Pentagon demands return of WikiLeaks data on Afghanistan war crimes

Antid Oto aorta at HOME.NL
Sat Aug 7 08:52:54 CEST 2010


REPLY TO: D66 at nic.surfnet.nl

Pentagon demands return of WikiLeaks data on Afghanistan war crimes
By Patrick Martin
7 August 2010

It is hard to top the arrogance of the Pentagon’s chief press spokesman, Geoff
Morrell, as he stood at a podium Thursday to demand that the WikiLeaks web site
return all the evidence of US war crimes in Afghanistan which was leaked to it
and posted on the Internet ten days ago.

Some 92,000 documents were made available by WikiLeaks July 25, with an advance
opportunity to study them provided to three publications: the New York Times,
the Guardian (UK), and the German magazine Der Spiegel.

WikiLeaks representatives announced at the time that they were holding another
15,000 documents for review, due to possible security dangers to individuals in
Afghanistan whose names might be made public. The group offered to work directly
with the Pentagon on a “harm minimization” effort.

The press briefing was called to reject that offer and demand, instead, that
WikiLeaks turn over to the Pentagon all US military intelligence records in its
possession and erase them on its own servers. Morrell declared, “We’re not
getting involved in harm-minimization conversations. We’re asking them to return
stolen property.”

Morrell said the Pentagon was engaged in no direct contact or negotiations with
WikiLeaks, but was using the news media to present its demands.

“We are asking them to do the right thing and not further exacerbate the damage
done to date,” he said. He continued, in an open threat of unspecified
retaliation, “If doing the right thing is not good enough for them, we’ll figure
out what other alternatives we have to compel them to do the right thing.”

This sounds much like a Mafia boss demanding the return of surveillance
recordings, although the Pentagon gangsters have a wider range of
“alternatives,” ranging from a judicial detention order to a cruise missile.

Morrell denounced the website as a “brazen solicitation to US government
officials, including our military, to break the law.” Actually, it is the US
military-intelligence complex that is the world’s greatest lawbreaker, waging
illegal wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and dozens of other countries. WikiLeaks is
being targeted because it has done what the cowardly American corporate media
will not do—inform the American people of what the US government is doing in
their name.

In the last week there have been several calls from right-wing media pundits and
congressmen that the US government carry out direct action to take down
WikiLeaks servers and deny it access to the Internet. The Pentagon has a vast
cybersecurity apparatus connected to the National Security Agency, which spies
on most of the world’s electronic communications, including e-mail, telephone
calls and Internet chat.

One week ago, the Washington Post revealed that the White House was seeking to
radically expand the FBI’s subpoena powers for e-mail records, without obtaining
a court order. The Obama administration wanted to add the words “electronic
communication transactional records” to a list of items that the FBI can legally
demand from Internet Service Providers. This would include lists of e-mail
addresses to which a user sends messages, the times and dates of the messages,
and the browser history of the web sites and individual visits. One “senior
administration government official” told the Post that “most” Internet or e-mail
providers already do this in response to an FBI demand known as a National
Security Letter.

The White House has asked Congress to amend the controlling statute, the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act, to add the necessary language. The term
“electronic communication transactional records” is not defined in the statute,
however, so the expanded powers could become open-ended, affecting, for
instance, behavior on social networking sites, such as Facebook “friend” requests.

The Pentagon recently centralized all its Internet-based disruption and spying
capabilities in a “cyber-terrorism” command. The US has consistently rejected
proposals by Russia and other countries that the Internet—whose backbone is
US-based—should be off limits for cyber-warfare.

That is the background to Morrell’s thuggish language. Shortly afterwards,
WikiLeaks gave an appropriate response on its Twitter page: “Obnoxious Pentagon
spokesperson issues formal threat against WikiLeaks: Destroy everything, or else.”

Morrell revealed that the Pentagon has deployed a team of 80 analysts to vet the
released documents for incriminating information, and that effort is expected to
increase significantly, including a “page by page, word by word” review of each
of the documents.

Last week, in what some Internet experts said was a precaution against a direct
cyberwarfare attack, WikiLeaks posted a huge 1.4 gigabyte file of encrypted data
on a file-sharing network and on the web page where it published the Afghan war
logs. It was entitled “insurance file,” suggesting that a password to access the
file could be distributed widely if WikiLeaks’ own site is attacked.

WikiLeaks also revealed August 3 that it would pay half the expected $100,000
cost of hiring civilian defense attorneys to defend Private Bradley Manning, the
soldier charged with leaking Iraq war videotapes to the group. Manning has been
designated a “person of interest” in the Pentagon’s investigation into the leak
of Afghanistan war documents.

http://wsws.org/articles/2010/aug2010/wiki-a07.shtml

**********
Dit bericht is verzonden via de informele D66 discussielijst (D66 at nic.surfnet.nl).
Aanmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SUBSCRIBE D66 uwvoornaam uwachternaam
Afmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SIGNOFF D66
Het on-line archief is te vinden op: http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/d66.html
**********



More information about the D66 mailing list