the public domain. There is little the authorities can do about that. Destroying Assange now would be like closing the stable door after the horse has bolted. What would be the point?
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ls1z28chris
We're on the side of the demons, chief.
02:55 PM on 02/10/2011
"We need to set the record straight before Assange turns into a cult, a pop phenomenon."

Has this guy seen the comments on HP? Too late.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Susan Shaffer
tell me from the beginning
08:06 PM on 02/10/2011
they didn't come from me
anyway, hp is just one site, it isn't the whole world
or though some people might believe it to be
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donnyraindog
Hi Mom!
10:40 PM on 02/10/2011
the two ouickest ways to lose friends here is defend bush or attack assange
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ls1z28chris
We're on the side of the demons, chief.
12:49 PM on 02/12/2011
Both of them are hacks.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
12:37 PM on 02/13/2011
You do realize that all those little avatars on your profile page aren't really your "friends", right?