Michelle~ Well here you have it, the alternative "WHAHOPPENED" to Tim T. Who is 
safe in MURDER INCORPORATED, ALIAS THE US, INC. especially those poor fools 
calling upon SOCIALISM to bring them the security they could never provide 
their weak minded selves?~Hal~

--- On Sun, 6/13/10, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Pentagon Manhunt
To: 
Date: Sunday, June 13, 2010, 9:43 AM




---------- Forwarded Message ----------
Subject: Pentagon Manhunt
Date: Sat, 12 Jun 2010 12:31:24 -0700 (PDT)











Pentagon Manhunt

by Philip Shenono 
 Julian Assange 
Anxious that Wikileaks may be on the verge of publishing a batch of secret 
State Department cables, investigators are desperately searching for founder 
Julian Assange. Philip Shenon reports. Plus, Daniel Ellsberg tells The Daily 
Beast: "Assange is in Some Danger." 

(This story has been updated to reflect new developments on Assange's 
whereabouts, including the cancelation of a scheduled appearance in Las Vegas.)

Pentagon investigators are trying to determine the whereabouts of the 
Australian-born founder of the secretive website Wikileaks for fear that he may 
be about to publish a huge cache of classified State Department cables that, if 
made public, could do serious damage to national security, government officials 
tell The Daily Beast.

The officials acknowledge that even if they found the website founder, Julian 
Assange, it is not clear what they could do to block publication of the cables 
on Wikileaks, which is nominally based on a server in Sweden and bills itself 
as a champion of whistleblowers.
“We’d like to know where he is; we’d like his cooperation in this,” one U.S. 
official said of Assange.
 
American officials said Pentagon investigators are convinced that Assange is in 
possession of at least some classified State Department cables leaked by a 
22-year-old Army intelligence specialist, Bradley Manning of Potomac, Maryland, 
who is now in custody in Kuwait.

And given the contents of the cables, the feds have good reason to be concerned.

As The Daily Beast reported June 8, Manning, while posted in Iraq, apparently 
had special access to cables prepared by diplomats and State Department 
officials throughout the Middle East, regarding the workings of Arab 
governments and their leaders, according to an American diplomat.

The cables, which date back over several years, went out over interagency 
computer networks available to the Army and contained information related to 
American diplomatic and intelligence efforts in the war zones in Afghanistan 
and Iraq, the diplomat said.

American officials would not discuss the methods being used to find Assange, 
nor would they say if they had information to suggest where he is now. "We'd 
like to know where he is; we'd like his cooperation in this," one U.S. official 
said of Assange.

• Daniel Ellsberg: 
'Assange Is In Danger'     -     Assange, who first gained notoriety as a 
computer hacker, is just as secretive as his website, and he has no permanent 
home anywhere in the world.

He was scheduled to speak Friday in Las Vegas at an International Reporters and 
Editors conference, but the group’s executive director, Mark Horvit states that 
to The Daily Beast that Assange canceled the appearance—he was on a panel to 
discuss anonymous sources—within the last several days as a result of 
unspecificed “security concerns.” 
Horvit said he communicated with Assange through email and did not know where 
he might be.
Last week, Assange was scheduled to join famed Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel 
Ellsberg for a talk at New York's Personal Democracy Forum. Assange appeared 
via Skype from Australia instead, saying lawyers recommended he not return to 
the United States.
 
Julian Assange, in April 2010, discussing confidential sources in the digital 
age
 
Assange was in the United States as recently as several weeks ago, when he gave 
press interviews to promote the website’s release of an explosive 2007 video of 
an American helicopter attack in Baghdad that left 12 people dead, including 
two employees of the news agency Reuters.

Wikileaks has not replied directly to any email messages from The Daily Beast.

However, in cryptic messages Assange sent this week via Twitter, Wikileaks 
referred to an earlier Daily Beast article on the investigation of Manning and 
said that it “looks like we’re about to be attacked by everything the U.S. has.”

In an earlier post, the site said that allegations that “we have been sent 
260,000 classified U.S. embassy cables are, as far as we can tell, incorrect, 
and this morning, a new Wikileaks tweet went out: "Any signs of unacceptable 
behavior by the Pentagon or its agents towards this press will be viewed dimly."
Pentagon investigators say that particular post may have been an effort by 
Wikileaks to throw them—and news organizations—off the track, as the site 
prepared the library of State Department cables for release, “It looks like 
they’re playing some sort of semantic games,” one American official said of 
Wikileaks. “They may not have 260,000 cables, but they’ve probably got enough 
cables to make some seriously big trouble.”

• Philip Shenon: 
The State Dept.’s Worst Nightmare is to be found in another cryptic Twitter 
message, the site put out saying that while the State Department might be 
alarmed about the prospect of the release of classified cables, however “we 
have not been contacted.”

American officials were unwilling to say what would happen if Assange is 
tracked down, although they suggested they would have many more legal options 
available to them if he were still somewhere in the United States.

Manning has reportedly admitted that he downloaded 260,000 diplomatic cables 
and provided them to Wikileaks. In Internet chat logs first revealed by Wired 
magazine, Manning also took credit for leaking the 2007 video to the website.

“Hillary Clinton and several thousand diplomats around the world are going to 
have a heart attack when they wake up one morning and find an entire repository 
of what they thought was classified foreign policies is available,” Manning 
wrote of the diplomatic cables, according to Wired.
Wikileaks has not confirmed that Manning is a source of any information posted 
on the site. “We do not know if Mr. Manning is our source, but the U.S. 
military is claiming he is, so we will defend him,” Wikileaks said in another 
Twitter message.

Manning was turned in to the Pentagon by a former computer hacker based in 
California, Adrian Lamo, after Manning approached Lamo for counsel. Manning is 
believed to have contacted Lamo after reading a recent profile of him in Wired. 
(NOTE: Snitch).   In the chat log revealed by Wired, Manning made Lamo aware of 
his having downloaded a huge library of State Department cables, as well as the 
2007 video of the painful helicopter attack, and having provided that 
same material to Wikileaks.

Manning took credit for having leaked a classified diplomatic cable that has 
already appeared on the site—a memo prepared by the United States embassy in 
Reykjavik, Iceland, that described a meeting there between American and 
Icelandic officials over that country’s banking meltdown.
The January 2010 memo may have been of special interest to Wikileaks given the 
site’s close ties to Iceland, where Assange has based himself at times, and 
where he worked with local lawmakers to draft free-speech laws that give broad 
freedom to journalists to protect their sources. (Wow... a country that honors 
"free speech"?)
A profile this week in The New Yorker magazine depicted Assange as being 
feverishly at work with Icelandic colleagues in Reykjavik in March as he 
organized the release of the 2007 video of the helicopter attack. The edited 
video was given the title Collateral Murder, and its release infuriated 
officials at the Defense Department. (Ohhh... I will just bet it DID~!)

With its network of whistleblowers, Wikileaks has published documents and 
videos on its site that have outraged other foreign governments as well. 
 
To protect the site from attack by intelligence agencies, Assange has placed 
Wikileaks on several Internet servers, making it all but impossible for any 
government to shut down the site entirely.

Philip Shenon, a former investigative reporter at The New York Times, is the 
author of The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation.
Get a head start with the Morning Scoop email. It's your Cheat Sheet with must 
reads from across the Web. Get it.
For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at [email protected].
 
 
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-06-10/wikileaks-founder-julian-assange-hunted-by-pentagon-over-massive-leak/full/






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