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Michael Hughes

Michael Hughes

Posted: July 28, 2010 12:02 PM

WikiStan: Do We Want Julian Assange on That Wall?

What's Your Reaction:

Americans enjoy freedom of expression like no other country, and I wouldn't want it any other way. Yet, although most likely unconstitutional, it just seems as if "there oughta be a law," as they say, against WikiLeaks's recent actions. Because, in my opinion, nescient arm-chair security analysts with an axe to grind sure as hell shouldn't be able to declassify thousands of government documents and unfetter them into cyberspace. It just doesn't feel right.

WikiLeaks's ability to extract and publicly expose such a prodigious amount of military intelligence should make the most liberal-minded of freedom of speech advocates nervous, because not only has internet journalism fundamentally changed the nature of the First Amendment, but of immediate concern is that the lives of American soldiers will be resting upon the intelligence expertise of journalists and computer hacks.

According to some intelligence experts, there's a good chance coalition soldiers and Afghans might even die in the coming days as a direct result of the decision to expose historical military data for the entire world to see (now that we've discovered the Taliban possess heat-seeking projectiles I am willing to bet they also have internet access).

But don't tell WikiLeaks editor Julian Assange that, who scoffs at the notion, claiming his organization won't publish anything that could put anyone or any operation in danger, because they vet every item prior to posting through their "harm minimalization process."

Mr. Assange is apparently also an expert on war crimes - no need for a court martial here, as he played judge and jury the other day during his press conference in London. When asked if there was evidence that war crimes had been committed Assange responded: "thousands." This is interesting because, according to Assange, his team has only closely analyzed about 2,000 of the 90,000 reports. But I guess that's a representative enough sample for the WikiLeaks founder to make a ruling.

Though Assange's military security acumen is up for meticulous scrutiny, he's certainly well-versed in cyber-security considering that he plead guilty to multiple counts of breaking into Australian government websites. Stealing information is one thing, analyzing it properly is another - and it looks as if WikiLeaks has already failed in that regard.

According to Andrew Exum - a former advisor to General Stanley McChrystal, now with the Center for a New American Security - the military has good reason to be upset because the documents reveal specific and sensitive information about tactics, techniques, procedures and equipment. Of course, I doubt Mr. Exum was aware that Mr. Assange "harm-minimalized" the docs.

The Telegraphreported that there's potential to do extensive damage to the military's human intelligence network that's been built over the past decade because of the fear of revenge killings. This caper has now jeopardized the lives of Afghans who have provided the U.S. with intelligence, including village elders and militants who act as double agents. The Telegraph spoke to someone who might know a bit more about this subject matter than Mr. Assange:

Michael Hayden, the former director of the CIA, predicted that the Taliban would take anything that described a US strike and the intelligence behind it "and figure out who was in the room when that particular operation, say in 2008, was planned, and in whose home".

As a matter of fact, The Times of London reported this morning that the names and locations of hundreds of Afghan civilians who had worked for the U.S. as informants have appeared in the WikiLeaks documents. Reporters supposedly identified these issues after scanning the reports for just a few hours.

Essentially, employees of WikiLeaks and organization's such as the New York Times, the Guardian and Der Spiegel will be the ones determining which military documents should or shouldn't be declassified, because they know more than the countless military personnel who believed the information in said documents were sensitive enough to classify in the first place. I'm inclined to let those professionally trained perform that task.

There ought to be a law, but what is happening is WikiLeaks is changing the nature of the ones currently in place. Brian Baxter of The Am Law Daily wrote that a number of lawyers agree that WikiLeaks has likely made prior restraint obsolete. First Amendment expert Floyd Abrams says:

"I think we're moving to a situation where it will be more and more difficult to protect secrets, regardless of the validity of the decision to make the information secret. The combination of Web sites, anonymity, and pervasiveness of distribution make it extremely difficult to find a person or an entity to prevent them from publishing and punish them for publishing."

Renowned attorney Thomas Burke, who specializes in freedom of the press litigation, also believes WikiLeaks will transform the prior restraint principle:

"There are certainly arguments for [disclosing everything], but from a legal perspective, the issue is you no longer have an editor exercising First Amendment-protected editorial decisions," Burke said. "If something's just posted on WikiLeaks, it's available for all the world to see and interpret."

WikiLeaks is ostensibly a major triumph for the press, but I wonder why it feels more like a defeat.

Coalition soldiers and the people of Afghanistan are not the only ones who are scared for their lives. Julian Assange himself is supposedly very concerned about his own safety. It's been reported that he rarely sleeps in the same place two nights in a row. He has that luxury.

Michael Hughes writes similar articles as the Geopolitics Examiner and the Afghanistan Headlines Examiner for Examiner.com.

 

Follow Michael Hughes on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mhughes3500

 
 
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01:43 PM on 07/31/2010
i believe there is an urgent need to assess everything - beginning with the agendas of 'democratic' governments. Whatever happened to the definition of democracy? it was supposed to be governance for the people. As it transpires, America is sending its soldiers to war and actually funding the Taliban via Pakistan to kill them? How much more warped can we get ? I do believe and agree with the point that you have made. But who gives governments - and not just the American government to have such complete disregard for the lives of their own people - let alone other people ? Not only have they created a Frankenstein, but they continue to patronise the monster created by them.

Internet, i believe is the last weapon angry and frustrated people use to vent their complete lack of faith in existing systems. So, Mr Hughes, creating a law would merely mean people finding other means to express their anger. There is not a single world leader today who commands respect for what he believes in. They are all like CEO's of their company, looking at the profitability of their new product, thought, venture, whatever.
So, dont talk ethics; if you have to, then go the whole hog.

I believe all acts of terrorism around the world should be condemmed. Simply because they take lives. How do you explain governments that willingly sacrifice their own people for causes that may not be justified.
12:23 AM on 07/29/2010
Why does Assange love the Taliban so much? Is it their raping and killing of young girls who have the audacity to attempt to attend school? Is it their extortion of small farmers--forcing them to grow opium poppies? Is it their providing safe haven to Al-Qaida? Whatever reason he loves them, he certainly has done them a great service by publishing details of military operations in Afghanistan so that the Taliban can kill more people (including specific named individuals who risked their lives to help coalition forces). he is helping the Taliban to better avoid getting themselves killed or arrested. It is ridiculous to claim claim that the leaking of 90,000 documents or even 75,000 is "whistle-blowing" or in service of any cause other than the Taliban. I am truly disgusted and hope Assange and the New York Times choke on the blood money.
10:50 PM on 07/28/2010
Thank god for Wikileaks.
We've had enough secrecy, misinformation, cover-ups, and whitewashing of all the relevant facts.
We know Afghanistan is a quagmire, but now we know it's not just a matter of incompetence.
07:02 PM on 07/28/2010
First of all, if the pentagon wants to keep secrets they ought to do a better job of it. All of the bluster about endangering the troops or one of our informants is nonsense. How can we be expected to believe that our government cares about the safety of the troops when we use weapons with depleted uranium, send them into war without the proper equipment, and then ignore their needs when and if they make it home alive? And , as for the informants, what makes their lives any more precious than the lives of the women and children that our military slaughters on a regular basis? Pure hypocrisy! No, the only reason for all the whining and accusations is the fear that some of their war crimes will be revealed.
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MicheleMoore-Happy1
Whistleblower and creator of the Happiness Habit
05:02 PM on 07/28/2010
42% of our national budget goes to Defense while we strain to find money to help millions of Americans suffering in the current economic crises at home. Our infrastructure is crumbling.

Powerful people and organizations are profiting grandly from our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, they will attack anyone who threatens their revenue streams.
03:19 PM on 07/28/2010
The documents were published by three major corporate media newspapers. Apparently, that is OK with Hughes. Problem is, why the distinction? Maybe a little remedial journalism coursework is recommended?
12:58 PM on 07/28/2010
Kudos to Mr. Assange and his 'associates' who have made these documents available to the public. This is not the first time Wikileaks has unearthed materials sensitive to those advocating the status quo and hopefully not the last.
After 8 years of senseless war in Afghanistan and the unprovoked and even more senseless war in Iraq it is refreshing to see light being shed on this and the public given the chance to see what we are supporting with OUR taxes and OUR votes.
Again, Kudos Mr. Assange and thanks to those involved in this.
12:49 PM on 07/28/2010
I think that the opinion expressed above speaks more about a slavish loyalty to old-school concepts of nationality and colonialism that to anything even remotely progressive. The issue might be stated in terms of what it says about the militarized preconception of international competition; that our governments are stuck in the rut of thinking that keeping secrets to 'protect' us from the truth is somehow justifiable. If and when (both very important qualifiers) force is required to address a real international threat there is a raison d'etre for operational secrecy. If we can't participate in these actions without our governments feeling the need to cover up for their actions afterwards, then perhaps we're just doing it wrong.

Transparency is one of the things that we, as a North American culture, seem to be placing a higher and higher value on, and that's a good thing. As a populace, we are taking ownership more and more for the actions our governments take, also a good thing. If our governments can't act in a way that allows for that transparency because they are afraid of the public reactions, then they aren't really acting as our representatives, are they?

I say kudos to Mr. Assange and Wikileaks. Report the truth that nobody else has the guts to report, the truth that more and more people actually want to know, and leave the apologizing to the lame politicians and generals that want to keep us in the dark.
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OneFish
Various and assorted mutualistic microbial buddies
12:41 PM on 07/28/2010
I'm more disturbed by the propensity of the cabal to classify data WE THE PEOPLE paid for just to cover their own greed, incompetence and criminal behavior.
12:16 PM on 07/28/2010
Your loyality to the military industrial complex and their useless wars is a sad reflection on your values and I can see that letting the public get a glimpse of the truth offends you but I am very grateful there are still real reporters left that haven't been corrupted by access.
01:05 PM on 07/28/2010
Lets just hope that those voting and paying taxes peruse this. It is after all US the people who elect those in power and pay for this idiocy with our tax money.
btw, Susan Eisenhower - Ike's granddaughter - revealed a while back on Bill Maher's show that Ike wanted to originally call it the Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex, but left the Congressional out so as not to muddy the waters between the Capitol and the White House. Maybe we ought to call it the Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex since the problem is Congress without which there would be no complex in the first place?!