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Richard N. Haass

Richard N. Haass

Posted: November 29, 2010 04:19 PM

The latest unauthorized release, i.e., leak, of some 250,000 documents by WikiLeaks does not appear to constitute a national security crisis, although it will cause more than a little near-term awkwardness and create some longer-term problems for the United States and its partners.

Much of what we have seen thus far confirms more than it informs. We are not surprised to read U.S. diplomatic cables reporting that corruption in Afghanistan is rampant; that prominent Sunni Arab leaders are more worried about Iran and its nuclear program than they are about Israel; that it has been difficult to get other governments to accept Guantanamo detainees; that Syria's government maintains close ties to Hezbollah despite assurances to the contrary; or that Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi is a man of questionable character.

In some cases, though, the publication of these documents will likely cause immediate problems. Working with Pakistan's weak government to ensure that its nuclear materials remain under tight control -- a process described in the WikiLeaks papers -- will prove even more difficult. Counterterrorism efforts in Yemen might also be set back as the leadership there might well feel the need to distance itself from the United States.

In still some other cases, though, we should be reassured. For example, it is good to know that the United States and South Korea are holding serious discussions about how to reduce Chinese unease about the dissolution of North Korea and the unification of the peninsula. This is the only way to end a situation that, as recent events demonstrate, threaten not just regional but world peace.

The longer term damage may be more real. Foreign governments may think twice before sharing their secrets or even their candid judgments with American counterparts lest they read about them on the Internet. And American diplomats may be less willing to commit their thoughts to paper. Such reticence will deprive policymakers of an important source of information and make decisonmaking more ad hoc and less systematic than it needs to be.

This post originally appeared at CFR.org.

 
 
 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NoSandwiches
08:31 AM on 12/02/2010
Sorry but I haven't heard a single surprise in the leaks yet. So what?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aroon
04:25 PM on 12/01/2010
These leaks have only confirmed the clueless & war-mongering nature of the so called world leaders who do not mind killing thousands to protect their personal interests. We entrust our future in the hands of these egomaniacs and that says more about us than the leaders.
07:41 PM on 11/30/2010
Wish Wikileaks was leaking stuff during the build up to the Iraq war and when Cheney's energy task force were meeting privately...
04:54 PM on 11/30/2010
The whole point of wikileaks is to get the information without having it filtered through the normal clueless think tank pundits
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Opening Shares
12:37 PM on 11/30/2010
How to read this article- it was written by the president of the Council on Foreign Relations. Alex Jones and anti-establishment anarchists are right about some things. That the CFR is harmful to the interests of the American public is one of them. The CFR is a heavily influential voice of the economic elite in Washington. In a nutshell: they make American democracy look bad.

How to read other articles about Cablegate- Notice the lack of referrence to the original cables. The cables are available at http://cablegate.wikileaks.org/index.html and if the Wikileaks site suffers another successful DDoS attack, at the OWNI site

So..there should be no reason that a reader couldn't read about a particular situation and reference the cables Looking at "articles relating to Wikileaks" I don't see that the New York Times has it's own cache of cables like the Guardian does and neither directly reference the cables that are the subject of their articles. The Guardian does link articles to the cables in it's cache but not the reverse.

This to me says that the mainstream press still isn't coping well with people opting to not "just take their word"
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:16 AM on 11/30/2010
Secrets are becoming obsolete. They cannot be kept any more because our technology makes it impossible to do so. The remedy is not to try to defy the technology, but instead to learn how to operate openly without secrets. If you desperately need just a few of them, then you might be able to keep them. Otherwise, forget it and change procedures to account for the lack of security.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shaun Hensley
The American Experiment has failed
03:39 AM on 12/01/2010
Exactly. This openness could be the end of war, and we can't have that.
11:13 AM on 11/30/2010
some nice reading material. Is WikiLeaks a terrorist organization, like some people want to classify it? Absolutely not. No one to blame here but the US Government. Good to know we have the "A team" in charge of keeping this information secured! ;-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Torus34
A poor old country mouse.
09:51 AM on 11/30/2010
I should think that, given the technology and talents at their command, the governments of most major players on the world scene were privy to the documents soon after their initial creation.

The only awkwardness the US government will experience will be with its own citizens, exacerbated by the usual cast of political demagogues and mischief-makers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Americulchie
Unapologetic Liberal
03:59 PM on 11/30/2010
Fanned and favored for the best analysis I have read so far.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shaun Hensley
The American Experiment has failed
03:40 AM on 12/01/2010
Not entirely true. The audience of this is the citizens of the world.
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Idean Salehyan
Associate Professor of Political Science, Universi
09:50 AM on 11/30/2010
The leaks may not reveal new facts, but they do send a chill across the diplomatic community. It's important that diplomats know that they can be frank and candid, and not have to worry about leaks. More importantly, though, it seems as though Wikileaks, and people feeding them information, is deliberately trying to embarrass the United States and undermine our global position. This not just promoting transparency in government as Assange claims, it is an attempt to harm our geopolitical position.
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MelissaGoldman
One moment in time--RIP Whitney
09:16 AM on 11/30/2010
I'm not sure what the big deal is, wikileaks just revelead more of what we already knew. I don't see how anyone can be surprised here.
frankiebarbella
hell hath no fury, like a bureucrat scorned!
08:19 AM on 11/30/2010
I have news for all the readers here, this information was allowed to be put in the public domain. Truly secured environments are compartmentalized to the point in which it very difficult to get access to various forms of information. A PFC with a secret clearance does not have access to damaging information. This is nothing more than bread and circus.
11:20 AM on 11/30/2010
The army private who released this information to WikiLeaks is by many accounts, a computer hacker.No network/computer security is without holes. That being said, this person might have also had help in getting this information from others, possibly with higher security clearances...others who might be fed up with how things are being run.
frankiebarbella
hell hath no fury, like a bureucrat scorned!
12:09 PM on 11/30/2010
This information was meant to be in the public domain. No network is truly secure, this is true, however, this is not an hacker that cracked into a secure network. Having access to a secure network does not get you access to all the various compartmentalized data.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shaun Hensley
The American Experiment has failed
03:41 AM on 12/01/2010
None of these documents were ever advertised as being Top Secret.
frankiebarbella
hell hath no fury, like a bureucrat scorned!
10:15 AM on 12/01/2010
Then you are agreeing with me, correct?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donald Simon
07:47 AM on 11/30/2010
All people everywhere rejoice that the time for secrets is over. Those with dark agendas will have light shined on them. Hooray !!!!!!!!!!
06:46 AM on 11/30/2010
Indeed, none of it should come as a surprise and it hasn't as I have yet to read something I didn't already know/guess. One could also say the same about most prior wikileaks releases: we already knew it, these documents confirm it. Unsurprising as well, not only it hasn't changed our perception but the media and politicos will not stop pretending we cannot see through their lies and will keep behaving as if they were surprised by what doesn't surprise us.
05:17 AM on 11/30/2010
The Big Bank Secrets are next This is just heating up and the genie ain't being put back in the bottle. A strike for real Democracy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Opening Shares
12:41 PM on 11/30/2010
Fanned for your sentiments and a fan of the band of your moniker-sake.
02:15 AM on 11/30/2010
1) I have yet to see or read about any significant revelation from these documents (Medvedev playing second banana to Putin is news? Gimme a break). Anyway, this all seems to be second hand opinions. If there was an original Russian document that explained the power division between Putin and Medvedev or an Italian document incriminating (or exonerating) Berlusconi, now that might be news. But I haven't seen anything like that. Has anyone?

2) The author's argument that foreign leaders will not share secrets with the US for fear of seeing them exposed does not hold water - actually, it is childish. Confidential conversations are always deniable.

3) Government will react with indignation because that's what it's supposed to do.

Much ado about very little, I think. Next, please.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shaun Hensley
The American Experiment has failed
03:41 AM on 12/01/2010
Talking point #2 "there's no there there/ we already knew this"