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Expected WikiLeaks disclosures prompts warning for editors
Government issues defence advisory notice to remind newspaper editors about
their responsibility over leaked documents
* Patrick Wintour, political editor
* guardian.co.uk, Friday 26 November 2010 23.58 GMT
David Cameron and other world leaders were being briefed by the US state
department about what American diplomats fear will be contained in the expected
leak of thousands of sensitive diplomatic cables sent to Washington by US
ambassadors around the world.
The leak is expected to be co-ordinated by the WikiLeaks website, which has
previously published secret details of military operations in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Newspaper editors were today asked to brief the government if they plan to
publish sensitive diplomatic files. But Downing Street stressed that the DA
(defence advisory) did not mean court action was likely to suppress publication
of the documents. The issue of the so-called D-notice is supposed to be a
reminder that newspapers should be concerned for UK military operations.
US officials, including the secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, have been
trying to brief allies, including Cameron, on what they expect to be in the
documents.
The head of the US military, Admiral Mike Mullen, called on WikiLeaks to stop
the publication of the documents. "I would hope that those who are responsible
for this would, at some point in time, think about the responsibility that they
have for lives that they're exposing and the potential that's there, and stop
leaking this information," he told CNN in an interview to be broadcast on
Sunday.
A spokesman for Cameron declined to discuss the nature of any confidential
communications that might have been obtained by WikiLeaks. It is thought that
the American ambassador to the UK, Louis Susman, has been trawling files to
guess what might have been leaked.
Susman today personally briefed London officials, including the Foreign Office
and No 10, requiring sometimes painful explanations.
A Downing Street spokesman said: "Obviously, the government has been briefed by
US officials, by the US ambassador, as to the likely content of these leaks. I
don't want to speculate about precisely what is going to be leaked before it is
leaked."
Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian, said tonight: "I appreciate why the DA
notice might make people anxious. But, from my reading of the WikiLeaks
material, only a tiny part of it is covered or relevant."
Before the notice was released, a spokesman for the US state department, PJ
Crowley, warned that publication could erode trust in the US as a diplomatic
partner. "When this confidence is betrayed and ends up on the front pages of
newspapers or lead stories on television or radio, it has an impact. We wish
this would not happen, but we are obviously prepared for the possibility that
it will."
The main American concern is that the diplomatic cables will reveal either
damaging episodes or duplicity by the Americans that will undermine trust in
the good faith of the US. Diplomats are expected to produce unvarnished
accounts of the state of the political leaders and the balance of forces, as
well as to disclose any form of intelligence activity.
The Obama administration today warned that the WikiLeaks release would endanger
"lives and interests".
Italy's foreign minister, Franco Frattini, said he spoke with the state
department on Friday, which told him that there would be documents regarding
Italy in the leak, "but the content can't be anticipated".
"We're talking about thousands and thousands of classified documents that the
US will not comment on, as is their custom," Frattini said.
He claimed to have been told that the person responsible for the leaks had been
arrested.
The governments of Canada, Israel, Iraq and Norway also said they had been
briefed by US officials.
The US says it has known for some time that WikiLeaks held the diplomatic
cables.
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