The Wikileaks Question

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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Elvis » Wed Dec 01, 2010 2:07 am

Things just got more interesting:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11883567

30 November 2010 Last updated at 21:08 ET

Interpol issues 'Red Notice' for Wikileaks' Assange

Interpol has issued a "Red Notice" for the founder of the whistle-blowing website Wikileaks, Julian Assange.

It said the Australian was wanted for questioning in Sweden over an alleged sex offence, which he has denied.

The Red Notice does not amount to an arrest warrant. Instead, it asks people to contact the police if they have any information about his whereabouts.

Meanwhile, Ecuador's President Rafael Correa has said he did not approve an offer of residency made to Mr Assange.

On Monday, Deputy Foreign Minister Kintto Lucas praised the 39-year-old's investigative work and said he was welcome to live and lecture in the country "without any conditions".

But Mr Correa told reporters that the offer had "not been approved by Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino - or the president". Mr Patino said it would "have to be studied from the legal and diplomatic perspective".

Sweden turned down Mr Assange's application for residency in October. The Scandinavian country's laws protect whistle-blowers.

Earlier, Mr Assange filed an appeal with Sweden's Supreme Court in an effort to overturn a ruling by the Stockholm district court earlier this month that he be detained for questioning on allegations of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion, stemming from a visit in August.

His petition was rejected by the Stockholm appeals court last week.

Australia is also investigating whether he has broken any laws there.

Mr Assange has dismissed the allegations as part of a smear campaign.

On Sunday, Wikileaks began publishing about 250,000 US diplomatic cables in a third major release of classified US documents. The first two concerned the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby justdrew » Wed Dec 01, 2010 3:46 am

Jeff wrote:I haven't reached any conclusions, but I'm fascinated by the questions. Like, for instance, where in Wikileaks is the wiki? I don't see anything resembling a collaborative web effort. Currently, I see a throttled and redacted graveyard for whistleblowers.


I think the original plan was to setup wikileaks as a whole new way of doing business, in which info was constantly leaked from everywhere. what's going on with their website now I don't know why they'd be doing that. must be some strategy to it.

The interview with the http://cryptome.org/ founder in the second Emory show is important, it's sourced from Wired IIRC. The big money play wikileaks was going for is significant. Hard to see what all that money would be used for other than keeping "the Julian" and possibly some others deeply underground & incognito for extended lengths.

I think the hair/cult linkup is there for a reason. He's sending a clue... to act as a deterrent... which answers the question of why he hasn't been picked up by now. Possibly because the PTB suspect that if they did, it would soon come out... "oh no they didn't." There may be a number of Julian's running around.

The info Emory brought (which I should have known already but didn't) about the owner of the PRQ server farm that hosts WL and PB... That's mildly annoying... WTF is up with that guy? He's got to be considered a player in this. Amazing they haven't just shut that down. It implies that there are powerful elements within Europe that favor the continuation of the wikileaks saga.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby Twyla LaSarc » Wed Dec 01, 2010 5:23 am

Forgive me if this has been posted elsewhere, I didn't see it in a quick search, but I thought his was an interesting view of Assange's philosophy and goal in releasing the leaks that has nothing to do with 'the usual suspects'. Perhaps it is the references to RAW in the other thread that have put me in mind of the SNAFU principle:


http://zunguzungu.wordpress.com/2010/11 ... %e2%80%9d/

“To radically shift regime behavior we must think clearly and boldly for if we have learned anything, it is that regimes do not want to be changed. We must think beyond those who have gone before us, and discover technological changes that embolden us with ways to act in which our forebears could not. Firstly we must understand what aspect of government or neocorporatist behavior we wish to change or remove. Secondly we must develop a way of thinking about this behavior that is strong enough carry us through the mire of politically distorted language, and into a position of clarity. Finally must use these insights to inspire within us and others a course of ennobling, and effective action."
Julian Assange, “State and Terrorist Conspiracies"



The piece of writing (via) which that quote introduces is intellectually substantial, but not all that difficult to read, so you might as well take a look at it yourself. Most of the news media seems to be losing their minds over Wikileaks without actually reading these essays, even though he describes the function and aims of an organization like Wikileaks in pretty straightforward terms. But, to summarize, he begins by describing a state like the US as essentially an authoritarian conspiracy, and then reasons that the practical strategy for combating that conspiracy is to degrade its ability to conspire, to hinder its ability to “think” as a conspiratorial mind. The metaphor of a computing network is mostly implicit, but utterly crucial: he seeks to oppose the power of the state by treating it like a computer and tossing sand in its diodes.

...

...He decides, instead, that the most effective way to attack this kind of organization would be to make “leaks” a fundamental part of the conspiracy’s information environment. Which is why the point is not that particular leaks are specifically effective. Wikileaks does not leak something like the “Collateral Murder” video as a way of putting an end to that particular military tactic; that would be to target a specific leg of the hydra even as it grows two more. Instead, the idea is that increasing the porousness of the conspiracy’s information system will impede its functioning, that the conspiracy will turn against itself in self-defense, clamping down on its own information flows in ways that will then impede its own cognitive function. You destroy the conspiracy, in other words, by making it so paranoid of itself that it can no longer conspire...

...

The leak, in other words, is only the catalyst for the desired counter-overreaction; Wikileaks wants to provoke the conspiracy into turning off its own brain in response to the threat. As it tries to plug its own holes and find the leakers, he reasons, its component elements will de-synchronize from and turn against each other, de-link from the central processing network, and come undone. Even if all the elements of the conspiracy still exist, in this sense, depriving themselves of a vigorous flow of information to connect them all together as a conspiracy prevents them from acting as a conspiracy.


He seems to have provoked this very action:

WRAPUP 1-One U.S. military network cut off from cables

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN3015128820101130
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby AlicetheKurious » Wed Dec 01, 2010 7:20 am

I wonder if:

Like 9/11 led to a crackdown on civil liberties and justified installing the accoutrement of a police state including scanners and such;

WikiLeaks is the "catalyst" that will lead to the installation of all sorts of newfangled "security" software and equipment into all inter-government and intelligence communications? With maybe back-doors built in?

If so, it will be interesting to know what companies are awarded such contracts.

Just letting ideas float to the surface of my mind.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby nathan28 » Wed Dec 01, 2010 10:59 am

justdrew wrote:
Jeff wrote:I haven't reached any conclusions, but I'm fascinated by the questions. Like, for instance, where in Wikileaks is the wiki? I don't see anything resembling a collaborative web effort. Currently, I see a throttled and redacted graveyard for whistleblowers.


I think the original plan was to setup wikileaks as a whole new way of doing business, in which info was constantly leaked from everywhere. what's going on with their website now I don't know why they'd be doing that. must be some strategy to it.


Yeah, WikiLeaks was a wiki until around the time it released the US helicopter attack on Reuters, or possibly earlier. Anyone could upload content and anyone could comment on it, and there was a lot of stuff that seemed very trivial there. Anyway, like Riddler says earlier, it's clearly indicative of something behind-the-scenes at WikiLeaks. I think the the Cryptome guy's comments would likewise indicate that.

The interview with the http://cryptome.org/ founder in the second Emory show is important, it's sourced from Wired IIRC. The big money play wikileaks was going for is significant. Hard to see what all that money would be used for other than keeping "the Julian" and possibly some others deeply underground & incognito for extended lengths.

I think the hair/cult linkup is there for a reason. He's sending a clue... to act as a deterrent... which answers the question of why he hasn't been picked up by now. Possibly because the PTB suspect that if they did, it would soon come out... "oh no they didn't." There may be a number of Julian's running around.


Did you really just suggest this is an attack of the clones phenomenon? B/c I could believe that, it would hardly be that far-fetched to image that hackers were sharing a collective identity for sake of cover. I've got way more issues with Emory playing "find the Nazi" and "find the MC connection", because Emory shoehorns everything into that. Remember, this is the guy who insists that the PLO is an arm of the Underground Reich and that the Gaza concentration camp starvation policy is justified, you know, to keep the Nazis from setting up concentration camps, and that OJ was framed as a veritable KWH to reinforce the image of PLO as good guy. And that a pre-teen George Soros got rich during the Anschluss. I'm not joking. Listen to his programs, they're practically all available now.

The issue I have is that those interviews with Cryptome are a little lacking nuance. The guy suggests he left WikiLeaks b/c he felt no need to operate with secrecy--after all, IMO Cryptome contains far, far more damaging information, like addresses, information on security details and procedures, etc., it's just not "newsworthy"--and WikiLeaks was as he said starting to act like the enemy they wanted to reveal. Now, that's debatable IMO. Likewise he had issues with the amount of money they wanted to raise. Emory makes a bunch of hay out of that.

That's the first thing that stands out in my mind. WikiLeaks used to be "free as in freedom." Now it's "free as in free beer." You wanted to post internally-circulated memos from the American College Psychiatric Counselors' and Puppydog Rehabilitators' Association, you could, and anyone could read them. Now you have three options on the menu: cablegate, the Iraq memos and the Afghanistan memos. That's a big reason why all this seems phony. I know MacCruise-dawg doesn't read posts by Americans, which is a shame, but to take a hint from him, WikiLeaks is going for Spectacle, not utility, now. It seems phony because at more than a few levels it is, even without the CIA, the Bormann Flight Network, Mossad, Disney, MK-ULTRA, the Koch bros., the Reptilians, DARPA, Goldman Sachs, Chemtrails etc. being involved.


Nordic wrote:So along comes Assange and Wikileaks. So now I can only assume people will think "well if it's true, then Wikileaks would probably find out about it".

Thus if Wikileaks doesn't release it, it probably didn't happen/doesn't exist/ is "conspiracy theory" only.


How long do you think a perceived monopoly position for Wikileaks as the sole source and arbiter of the real shit would last?


Likewise, there's plenty of crap floating around the internet that's *not* at WikiLeaks that's about as reliable. If WikiLeaks is making a bid to become the New York Times of the leaked documents world, which it very well may, I think it will become obvious, and probably sooner rather than later.

For example, this document (http://riceball.com/d/files/citionstress.pdf) has been aggressively suppressed by Citi with DMCA take-down demand letters, but not successfully, obviously--without Wikileaks being involved at all. Of course, it doesn't mention that AIPAC kidnapped Barack Obama and tortured him as a child and killed his twin brother and used his bones to make challah that they then fed to Barry in order to have a "Manchurian Candidate" in the 2008 elections to accelerate their plot to depopulate North America with an airborne spraying program (via commercial jets) and the AGW hoax to facilitate colonization by Israel, which plans to use FEMA camps to breed blonde-haired, blue-eyed American sex slaves for the controlled opposition in Tehran and Beijing during ancient Atlantean rituals to open a portal for the Reptilians, so I guess it must just be another false-flag limited hangout controlled opposition doc that Citi threatened SLAPP suits over, because billion-dollar corporations only drive low-net worth bloggers into bankruptcy when it's part of a stage-managed KWH psyop. We all know that those blog-writers on free services, especially the ones whose blogs get shitcanned after a letter from Citi's legal people, are just getting paid by the CIA, anyway.

justdrew wrote:The info Emory brought (which I should have known already but didn't) about the owner of the PRQ server farm that hosts WL and PB... That's mildly annoying... WTF is up with that guy? He's got to be considered a player in this. Amazing they haven't just shut that down. It implies that there are powerful elements within Europe that favor the continuation of the wikileaks saga.


Whoa, egghead, are you trying to tell me that there are players on the world-stage besides Israel and the United States? Could it be that Wikileaks might even have sponsorship from non-US or non-state players? :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby MacCruiskeen » Wed Dec 01, 2010 11:10 am

nathan28 wrote:I know MacCruise-dawg doesn't read posts by Americans, which is a shame,


:shock: Qué?

nathan28 wrote: but to take a hint from him, WikiLeaks is going for Spectacle, not utility, now.


Nathan, I'm just not understanding the banter at all here. I never said, nor even hinted, anything whatsoever about "WikiLeaks ... going for Spectacle, not utility".
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby nathan28 » Wed Dec 01, 2010 11:16 am

MacCruiskeen wrote:
nathan28 wrote:I know MacCruise-dawg doesn't read posts by Americans, which is a shame,


:shock: Qué?

nathan28 wrote: but to take a hint from him, WikiLeaks is going for Spectacle, not utility, now.


Nathan, I'm just not understanding the banter at all here. I never said, nor even hinted, anything whatsoever about "WikiLeaks ... going for Spectacle, not utility".



No, I mean you use the spectacle theory a lot. Just a hat tip.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby nathan28 » Wed Dec 01, 2010 12:31 pm

Cross-posting from SLAD's other post. Check out the AIPAC propaganda in this one:

seemslikeadream wrote:
Documents Show NYT and Washington Post Shilling for US Government on Iran Missile "Threat"

Wikileaks Exposes Complicity of the Press

By GARETH PORTER

A diplomatic cable from last February released by Wikileaks provides a detailed account of how Russian specialists on the Iranian ballistic missile program refuted the U.S. suggestion that Iran has missiles that could target European capitals or intends to develop such a capability.

In fact, the Russians challenged the very existence of the mystery missile the U.S. claims Iran acquired from North Korea.

But readers of the two leading U.S. newspapers never learned those key facts about the document.


DEFINITELY a limited hang-out.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Dec 01, 2010 2:09 pm

.

Putin labels embassy cables 'slanderous'

Russian prime minister condemns US cable describing him and President Dmitry Medvedev as Batman and Robin

Leaks culprit should be executed, says Mike Huckabee
UK police seek Julian Assange over rape claims


Those are the current Guardian headlines. If Assange is genuine I'd be advising him that the time has come to dump the whole thing online, anywhere, everywhere. Somewhere between 600,000 and 3 million people had access to the cable database, which means all of the major powers and intel agencies downloaded it quietly long ago, which means any individual agent who can be compromised already was, and the only ones without access are the people. These aren't intel cables, they're the business memos of supposed public servants.

My dishwashing today featured more of Brian Lehrer, this time with Gideon Rose (identified as the "liberal" editor of Foreign Affairs, the CFR organ) in a controlled froth about the child anarchist Assange and his attack on diplomacy and America. To summarize his spin: Spying is fine because everybody does it. (1) The apparent exception, however, is Manning. He's a traitor!!! and they will and should throw away the key. The cables show nothing, just a lot of irrelevant personal gossip that no one needs to know (2). But the cables also show how American diplomats are conscientious grown-ups trying to manage the world responsibly, and those who think otherwise have seen too many conspiracy movies. (He did a little review of "Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" and said Assange thinks he's the girl.) If you've got a problem with that, how would YOU like to tell us the best way to run the Middle East?! Come on, what's your alternative for ruling the world? Let the adults take care of business! At one point he veered into complaining about how so many other countries also don't get how hard it is to be in charge of the whole planet and each and every region. (3)

(1) This was said plainly, as though that makes it all right to bug Ban Ki Moon's office and steal his credit card number. I'm sure Moon's doing it to Clinton, or goddamn it he would be if the roles were reversed, because that's the only way the world works.

(2) except for the hundreds of thousands who had access?

(3) Of course no mention was made that still so far less than 300 cables have been released to the public (Cable Viewer is currently DOWN) and that the spin and cherrypicking has been conducted entirely by NYT and Co.

Yesterday Baer showed the empire's mode of thinking from a more operative level -- damn it, how can we bomb people if we can't keep secrets?! -- and now Rose shows the perspective from the top: elite hatred of democracy.

This illustrates Chomsky's take:

Noam Chomsky: WikiLeaks Cables Reveal "Profound Hatred for Democracy on the Part of Our Political Leadership"
By Noam Chomsky and Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!
Posted on November 30, 2010, Printed on December 1, 2010
http://www.alternet.org/story/149032/

AMY GOODMAN: For reaction to the WikiLeaks documents, we’re joined by world renowned political dissident and linguist Noam Chomsky, Professor Emeritus at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, author of over a hundred books including his latest Hopes and Prospects. Forty years ago, Noam and Howard Zinn helped government whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg edit and release the Pentagon Papers that top-secret internal U.S. history of the Vietnam War.

Noam Chomsky joins us from Boston... Before we talk about WikiLeaks, what was your involvement in the Pentagon Papers? I don’t think most people know about this.

NOAM CHOMSKY: Dan and I were friends. Tony Russo, who also who prepared them and helped leak them. I got advanced copies from Dan and Tony and there were several people who were releasing them to the press. I was one of them. Then I- along with Howard Zinn as you mentioned- edited a volume of essays and indexed the papers.

AMY GOODMAN: So explain how, though, how it worked. I always think this is important- to tell this story- especially for young people. Dan Ellsberg- Pentagon official, top-secret clearance- gets this U.S. involvement in Vietnam history out of his safe, he Xerox’s it and then how did you get your hands on it? He just directly gave it to you?

NOAM CHOMSKY: From Dan Ellsberg and Tony Russo, who had done the Xeroxing and the preparation of the material.

AMY GOODMAN: How much did you edit?

NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, we did not modify anything. The papers were not edited. They were in their original form. What Howard Zinn and I did was -- they came out in four volumes -- we prepared a fifth volume, which was critical essays by many scholars on the papers, what they mean, the significance and so on. And an index, which is almost indispensable for using them seriously. That’s the fifth volume in the Beacon Press series.

AMY GOODMAN: So you were then one of the first people to see the Pentagon Papers?

NOAM CHOMSKY: Outside of Dan Ellsberg and Tony Russo, yes. I mean, there were some journalists who may have seen them, I am not sure.

AMY GOODMAN: What are your thoughts today? For example, we just played this clip of New York republican congress member Peter King who says WikiLeaks should be declared a foreign terrorist organization.

NOAM CHOMSKY: I think that is outlandish. We should understand -- and the Pentagon Papers is another case in point -- that one of the major reasons for government secrecy is to protect the government from its own population. In the Pentagon Papers, for example, there was one volume -- the negotiations volume -- which might have had a bearing on ongoing activities and Daniel Ellsberg withheld that. That came out a little bit later. If you look at the papers themselves, there are things Americans should have known that others did not want them to know. And as far as I can tell, from what I’ve seen here, pretty much the same is true. In fact, the current leaks are -- what I’ve seen, at least -- primarily interesting because of what they tell us about how the diplomatic service works.

AMY GOODMAN: The documents’ revelations about Iran come just as the Iranian government has agreed to a new round of nuclear talks beginning next month. On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the cables vindicate the Israeli position that Iran poses a nuclear threat. Netanyahu said, "Our region has been hostage to a narrative that is the result of sixty years of propaganda, which paints Israel as the greatest threat. In reality, leaders understand that that view is bankrupt. For the first time in history, there is agreement that Iran is the threat. If leaders start saying openly what they have long been saying behind closed doors, with can make a real breakthrough on the road to peace," Netanyahu said. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also discussed Iran at her news conference in Washington. This is what she said:

HILARY CLINTON: I think that it should not be a surprise to anyone that Iran is a source of great concern, not only in the United States. What comes through in every meeting that I have- anywhere in the world- is a concern about Iranian actions and intentions. So, if anything, any of the comments that are being reported on allegedly from the cables confirm the fact that Iran poses a very serious threat in the eyes of many of her neighbors and a serious concern far beyond her region. That is why the international community came together to pass the strongest possible sanctions against Iran. It did not happen because the United States said, "Please, do this for us!" It happened because countries- once they evaluated the evidence concerning Iran’s actions and intentions- reached the same conclusion that the United States reached: that we must do whatever we can to muster the international community to take action to prevent Iran from becoming a nuclear weapons state. So if anyone reading the stories about these, uh, alleged cables thinks carefully what they will conclude is that the concern about Iran is well founded, widely shared, and will continue to be at the source of the policy that we pursue with like-minded nations to try to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Secretary to Hillary Clinton yesterday at a news conference. I wanted to get your comment on Clinton, Netanyahu’s comment, and the fact that Abdullah of Saudi Arabia- the King who is now getting back surgery in the New York- called for the U.S. to attack Iran. Noam Chomsky?

NOAM CHOMSKY: That essentially reinforces what I said before, that the main significance of the cables that are being released so far is what they tell us about Western leadership. So Hillary Clinton and Benjamin Netanyahu surely know of the careful polls of Arab public opinion. The Brookings Institute just a few months ago released extensive polls of what Arabs think about Iran. The results are rather striking. They show the Arab opinion holds that the major threat in the region is Israel -- that’s 80. The second major threat is the United States -- that’s 77. Iran is listed as a threat by 10%.

With regard to nuclear weapons, rather remarkably, a majority -- in fact, 57 – say that the region would have a positive effect in the region if Iran had nuclear weapons. Now, these are not small numbers. 80, 77, say the U.S. and Israel are the major threat. 10 say Iran is the major threat. This may not be reported in the newspapers here -- it is in England -- but it’s certainly familiar to the Israeli and U.S. governments, and to the ambassadors. But there is not a word about it anywhere. What that reveals is the profound hatred for democracy on the part of our political leadership and the Israeli political leadership. These things aren’t even to be mentioned. This seeps its way all through the diplomatic service. The cables to not have any indication of that.

When they talk about Arabs, they mean the Arab dictators, not the population, which is overwhelmingly opposed to the conclusions that the analysts here -- Clinton and the media -- have drawn. There’s also a minor problem; that’s the major problem. The minor problem is that we don’t know from the cables what the Arab leaders think and say. We know what was selected from the range of what they say. So there is a filtering process. We don’t know how much it distorts the information. But there is no question that what is a radical distortion is -- or, not even a distortion, a reflection -- of the concern that the dictators are what matter. The population does not matter, even if it’s overwhelmingly opposed to U.S. policy.


There are similar things elsewhere, such as keeping to this region. One of the most interesting cables was a cable from the U.S. ambassador in Israel to Hillary Clinton, which described the attack on Gaza -- which we should call the U.S./Israeli attack on Gaza -- December 2008. It states correctly there had been a truce. It does not add that during the truce -- which was really not observed by Israel -- but during the truce, Hamas scrupulously observed it according to the Israeli government, not a single rocket was fired. That’s an omission. But then comes a straight lie: it says that in December 2008, Hamas renewed rocket firing and therefore Israel had to attack in self-defense. Now, the ambassador surely is aware that there must be somebody in the American Embassy who reads the Israeli press -- the mainstream Israeli press -- in which case the embassy is surely aware that it is exactly the opposite: Hamas was calling for a renewal of the cease-fire. Israel considered the offer and rejected it, preferring to bomb rather than have security. Also omitted is that while Israel never observed the cease-fire -- it maintained the siege in violation of the truce agreement -- on November 4, the U.S. election 2008, the Israeli army invaded Gaza, killed half a dozen Hamas militants, which did lead to an exchange of fire in which all the casualties, as usual, were Palestinian. Then in December, Hamas -- when the truce officially ended -- Hamas called for renewing it. Israel refused, and the U.S. and Israel chose to launch the war. What the embassy reported is a gross falsification and a very significant one since- since it has to do the justification for the murderous attack- which means either the embassy hasn’t a clue to what is going on or else they’re lying outright.

AMY GOODMAN: And the latest report that just came out -- from Oxfam, from Amnesty International, and other groups -- about the effects of the siege on Gaza? What’s happening right now?

NOAM CHOMSKY: A siege is an act of war. If anyone insists on that, it is Israel. Israel launched two wars -- '56 and ’67 -- in part on grounds its access to the outside world was very partially restricted. That very partial siege they considered an act of war and justification for -- well, one of several justifications -- for what they called "preventive" -- or if you like, preemptive -- war. So they understand that perfectly well and the point is correct. The siege is a criminal act, in the first place. The Security Council has called on Israel to lift it, and others have. It's designed to -- as Israeli officials have have stated -- to keep the people of Gaza to minimal level of existence. They do not want to kill them all off because that would not look good in international opinion. As they put it, "to keep them on a diet." This justification, this began very shortly after the official Israeli withdrawal. There was an election in January 2006 after the only free election in the Arab world -- carefully monitored, recognized to be free -- but it had a flaw. The wrong people won. Namely Hamas, which the U.S. did not want it and Israel did not want. Instantly, within days, the U.S. and Israel instituted harsh measures to punish the people of Gaza for voting the wrong way in a free election.

The next step was that they -- the U.S. and Israel -- sought to, along with the Palestinian Authority, try to carry out a military coup in Gaza to overthrow the elected government. This failed -- Hamas beat back the coup attempt. That was July 2007. At that point, the siege got much harsher. In between come in many acts of violence, shellings, invasions and so on and so forth. But basically, Israel claims that when the truce was established in the summer 2008, Israel’s reason for not observing it and withdrawing the siege was that there was an Israeli soldier -- Gilad Shalit -- who was captured at the border. International commentary regards this as a terrible crime. Well, whatever you think about it, capturing a soldier of an attacking army -- and the army was attacking Gaza -- capturing a soldier of an attacking army isn’t anywhere near the level of the crime of kidnapping civilians. Just one day before the capture of Gilad Shalit at the border, Israeli troops had entered Gaza, kidnapped two civilians -- the Muammar Brothers -- and spirited them across the border. They’ve disappeared somewhere in Israel’s prison system, which is where hundreds, maybe a thousand or so people are sometimes there for years without charges. There are also secret prisons. We don’t know what happens there.

This alone is a far worse crime than the kidnapping of Shalit. In fact, you could argue there was a reason why was barely covered: Israel has been doing this for years, in fact, decades. Kidnapping, capturing people, hijacking ships, killing people, bringing them to Israel sometimes as hostages for many years. So this is regular practice; Israel can do what it likes. But the reaction here and the rest of the world of regarding the Shalit kidnapping- well, not kidnapping, you don’t kidnap soldiers- the capture of a soldier as an unspeakable crime, justification for maintaining and murders siege... that’s disgraceful.

AMY GOODMAN: So you have Amnesty International, Oxfam, Save the Children, and eighteen other aide groups calling on Israel to unconditionally lift the blockade of Gaza. And you have in the WikiLeaks release a U.S. diplomatic cable -- provided to The Guardian by WikiLeaks -- laying out, "National human intelligence collection directive: Asking U.S. personnel to obtain details of travel plans such as routes and vehicles used by Palestinian Authority leaders and Hamas members." The cable demands, "Biographical, financial, by metric information on key PA and Hamas leaders and representatives to include the Young Guard inside Gaza, the West Bank, and outside," it says.

NOAM CHOMSKY: That should not come as much of a surprise. Contrary to the image that is portrayed here, the United States is not an honest broker. It is a participant, a direct and crucial participant, in Israeli crimes, both in the West Bank and in Gaza. The attack in Gaza was a clear case in point: they used American weapons, the U.S. blocked cease-fire efforts, they gave diplomatic support. The same is true of the daily ongoing crimes in the West Bank, and we should not forget that. Actually, in Area C- the area of the West Bank that Israel controls -- conditions for Palestinians have been reported by Save The Children to be worse than in Gaza. Again, this all takes place on the basis of crucial, decisive, U.S., military, diplomatic, economic support; and also ideological support -- meaning, distorting the situation, as is done again dramatically in the cables.

The siege itself is simply criminal. It is not only blocking desperately needed aid from coming in, it also drives Palestinians away from the border. Gaza is a small place, heavily and densely overcrowded. And Israeli fire and attacks drive Palestinians away from the Arab land on the border, and also drive fisherman in from Gaza into territorial waters. They compelled by Israeli gunboats -- all illegal, of course -- to fish right near the shore where fishing is almost impossible because Israel has destroyed the power systems and sewage systems and the contamination is terrible. This is just a stranglehold to punish people for being there and for insisting on voting the wrong way. Israel decided, "We don’t want this anymore. Let’s just get rid of them."

We should also remember, the U.S./Israeli policy -- since Oslo, since the early 1990’s -- has been to separate Gaza from the West Bank. That is in straight violation of the Oslo agreements, but it has been carried out systematically, and it has a big effect. It means almost half the Palestinian population would be cut off from any possible political arrangement that would be made. It also means Palestine loses its access to the outside world -- Gaza should have and can have airports and seaports. Right now, Israel has taken over about 40% of the West Bank. Obama’s latest offers have granted even more, and they’re certainly planning to take more. What is left is just canonized. It’s what the planner, Ariel Sharon called Bantustans. And they’re in prison, too, as Israel takes over the Jordan Valley and drives Palestinians out. So these are all crimes of a piece.

The Gaza siege is particularly grotesque because of the conditions under which people are forced to live. I mean, if a young person in Gaza -- student in Gaza, let’s say -- wants to study in a West Bank university, they can’t do it. If it a person in Gaza needs advanced medical training or treatment from an East Jerusalem hospital where the training is available, they can’t go! Medicines are held back. It is a scandalous crime, all around.

AMY GOODMAN: What do you think the United States should do in this case?

NOAM CHOMSKY: What the United States should do is very simple: it should join the world. I mean, there are negotiations going on, supposedly. As they are presented here, the standard picture is that the U.S. is an honest broker trying to bring together two recalcitrant opponents -- Israel and Palestinian Authority. That’s just a charade.

If there were serious negotiations, they would be organized by some neutral party and the U.S. and Israel would be on one side and the world would be on the other side. And that is not an exaggeration. It should not be a secret that there has long been an overwhelming international consensus on a diplomatic, political solution. Everyone knows the basic outlines; some of the details you can argue about. It includes everyone except the United States and Israel. The U.S. has been blocking it for 35 years with occasional departures -- brief ones. It includes the Arab League. It includes the Organization of Islamic States. which happens to include Iran. It includes every relevant actor except the United States and Israel, the two rejectionist states. So if there were to be negotiations that were serious, that’s the way they would be organized. The actual negotiations barely reach the level of comedy. The issue that’s being debated is a footnote, a minor footnote: expansion of settlements. Of course it’s illegal. In fact, everything Israel is doing in the West Bank and Gaza is illegal. That hasn’t even been controversial since 1967. ...

AMY GOODMAN: I want to read for you now what Sarah Palin tweeted – the former Alaskan governor, of course, and Republication vice presidential nominee. This is what she tweeted about WikiLeaks. Rather, she put it on Facebook. She said, “First and foremost, what steps were taken to stop WikiLeaks’ director Julian Assange from distributing this highly-sensitive classified material, especially after he had already published material not once but twice in the previous months? Assange is not a journalist any more than the editor of the Al Qaeda’s new English-language magazine “Inspire,” is a journalist. He is an anti-American operative with blood on his hands. His past posting of classified documents revealed the identity of more than 100 Afghan sources to the Taliban. Why was he not pursued with the same urgency we pursue Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders?” Noam Chomsky, your response?

NOAM CHOMSKY: That’s pretty much what I would expect Sarah Palin to say. I don’t know how much she understands, but I think we should pay attention to what we learn from the leaks. ... Perhaps the most dramatic revelation, or mention, is the bitter hatred of democracy that is revealed both by the U.S. Government – Hillary Clinton, others – and also by the diplomatic service.

To tell the world – well, they’re talking to each other -- to pretend to each other that the Arab world regards Iran as the major threat and wants the U.S. to bomb Iran, is extremely revealing, when they know that approximately 80% of Arab opinion regards the U.S. and Israel as the major threat, 10% regard Iran as the major threat, and a majority, 57%, think the region would be better off with Iranian nuclear weapons as a kind of deterrent. That is does not even enter. All that enters is what they claim has been said by Arab dictators – brutal Arab dictators. That is what counts.


How representative this is of what they say, we don’t know, because we do not know what the filtering is. But that’s a minor point. But the major point is that the population is irrelevant. All that matters is the opinions of the dictators that we support. If they were to back us, that is the Arab world. That is a very revealing picture of the mentality of U.S. political leadership and, presumably, the lead opinion, judging by the commentary that’s appeared here, that’s the way it has been presented in the press as well. It does not matter what the Arabs believe.


REST OF INTERVIEW AND VIDEO AT LINK.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby justdrew » Wed Dec 01, 2010 3:41 pm

SO WHY THE FUCK IS AMAZON SPEAKING DIRECTLY TO THIS WORM LIEBERMAN?

short form: to deal with the dDOS attacks they've mirrored some content to amazon's self-service webhosting solution, once amazon realized they shut it down. BFD.

WikiLeaks website, pummeled by attacks, loses home
By The Associated Press
Wednesday, December 1st, 2010 -- 1:59 pm

Update: Amazon tells Lieberman that it took down the WikiLeaks website

Independent Sen. Joe Lieberman released a statement Wednesday saying that Amazon.com told him that it had terminated its relationship with a WikiLeaks website that hosted secret US diplomatic cables.

Talking Points Memo obtained a copy of the full statement:

This morning Amazon informed my staff that it has ceased to host the Wikileaks website. I wish that Amazon had taken this action earlier based on Wikileaks' previous publication of classified material. The company's decision to cut off Wikileaks now is the right decision and should set the standard for other companies Wikileaks is using to distribute its illegally seized material. I call on any other company or organization that is hosting Wikileaks to immediately terminate its relationship with them. Wikileaks' illegal, outrageous, and reckless acts have compromised our national security and put lives at risk around the world. No responsible company - whether American or foreign - should assist Wikileaks in its efforts to disseminate these stolen materials. I will be asking Amazon about the extent of its relationship with Wikileaks and what it and other web service providers will do in the future to ensure that their services are not used to distribute stolen, classified information.

Michael van Poppel of BNO News reported that the Department of Homeland Security has confirmed that Amazon is no longer doing business with WikiLeaks.

Original report follows...

The website of WikiLeaks, the organization that just released a trove of sensitive U.S. State Department documents, appears to have lost or left its main Web host, Amazon.com.

The main website and a sub-site devoted to the diplomatic documents were unavailable from the U.S. and Europe on Wednesday, as Amazon servers refused to acknowledge requests for data.

Availability of the sites has been spotty since Sunday, when it started to come under a series of Internet-based attacks by unknown hackers. WikiLeaks dealt with the attacks in part by moving to servers run by Amazon Web Services, which is self-service.

Amazon.com Inc. would not comment on its relationship with WikiLeaks or whether it forced the site to leave. Messages seeking comment from WikiLeaks were not immediately returned.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby barracuda » Wed Dec 01, 2010 3:57 pm

The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby justdrew » Wed Dec 01, 2010 4:01 pm

these disgusting pieces of human garbage, these sick old white men braying like asses for murder should receive their own medicine.

if WL keeps running into dDOS attack problems, I bet before much longer they just release the whole shebang via P2P just like the insurance file.
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby justdrew » Wed Dec 01, 2010 5:01 pm

"The Pirate Bay Co-Founder, Peter Sunde, has started a new project which will provide a decentralized p2p based DNS system. This is a direct result of the increasing control which the US government has over ICANN. The project is called P2P-DNS and according to the project's wiki, this is how the project is described: 'P2P-DNS is a community project that will free internet users from imperial control of DNS by ICANN. In order to prevent unjust prosecution or denial of service, P2P-DNS will operate as a distributed and less centralized service hosted by the users of DNS. Temporary substitutes, (as Alpha and Beta developments), are being made ready for deployment. A network with no centralized points of failure, (per the original design of the internet), remains our goal. P2P-DNS is developing rapidly.'"
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby nathan28 » Wed Dec 01, 2010 5:14 pm

Looks Like Assange's MC'd mom has got in on the action, so now we know once and for all that this is really just a limited hang-out controlled opposition effort. That's why people are calling for Assange's assassination, including likely presidential candidates.

http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-Issues/2010/1201/WikiLeaks-Julian-Assange-is-merely-fighting-baddies-says-his-mom

WikiLeaks' Julian Assange is merely 'fighting baddies,' says his mom
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's mother Christine is defending her son as fighting a good fight, saying she gave him a strong grounding in ethics.


The mother of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has emerged to defend her son as fighting a good fight, saying she raised a highly intelligent and sensitive boy, and gave him a strong grounding in ethics.

"Whether you agree with what Julian does or not, living by what you believe in and standing up for something is a good thing," she told the Australian newspaper Herald Sun, in an article dated Dec. 2. "He sees what he's doing as doing a good thing in the world, fighting baddies, if you like."

But that’s not exactly what government authorities are considering as they seek to arrest the renegade Australian. Mr. Assange is wanted on rape allegations in Sweden, the international police organization Interpol has issued a “red notice” alert for his arrest, and Australian and American law enforcement agencies are reportedly studying the possibility of issuing criminal charges against him.

RELATED - WikiLeaks 101: Five questions about who did what and when

In addition, his former friends and colleagues describe him as a self-absorbed authoritarian. But he has made new friends with leftist Latin American governments, who praise him.

Person of the Year?

But despite the blowback he faces, Assange is reportedly leading the poll for Time magazine’s 2010 “Person of the Year” – a title that went last year to chairman of the US Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, and before that to President-elect Barack Obama...
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Re: The Wikileaks Question

Postby justdrew » Wed Dec 01, 2010 5:20 pm

nathan28 wrote:Looks Like Assange's MC'd mom has got in on the action, so now we know once and for all that this is really just a limited hang-out controlled opposition effort. That's why people are calling for Assange's assassination, including likely presidential candidates.


is that sarcasm? :sarcasm
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