Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks. (photo: Cordon Press)

Two Years of Cablegate As Bradley Manning Testifies
By Julian Assange, Reader Supported News
01 December 12
 
hursday, November 29th, Bradley Manning testified for the first time since his 
arrest two and a half years ago in Baghdad. Today also marks the 
two-year anniversary of the first front pages around the world from 
Cablegate, an archive of 251,287 U.S. State Department diplomatic cables - 
messages sent between the State Department and its embassies, 
consulates and diplomatic missions around the world. In collaboration 
with a network of more than 100 press outlets we revealed the full 
spectrum of techniques used by the United States to exert itself around 
the world. The young intelligence analyst Bradley Manning was detained 
as an alleged source.
WikiLeaks came under attack, with American politicians and right-wing pundits 
calling for all of us to be designated as 
terrorists, some even calling for my assassination and the kidnapping of our 
staff. Speaking on Meet The Press, Vice President Joe Biden 
referred to me as a "high-tech terrorist," while Senator Joe Lieberman 
demanded that we be prosecuted under the U.S. Espionage Act. The 
Department of Justice spokesperson Dean Boyd admitted as recently as 
July 2012 that the Department of Justice investigation into WikiLeaks is 
ongoing, and the Pentagon renewed its threats against us on September 
28th, declaring our work an "ongoing crime." As a result, I have been 
granted political asylum and now live in the Ecuadorian embassy in 
London, surrounded by armed police while the FBI portion of the "whole 
of government" investigation against us, according to court testimony, 
had reached 42,135 pages as of December last year.
Earlier this week, WikiLeaks released European Commission documents showing 
that Senator Lieberman and Congressman Peter T. King directly 
influenced decisions by PayPal, Visa and MasterCard to block donations 
to WikiLeaks, which has blocked 95 percent of our donors since December 
of 2010. Last week the European Parliament expressed its will that the 
Commission should prevent the arbitrary blockade of WikiLeaks.
Bradley Manning, who is alleged to be a source of the 
cables, started testifying on Thursday about his pre-trial treatment, 
which UN Special Rapporteur Juan Mendez said was "at a minimum cruel, 
inhuman and degrading treatment in violation of Article 16 of the 
Convention against Torture." Captain William Hoctor, the government 
psychiatrist with 24 years of experience who evaluated Manning at 
Quantico base in Virginia, testified that brig commanders had ignored his 
recommendations for Manning's 
detention, something he had not even experienced in his work at 
Guantánamo bay prison.
Bradley Manning has been detained without trial for 
921 days. This is the longest pre-trial detention of a U.S. military 
soldier since at least the Vietnam War. U.S. military law says the 
maximum is 120 days.
The material that Bradley Manning is alleged to have 
leaked has highlighted astonishing examples of U.S. subversion of the 
democratic process around the world, systematic evasion of 
accountability for atrocities and killings, and many other abuses. Our 
archive of State Department cables have appeared in tens of thousands of 
articles, books and scholarly works, illustrating the nature of U.S. 
foreign policy and the instruments of U.S. national power. On the 
two-year anniversary of the start of Cablegate, I want to highlight some of the 
stories that have emerged.
A War of Terror 
The United States' War on Terror has claimed hundreds 
of thousands of lives, inflamed sectarian violence, and made a mockery 
of international law. Victims and their families struggle to have their 
stories acknowledged, and the U.S.' systematic avoidance of 
accountability for war crimes implicitly denies their right to be 
considered human beings. Moreover, as the U.S. increasingly relies on 
clandestine military operations conducted outside the scrutiny of 
government oversight, the execution of this expanding War on Terror 
becomes increasingly uncoupled from the democratic process. While 
President Obama had promised the American people in 2008 that he would 
end the Iraq War, U.S. troops were only withdrawn when information from a cable 
revived international scrutiny of abuse occurring in Iraq, 
resulting in a refusal to grant continued immunity to U.S. troops in 
2012 or beyond.
In 2007 the U.S. embassy in Baghdad obtained a copy of the Iraqi government's 
final investigation report on the massacre of 17 civilians on September 16th, 
2007 in Nisour Square. The report 
concluded that the incident was an unprovoked attack on unarmed 
civilians, asked for $8 million in compensation for each death and $4 
million for each injury, and demanded that the private security firm 
Blackwater be replaced within six months. Blackwater continued to operate in 
Iraq for two years afterwards, and the U.S. Embassy 
compensated victims with $10,000 for each death and $5,000 for each 
injury. Five years later, the offending Blackwater mercenaries have 
escaped from accountability to Iraq, and attempts to bring them to 
justice in the U.S. have resulted in a long chain of dismissed cases and one 
undisclosed settlement. WikiLeaks' Iraq War Logs release of 391,832 U.S. Army 
field reports uncovered 14 additional cases where Blackwater opened fire on 
civilians, along with numerous other incidents of abuse. The Iraq 
War Logs also showed how the United States handed over prisoners to be tortured 
in gruesome detail - stories of electrocution, mutilation and of victims being 
attacked with drills.
The fact that, five years on, the victims of the 
Nisour Square Massacre have seen no meaningful accountability is an 
atrocity. But it is unfortunately no surprise that the U.S. claims 
immunity for its forces in other countries, then fails to administer 
justice at home.
These events - and in particular one cable detailing the summary execution of 
10 Iraqi civilians, including four women and five children - by U.S. soldiers 
and a subsequent airstrike to cover up the evidence, forced 
the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq in 2011. The story of handcuffed execution and 
cover-up sparked outrage around the world in the midst of 
negotiations to extend U.S. troop presence into 2012 and, in response to 
international coverage, Iraq revived its investigation into the incident. Iraq 
ultimately refused to grant immunity to U.S. 
troops in 2012, forcing the U.S. to withdraw in December 2011.
This systemic violence and cover-up extends to the war in Afghanistan. When 
news emerged that a midnight bombing campaign on 
the Afghan village of Granai in 2009 had possibly resulted in the death 
of up to 100 civilians, U.S. officials publicly asserted that most of 
the dead had been Taliban fighters. A State Department cable written 
shortly after the event summarizes a meeting between the Red Cross' 
Afghanistan chief Reto Stocker and U.S. Ambassador Carl Eikenberry in 
which they discussed findings from an investigation of the event. In the cable, 
Stocker is referred to as "one of the most credible sources for 
unbiased and objective information in Afghanistan." The Red Cross report 
estimated that 89 of the dead and 13 injured were in fact civilians. Neither 
the U.S. government nor the Red Cross publicly revealed these figures.
WikiLeaks and the Arab Spring 
The Tunisian cables describe the extreme corruption 
and lack of transparency of the Ben Ali regime. The Ben Ali extended 
family are described as the worst offenders, their lavish life 
accompanied by "a wide-range of corrupt schemes," including "property 
expropriation and extortion of bribes." We also learned that Ben Ali family 
assets included an airline, several hotels and a 
radio station. One cable describes state censorship of Tunisia's only 
private broadcast satellite TV station, and a surprise tax judgment 
against the station of almost $1.5 million.
In its 2011 annual report, Amnesty International praised WikiLeaks and its 
media partners for catalyzing the revolution in Tunisia:
"While the 'Jasmine Revolution' in Tunisia would not 
have happened without the long struggle of brave human rights defenders 
over the last two decades, support for activists from outside the 
country may have been strengthened as people scrutinized the WikiLeaks 
documents on Tunisia and understood the roots of the anger. In 
particular, some of the documents made clear that countries around the 
world were aware of both the political repression and the lack of 
economic opportunity, but for the most part were not taking action to 
urge change."
When Tunisia's president Moncef Marzouki spoke with me on The World Tomorrow, 
he thanked WikiLeaks for its work, saying, "I am very grateful for all that you 
have done for promoting human rights, truth, and I admire and support your 
efforts."
Shortly following Tunisia's revolution, protests 
erupted in Libya, and a new batch of cables revealed the strategic 
calculations behind U.S. support of the Gaddafi regime. In Egypt, cables 
revealed that Mubarak would rather die in office than step down and 
that his son would likely succeed him. Then, just as evidence emerged 
that Vice President Suleiman was tipped to replace Mubarak, cables were 
released detailing his former role as intelligence chief, as well as his close 
ties to Israel. Such elements became a crucial part of the ongoing Egyptian 
uprising.
A Global Death Squad Consulting Firm? 
For years, WikiLeaks faced a chorus of accusations by 
U.S. officials and right-wing pundits of making the world a less-safe 
place, and of having potentially caused harm through publication of 
embarrassing secrets. In reality, the cables show that torture and 
killing are not isolated events, but the violent manifestations of an 
aggressive policy of coercion used by the United States in the pursuit 
of its strategic commercial and political goals around the world.
While U.S. law bans the training of military units 
with a history of human rights violations, in practice the law is easily and 
often circumvented. The Indonesian army's elite special forces unit KOPASSUS 
has brutally repressed the West Papuans' freedom movement 
(West Papua has been occupied by Indonesia since 1963), as has been 
extensively documented by Human Rights Watch. Despite this, U.S. diplomats in 
Jakarta judged 
in 2007 that the time had come to resume collaboration with KOPASSUS, 
for the sake of "commercial interest" and "the protection of U.S. officials."
A diplomatic cable from November 2009 mentions as a side note that right-wing 
paramilitaries in Colombia were responsible for the death of 257,089 victims, a 
figure well above the estimations of local human rights activists. 
The U.S. has nonetheless offered generous support to the Colombian 
military; Amnesty International, which has called for a complete cut-off of 
U.S. military aid to Colombia, has estimated that total U.S. aid in 
2006 amounted to $728 million, of which 80 percent was given to military and 
police assistance. As of 2012, U.S. military support to Colombia is ongoing.
Such examples illustrate the United States' liberal 
interpretation of the laws banning the training of military units with a 
history of human rights violations. In another cable from August 2008, U.S. 
officials acknowledge that the Bangladeshi death squad, the Rapid Action 
Battalion (RAB), has been involved in obvious 
human rights violations, making support for the RAB difficult - U.S. 
officials hoped, however, to improve the RAB's record and polish its 
public image. U.S. officials praised the RAB for having "succeeded in 
reducing crime and fighting terrorism, making it in many ways 
Bangladesh's most respected police unit." In a diplomatic cable from 
2009, it was also revealed that the UK had been training the RAB for the 
previous 18 months "in areas such as investigative interviewing techniques and 
rules of engagement."
Foreign Service Spies 
In 2009, Hillary Clinton sent an intelligence 
gathering directive to 33 embassies and consulates around the world. The 
directive asked diplomats to gather intelligence on UN officials, 
including credit card numbers and online handles. A similar cable requested 
intelligence on officials from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundy, 
Rwanda and Uganda, and specifically mentioned the collection of DNA samples, 
iris scans and computer passwords.
Another state department cable revealed that a mole within the German 
government was spying for the 
U.S. Embassy in Berlin, frequently updating U.S. officials on negotiations 
between Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats and Westerwelle's FDP on the 
formation of a new coalition government in 2009. Helmut Metzner, formerly chief 
of staff to Germany's foreign minister, admitted to 
being the mole mentioned in these cables when this story broke in the 
press, and was subsequently fired.
Lobbying for Unaccountability - Manipulation of Judicial Process in Other 
Countries 
Abuse that occurs in war, as it did in Iraq, is often 
dismissed by its perpetrators as exceptional, and we are often assured 
that when abuse has occurred, the accountability mechanisms in place 
will bring justice. The diplomatic cables have given us numerous 
concrete examples of the coercion used by the U.S. to manipulate and 
undermine judicial processes in other countries, and they establish a 
clear policy for the evasion of accountability in any form.
During the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, two journalists - including the Spanish 
journalist José Couso - were killed and three 
others were wounded when a U.S. tank fired on the Palestine Hotel in 
Baghdad. An investigation into the event was subsequently launched in 
Spain, and an international arrest warrant was issued for three U.S. 
soldiers involved. Cables showed that the U.S. aggressively fought to 
have Spanish officials drop the case. Writing about the case in one cable, U.S. 
Ambassador Eduardo Aguirre emphasizes: "While we are careful to show our 
respect for the tragic death of Couso and for the independence of the Spanish 
judicial system, behind the 
scenes we have fought tooth and nail to make the charges disappear." 
Shamefully, this quote was redacted in the original reporting on the subject 
from El Pais and Le Monde.
In another example from 2003, a German citizen of Lebanese origins, Kalid 
el-Masri, was kidnapped while on vacation in Macedonia, renditioned to 
Afghanistan by the CIA, and tortured for four months. When his captors 
finally decided he was innocent, he was flown to Albania and dumped on a 
country road without so much as an apology. In a cable from 2007, we learn that 
when a German 
prosecutor issued arrest warrants for agents involved in el-Masri's 
kidnapping, the U.S. ambassador in Berlin warned German officials that there 
would be repercussions. No arrests have yet been made and el-Masri is still 
seeking justice.
The U.S.' manipulation extended to the UK, where a 
cable shows that during a British public inquiry led by Sir John Chilcot into 
the UK role in the Iraq War, the Ministry of Defence had "put measures in 
place" to protect U.S. interests.
Global Powers Work to Break Environmental Solidarity, and to Exploit 
"Opportunities" of Climate Change 
On environmental issues, cables show that the U.S. 
routinely makes symbolic gestures rather than initiating substantial 
practices to combat climate change, and works aggressively to tailor 
international agreements to its own commercial interests.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton asked embassies to 
gather intelligence on the preparations for the Copenhagen UN Convention on 
Climate Change Meeting in December 2009, asking for biographical 
details of representatives from China, France, Japan, Mexico, Russia and the 
European Union. Cables show that in Copenhagen the U.S. manipulated the accord 
talks by offering "gifts" to poorer countries to derail 
opposition to the accord proposed by first world powers. Another cable 
from the Secretary of State revealed that in 2010, a Maldives ambassador 
designate had stressed the importance of "tangible assistance" from larger 
economies to smaller ones. As a consequence of this meeting, the accord offered 
financial compensation to poor countries suffering from the effects of global 
warming.
In a visit to Canada in 2009 David Goldwyn, the State Department's Coordinator 
for International Energy Affairs 
discussed public relations assistance to be offered to the oil sands 
industry. Goldwyn proposed consulting experts, scholars and think tanks 
to "increase visibility and accessibility of more positive news stories." The 
cable was later used by environmentalists in their battle against 
the Keystone XL pipeline, which ships crude oil across the U.S.-Canada 
border. In early 2012, President Obama rejected the Keystone XL pipeline 
proposal, but recently publicly announced support for another proposal. It also 
turns out that Goldwyn eventually went on to work for Sutherland, a 
lobbying group in favor of Keystone XL.
The cables also reveal that the U.S. is carefully positioning itself to take 
advantage of new 
opportunities for harvesting hydrocarbons and minerals from the Arctic 
as climate change melts polar ice. U.S. diplomats were hoping to offer 
Greenland support for its independence from Denmark in exchange for 
access by American gas and oil companies to exploit the country's 
resources. The U.S. has been closely watching Russia, America's main 
competitor for Arctic resources, but American officials also showed 
concern over Canada's potential territorial claim to the Arctic's 
Northwest passage.
Secret Agreements - Circumvention of the Democratic Process 
The State Department cables revealed that the United 
States and its allies systematically make secret arrangements with 
various governments, hiding details not only from the country's public, 
but sometimes even from the country's representatives, ministers and 
oversight bodies.
In 2009, Jeremy Scahill and Seymour Hersh broke a story in The Nation on secret 
U.S. special operations forces combat missions 
and drone strikes in Pakistan. When questioned about the story, 
Department of Defense spokesperson Geoff Morrell dismissed the claims as 
"conspiratorial theories." Only one year later, cables released by 
WikiLeaks confirmed their story. In addition, cables quoted Pakistan's Prime 
Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani telling U.S. officials: "I don't care if they do it 
as long as they get the right people - we'll 
protest about it in the National Assembly and then ignore it." Stories 
based on State Department cables also revealed agreements between the U.S. and 
Yemen in which the Yemeni government 
would claim responsibility for attacks launched by the U.S. on local 
militia groups. The release of State Department cables resulted in total 
transparency with respect to certain aspects of the War on Terror.
State Department cables also revealed that the U.S. worked with Australia to 
weaken the text of an international agreement banning the use of cluster 
munitions - bombs which spray thousands of smaller bomblets over a large area. 
Out of more than 13,000 casualties of cluster munitions 
registered by Handicap International, over 98 percent are civilian and 
one-third of those are children. Despite this, cables also revealed that the 
UK's then-Foreign Minister David Miliband secretly approved the use of a legal 
loophole to allow the United States to store cluster munitions on UK territory, 
despite the fact that the UK is a signatory 
to a convention banning them. The United States is not a signatory to 
the Convention on Cluster Munitions, and even attempted in 2011 to have 
the ban lifted by the UN.
In 2007, former Canadian Deputy Prime Minister John Manley asked U.S. officials 
for predator drones to help shore up liberal support for a sustained Canadian 
presence in 
the war in Afghanistan. At the time, Manley was leading a 
government-appointed panel charged with investigating Canada's interests in a 
future role in Afghanistan. In August 2012, the Ottawa Citizen reported that 
the Canadian government is seeking to spend up to $1 billion on a 
state-of-the-art armed drone fleet.
The cables also revealed that Canada's conservative Prime Minister Stephen 
Harper 
secretly promised NATO in January 2010 that Canada would remain in 
Afghanistan to conduct army training even after the end of its mission 
in 2011. The Canadian public was shocked when the government announced 
that it would be extending its mission in November of that year. Harper 
expressed concern to U.S. diplomats that an early departure of Canadian 
troops from Aghanistan would seem like a "withdrawal," reflecting the low 
public support for Canada's mission in Afghanistan.
In 2008, the U.S. proposed an "informal agreement" to Swedish government 
officials for the 
exchange of information on terrorism watch-lists. U.S. officials explained that 
they feared scrutiny by the Swedish parliament would jeopardize "law 
enforcement and anti-terrorism cooperation." Cables also revealed that in 2009, 
the U.S. resumed full intelligence-sharing 
with New Zealand after it had been restricted in retaliation for the 
country's ban against nuclear-powered or armed vessels in its ports. 
Both governments agreed that the newly resumed cooperation should be 
kept hidden from the public.
The Realpolitik of Commercial Lobbying 
State Department cables illustrate that U.S. officials and their commercial 
partners take a default position of having an 
intrinsic right to resources and market dominance around the world.
In a 2007 cable to the U.S. Trade Representative, U.S. Ambassador Craig 
Stapleton 
suggested taking a hard-line approach towards the European Union over 
its resistance to American genetically modified products and foods. 
France's refusal to embrace GMOs and agricultural biotechnology, according to 
Ambassador Stapleton, would lead to a general European rejection of GMOs, and 
he suggested retaliation to help the French see things differently:
"Country team Paris recommends that we calibrate a 
target retaliation list that causes some pain across the EU since this 
is a collective responsibility, but that also focuses in part on the 
worst culprits. The list should be measured rather than vicious and must be 
sustainable over the long term, since we should not expect an early 
victory."
The cables also showed that the U.S. revoked visas of then-Ecuadoran 
presidential 
candidate Xavier Neira and seven others due to their involvement in a 
legal case against the American pharmaceutical company Pfizer for unfair 
competition. The timing of the decision to revoke their visas coincided with 
the upcoming presidential elections and an impending court 
decision on the case. In its explanation of the revocation, officials 
cite "corruption" and the case against Pfizer.
The U.S.-based Shell Oil company has a long and sordid history in Nigeria, and 
its representatives spoke openly about 
activities in the country. In a 2009 meeting, Shell representatives told U.S. 
officials that they would be able to influence the Nigerian 
government's 2009 Petroleum Industry Bill to suit their interests.
Cables from 2005 highlight U.S. determination to "improve the investment 
climate" for mining companies in Peru. Representatives from Canada, UK, 
Australia, Switzerland and South Africa met to strategize ways of 
circumventing anti-mining protests coming from a diverse group of NGOs, the 
Catholic Church and indigenous Peruvians. Once protests had turned violent, the 
U.S. used this as an 
excuse for monitoring NGO groups such as Oxfam and Friends of the Earth, and 
asked the Peruvian government to enhance security by taking control of roadways 
and transit areas.
In other cases, officials in the U.S. Embassy assisted in lobbying for or 
against particular pieces of legislation according 
to U.S. commercial interests. U.S. officials lobbied on behalf of Visa and 
MasterCard against a bill in Russia which would 
have created a national card payment system, taking away Visa and 
MasterCard's market share.
Strategic Duplicity on Human Rights and Press Freedom 
A cable summarizing a meeting with a director of Al Jazeera shows that U.S. 
officials expected a special report with graphic images of injured Iraqis to be 
changed and its images removed. In another 
cable, the director is asked to explain Al Jazeera's lack of coverage of the 
Iran elections and protests as opposed to their "heavy" coverage of Gaza.
The U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet is based in the kingdom of Bahrain, and the U.S. 
has maintained a mutually beneficial relationship with the country's leaders 
over the past years. In one cable, the U.S. ambassador to Bahrain praised the 
country and its king, 
pointing out that U.S. companies had won major contracts there. This 
same regime brutally cracked down on protesters during the Arab Spring, and 
Bahraini authorities shut down dissident 
websites and publications. While the U.S. State Department harshly 
condemned the crackdown on protests after Iran's 2009 elections, it remained 
silent on the killings in Bahrain.
Thailand's Monarchy Exposed 
Thailand's lèse majesté law prevents anyone in the 
country from speaking openly about the monarchy without risk of severe 
punishment. As such, any reports about political developments in the 
country are censored, and there is a huge gap in public knowledge about 
the country's political environment. WikiLeaks' release of State 
Department cables gives an unprecedented view of not only the monarchy's deep 
impact on the politics of the country, but also the close 
relationship that Thailand had with the U.S. Journalist Andrew MacGregor 
Marshall quit his job at Reuters to write his book Thailand's Moment of Truth, 
using the Thai cables exposing obscured and taboo aspects of Thailand's 
politics, history and international relations for the first time.
U.S. Aims to Reshape Global Views and Law on Intellectual Property and 
Copyright 
U.S.-based lobbying groups work hand in hand with U.S. State Department 
officials around the world to aggressively lobby for 
legislation and trade agreements that favor American companies such as 
Google, Facebook, Apple and Microsoft, or large film studios such as 
Disney, Paramount, Sony and Warner.
A 2006 cable from Japan describes the first draft proposals for a "gold 
standard" in intellectual property rights enforcement, called ACTA. This 
standard was meant to give intellectual property owners much stronger powers, 
even at the expense of citizen privacy and due process. ACTA was 
subsequently negotiated in secret, unknown to the general public, until 
WikiLeaks leaked the first draft in 2008. In the film industry, the lobbyist 
group for motion picture studios conspired with their 
Australian counterpart to establish a legal precedent for holding an 
Internet service provider accountable for copyright infringement in Australia. 
What is the effect of this push and pull? It is a global environment 
where legislation and legal precedents are set to benefit intellectual 
property owners who are rich, powerful and influential - even at the 
expense of public good.
Breaking the Monopoly on Influence 
The examples I present above represent only a small 
fraction of what has been revealed by WikiLeaks material. Since 2010, 
Western governments have tried to portray WikiLeaks as a terrorist 
organization, enabling a disproportionate response from both political figures 
and private institutions. It is the case 
that WikiLeaks' publications can and have changed the world, but that 
change has clearly been for the better. Two years on, no claim of 
individual harm has been presented, and the examples above clearly show 
precisely who has blood on their hands.
In large Western democracies, the political discourse 
has been so highly controlled for so long, that it is no longer shocking when 
Western experts fill in to speak for third world victims, or when 
an American president stands up at a podium to accept his Nobel Peace 
Prize, and makes the case for war. It is, in fact, no longer safe to 
presume that a media outlet such as The New York Times would perform the same 
act today as they did in 1971 when Daniel Ellsberg leaked the 
Pentagon Papers.
In a panel discussion with Daniel Ellsberg and New 
York Times editor Jill Abramson discussing the Pentagon Papers, Ellsberg voiced 
his dissent over the Times' acquiescence to the Bush 
administration's request to delay James Risen's story on warrantless NSA 
wiretapping until after the 2004 elections. Abramson equivocated:
"The thing is when the government says - you know - by 
publishing a story you're harming the national security, you're helping 
the terrorists. I mean, there are still people today who argue that the 
NSA program was the crown jewel, the most valuable anti-terrorism 
program that the Bush administration had going, and that it was terribly wrong 
of the Times to publish."
On the same panel, Daniel Ellsberg said of the Pentagon Papers:
"The secrecy of these documents has so far condemned 
over 30,000 Americans to death and several million Vietnamese. And the 
continued secrecy of them will undoubtedly contribute to the death of 
tens of thousands more Americans, and so forth. I think that's true. But that 
comes up in the WikiLeaks case, right now." 
Since the release of the diplomatic cables, WikiLeaks 
has continued its operations despite the financial blockade, publishing 
leaked documents from companies selling mass interception units to state spy 
agencies around the world; detainee profiles for almost all of the 
people detained at Guantánamo Bay prison; U.S. policy manuals for 
detention of military prisoners in the War on Terror; intelligence 
databases from the private intelligence firm Stratfor; and millions of 
documents from inside the Syrian government. The information we've 
disclosed frustrates the controlled political discourse that is 
trumpeted by establishment media and Western governments to shape public 
perception.
We will continue our fight against the financial 
blockade, and we will continue to publish. The Pentagon's threats 
against us do the United States a disservice and will not be heeded.

http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/370-wikileaks/14821-two-years-of-cablegate-as-bradley-manning-testifies


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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