Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Dec 22, 2010 10:13 am

WikiLeaks cables: US intervened in Michael Moore NZ screening
Embassy angered by 'potential fiasco' of cabinet minister hosting a showing of Fahrenheit 9/11

Richard Adams in Washington
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 22 December 2010 12.48 GMT


Whatever else WikiLeaks may have revealed, one fact has been repeatedly confirmed: the US government under George Bush really loathed the documentary filmmaker Michael Moore.

After a leaked cable from US diplomats in Havana falsely claimed Cuba had banned Moore's documentary Sicko – when in fact it was shown on state television – another cable reveals US officials flying into a panic after hearing a rumour that a New Zealand cabinet minister was hosting a screening of Moore's film Fahrenheit 9/11.

Labelling the event a "potential fiasco", the classified cable from the US embassy in Wellington in 2003 reads like a failed plotline for an episode of In the Loop, breathlessly reporting a series of calls to the New Zealand prime minister's office and to the minister involved, Marian Hobbs.

Michael Moore, appearing on the Rachel Maddow Show on Tuesday night, said the New Zealand cable uncovered by WikiLeaks showed the unsettling reach of US influence. "If they were micromanaging me that much, if they were that concerned about the truth in Fahrenheit 9/11 that they have to go after a screening in a place I don't even really know where it is – I know it's way too long to sit in coach for me – I want to know. Because I think it speaks to a larger issue: if they have the time for that, what else are these guys up to?"

Sadly for the world's only superpower, the New Zealand government wasn't concerned in the slightest, based on the puzzled responses recorded by the US deputy chief of mission, David Burnett, to his protests.

Burnett contacted the prime minister's office, to be told they knew nothing about a screening. He then called Hobbs, only to be rebuffed by a receptionist. "The minister's office declined to make her available to discuss the matter," Burnett sniffed.

Hobbs's staff later told the US embassy that she was merely attending the screening, part of a series of Labour party fundraisers in her constituency.

The Americans tried to console themselves with bluster, assuring colleagues in Washington that they had saved the day in the face of New Zealand's latent indifference. "It is probable that this potential fiasco may only have been averted because of our phone calls – it is apparent to us that neither the minister nor anyone else in the Labour government seems to have thought there was anything wrong with a senior minister hosting such an event."

The participants on the New Zealand side remember little, if anything, about the "potential fiasco".

Hobbs, who retired from politics in 2008 and now works in Northampton, told the Guardian she did not recall the event that merited a superpower's intervention.

"To be honest I can't remember anything about it at all," she said. "Possibly my staff didn't tell me because they knew I wouldn't take any notice."

Grant Robertson, who worked as a volunteer campaign official for Hobbs and helped organise fundraising events, recalls a "bit of a fuss" but can't remember minor details – such as the diplomatic might of the US state department being involved.

"Yes, I remember the event. It was one of a number of similar movie fundraisers, and I remember that it went ahead," said Robertson, who replaced Hobbs as Labour MP for the Wellington Central seat. "I have a memory of a fuss but it wasn't much of a fuss."

The Americans seemed to think so. The cable concludes: "Ambassador will use a scheduled meeting with the prime minister to tell [Helen] Clark … that we would really rather not get dragged into internal political issues, such as ministerial fundraising events for Clark's Labour party."

The US ambassador to New Zealand at the time was Charles Swindells, appointed to the post by George Bush in 2001.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/de ... l-moore-nz

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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby vanlose kid » Wed Dec 22, 2010 10:39 am

The smoking cable: Israel said it had ’secret accord’ with U.S. over expanding settlements even as Obama said in Cairo they must stop!

by PHILIP WEISS on DECEMBER 21, 2010 · 85 COMMENTS


This is why Wikileaks is so crucial: A June 2009 cable from France, days after the great Cairo speech of Obama, in which the Israelis are said to claim a secret deal with the US for settlement growth. I'm running. More to say later. And note too where Sarkozy says, Israel, the horse of history is galloping past the window. Jump now or you are finished. The Palestinians are stronger than you think. Beautiful. Europe is taking Palestine's side now because of this understanding. Wow. Thank you, Mr. Assange:

"MFA Middle East Director (Assistant Secretary-equivalent) Patrice Paoli informed POL Minister Counselor June 18 that Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak
told French officials in Paris June 15 that the Israelis have
a "secret accord" with the USG to continue the "natural
growth" of Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Paoli noted
that the French anticipate strong Israeli resistance to USG
pressure on this issue....

"President Sarkozy will have
three messages to convey to Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu
when they meet in Paris on June 24:

"-- 'You think you've got time, but you don't.'
"-- 'You think you have an alternative solution, but you
don't.'
"-- 'You think you're stronger than the Palestinians, but
you're not.'

"Paoli said that Sarkozy will stress that 'there is a single
door and it is imperative to move through it now.'"


http://mondoweiss.net/2010/12/the-smoki ... t-end.html

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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Dec 22, 2010 9:22 pm

WikiLeaks, Russian Paper Teaming Up To Expose Graft In Country

The Moscow-based newspaper part-owned by former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and billionaire Alexander Lebedev said Wednesday that it has agreed to work with the website WikiLeaks to expose corruption in Russia.

Julian Assange, founder of the site that has sparked controvery for posting secret government and corporate documents online, has materials about Russia that haven't been published yet, weekly Novaya Gazeta -- known for its criticism of the Kremlin -- said on its website.

"Assange said that Russians will soon find out a lot about their country. He wasn't bluffing," Novaya Gazeta said. "Our collaboration will be aimed at exposing corruption at the top levels of politics. Now, none of them will be protected from the truth."

Lebedev, who served as a spy in the Soviet-era KGB, is a rare Russian tycoon who supports opposition media. He also owns London's Evening Standard and Independent newspapers. Lebedev and Gorbachev own about half of Novaya Gazeta, with the paper's staff owning the rest.

Bloomberg News on Wednesday quoted a Novaya Gazeta spokeswoman as saying the paper received unlimited access to WikiLeaks' database, which contains a "wide range" of documents including ones pertaining to Anna Politkovskaya, a reporter for the paper who was killed in 2006. Colleagues say Politkovskaya was shot dead in her apartment building in a contract-style hit to retaliate for her exposes on official corruption.

Separately, President Dmitry Medvedev said the documents published by WikiLeaks don't hurt Russia's interests and that authorities in the country don't care what's being discussed in diplomatic circles.

"When people communicate, they sometimes use very harsh language and if such a leak had happened from our Foreign Ministry or secrete services, many of our partners, including Americans, would have got an emotional charge after reading 'kind words' about themselves," Russian news agencies quoted Medvedev as saying during a meeting with students in India.



Wikileaks Leak? Norwegian Paper Claims Access to Entire Cache of Cables
Wikileaks and Julian Assange Have Held Exclusive Control Over Release of Cables -- Until Now

Norway's main business newspaper reported Wednesday that the Aftenposten news service has obtained unfettered and unauthorized access to the entire cache of secret government documents held exclusively by Wikileaks and its founder, Julian Assange.

If true, Aftenposten would be the only international news organization to have direct possession of the entire trove of U.S. diplomatic cables and military records believed to have been originally leaked by U.S. Army Private Bradley Manning.

The paper does not reveal who leaked the documents from inside Wikileaks' operations.


"I have no comments on how we have secured access to the documents. We never give our sources, even in this case," Aftenposten news editor Ole Erik Almlid told the paper Dagens Naerings, according to a rough translation of his comments, which were in Norwegian.

Until now, Wikileaks has selectively released roughly 2,000 of the more than quarter million controversial documents, disseminating them to the general public through a handful of news organizations, including The New York Times, Guardian and Der Spiegel newspapers.

The leak from Wikileaks could undermine Assange's plan to use the release of the documents as leverage against foreign governments.

"We are free to do whatever we want with these documents," Almlid told Dagens Naerings. "We're free to publish the documents or not publish the documents. We can publish on the Internet or on paper. We are handling these documents just like all other journalistic material to which we have gained access."

More than a dozen Aftenposten reporters are now sifting through the documents, according to the Australian Herald Sun, which first reported on Aftenposten's acquisition.

United Nations Investigates Manning Detention
Meanwhile, Manning remains in U.S. military custody awaiting trial for allegedly downloading the secret files in his role as an intelligence analyst.

But his detention has become a focal point for debate.

Some civil rights groups are protesting treatment of Manning at a Marine Corps brig in Quantico, Va., as inhumane and punitive -- saying the conditions amount to torture.


The United Nations said Wednesday it is investigating the complaints, according to The Associated Press.

Manning spends 23 hours a day in solitary confinement.

The Marines note that Manning has been treated no differently than other maximum custody detainees. And, contrary to critics' assertions, a Marine spokesman told ABC, Manning is allowed to converse with other detainees
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Dec 22, 2010 9:47 pm


http://www.fair.org
Media Advisory

What We Learn From WikiLeaks
Media paint flattering picture of U.S. diplomacy


12/16/10

In U.S. elite media, the main revelation of the WikiLeaks diplomatic cables is that the U.S. government conducts its foreign policy in a largely admirable fashion.

Fareed Zakaria, Time (12/2/10):

The WikiLeaks documents, by contrast [to the Pentagon Papers], show Washington pursuing privately pretty much the policies it has articulated publicly. Whether on Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan or North Korea, the cables confirm what we know to be U.S. foreign policy. And often this foreign policy is concerned with broader regional security, not narrow American interests. Ambassadors are not caught pushing other countries in order to make deals secretly to strengthen the U.S., but rather to solve festering problems.


David Sanger, New York Times (12/5/10):

While WikiLeaks made the trove available with the intention of exposing United States duplicity, what struck many readers was that American diplomacy looked rather impressive. The day-by-day record showed diplomats trying their hardest behind closed doors to defuse some of the world's thorniest conflicts, but also assembling a Plan B.


David Brooks, New York Times (11/30/10):

Despite the imaginings of people like Assange, the conversation revealed in the cables is not devious and nefarious. The private conversation is similar to the public conversation, except maybe more admirable.


New York Times editorial (11/30/10):

But what struck us, and reassured us, about the latest trove of classified documents released by WikiLeaks was the absence of any real skullduggery. After years of revelations about the Bush administration's abuses--including the use of torture and kidnappings--much of the Obama administration's diplomatic wheeling and dealing is appropriate and, at times, downright skillful.

Christopher Dickey and Andrew Bast, Newsweek (12/13/10):

One of the great ironies of the latest WikiLeaks dump, in fact, is that the industrial quantities of pilfered State Department documents actually show American diplomats doing their jobs the way diplomats should, and doing them very well indeed. When the cables detail corruption at the top of the Afghan government, the Saudi king's desire to be rid of the Iranian threat, the personality quirks of European leaders or the state of the Russian mafiacracy, the reporting is very much in line with what the press has already told the public. There's no big disconnect about the facts; no evidence--in the recent cables at least--that the United States government is trying to deceive the public or itself.


Bob Garfield, NPR's On the Media (12/3/10):

The stories so far have been revealing but unsurprising, it seems to me, and not especially indicting. It’s made me wonder whether WikiLeaks is a legitimate whistleblower in this case or just a looter. Has Julian Assange shed light here with the release of 253,000 cables or has he just smashed a very big store window?

Anne Applebaum, Washington Post (12/7/10):

By now, I think we have learned that Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, has vast ambitions. Among them is the end of American government as we know it. On his website he describes the leaked U.S. diplomatic cables in dramatic and sinister terms, evoking the lost ideals of George Washington and claiming that they demonstrate a profound gap between the United States' "public persona and what it says behind closed doors." Alas, the cables don't live up to that promise. On the contrary--as others have noted--they show that U.S. diplomats pursue pretty much the same goals in private as they do in public, albeit using more caustic language.

These conclusions represent an extraordinarily narrow reading of the WikiLeaks cables, of which about 1,000 have been released (contrary to constant media claims that the website has already released 250,000 cables). Some of the more explosive revelations, unflattering to U.S. policymakers, have received less attention in U.S. corporate media. Among the revelations that, by any sensible reading, show U.S. diplomatic efforts of considerable concern:

--The U.S. attempted to prevent German authorities from acting on arrest warrants against 13 CIA officers who were instrumental in the abduction and subsequent torture of German citizen Khaled El-Masri (Scott Horton, Harpers.org, 11/29/10; New York Times, 12/9/10).

--The U.S. worked to obstruct Spanish government investigations into the killing of a Spanish journalist in Iraq by U.S. forces, the use of Spanish airfields for the CIA's "extraordinary rendition" program and torture of Spanish detainees at Guantánamo (El Pais, 12/2/10; Scott Horton, Harpers.org, 12/1/10).

--WikiLeaks coverage has often emphasized that Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh reassured U.S. officials that he would claim U.S. military airstrikes in his country were the work of Yemeni forces. But as Justin Elliot pointed out (Salon, 12/7/10), the United States has long denied carrying out airstrikes in the country at all. The secret attacks have killed scores of civilians.

--According to the cables, U.S. Special Forces are actively conducting operations inside Pakistan, despite repeated government denials (Jeremy Scahill, Nation, 12/1/10).

--The U.S. ambassador to Honduras concluded that the 2009 removal of president Manuel Zelaya was indeed a coup, and that backers of this action provided no compelling evidence to support their legal claims (Robert Naiman, Just Foreign Policy, 11/29/10). Despite the conclusions reached in the cable, official U.S. statements remained ambiguous. If the Obama administration had reached the same conclusion in public as was made in the cable, the outcome of the coup might have been very different.

--The U.S. secured a secret agreement with Britain to allow U.S. bases on British soil to stockpile cluster bombs, circumventing a treaty signed by Britain. The U.S. also discouraged other countries from working to ban the weapons, which have devastating effects on civilian populations (Guardian, 12/1/10).

--The U.S. engaged in an array of tactics to undermine opposition to U.S. climate change policies, including bribes and surveillance (Guardian, 12/3/10).

--U.S. diplomats in Georgia were uncritical of that country's claims about Russian interference, a dispute that eventually led to a brief war (New York Times, 12/2/10). U.S. officials "appeared to set aside skepticism and embrace Georgian versions of important and disputed events....as the region slipped toward war, sources outside the Georgian government were played down or not included in important cables. Official Georgian versions of events were passed to Washington largely unchallenged."

--U.S. officials put forward sketchy intelligence as proof that Iran had secured 19 long-range missiles from North Korea--claims that were treated as fact by the New York Times, which subsequently walked back its credulous reporting (FAIR Activism Update, 12/3/10)


All of these examples--an incomplete tally of the important revelations in the cables thus far--would suggest that there is plenty in the WikiLeaks releases that does not reflect particularly well on U.S. policymakers.

In its "Note to Readers" explaining their decision to publish stories about the cables, the New York Times (11/29/10) told readers that "the documents serve an important public interest, illuminating the goals, successes, compromises and frustrations of American diplomacy."

The paper went on:

But the more important reason to publish these articles is that the cables tell the unvarnished story of how the government makes its biggest decisions, the decisions that cost the country most heavily in lives and money. They shed light on the motivations--and, in some cases, duplicity--of allies on the receiving end of American courtship and foreign aid. They illuminate the diplomacy surrounding two current wars and several countries, like Pakistan and Yemen, where American military involvement is growing.


The "duplicity" of other countries can be illuminated by the cables, while the U.S.'s secret wars are evidence of "diplomacy." That principle would seem to be guiding the way many U.S. outlets are interpreting the WikiLeaks revelations.


http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=4215



And this list missed a whole bunch of the big ones, like the Yemeni-US construction of a mini-Gulf of Tonkin incident, the order to steal Ban-Ki Moon's credit card numbers, corporations like Pfizer and Shell routinely reporting their crimes in Nigeria to the State Department without fear of repercussion or loss of support, Arbib's service as an informant during the toppling of the Rudd government in Australia, pressure on Sweden and Spain among others to follow US corporate copyright policy, and and what am I forgettin'? Oh yeah, Lebanese defense minister Murr negotiating with Israel about which targets in his country he'd like to see BOMBED.

Plus the fanatic obsession with the real Axis of Evil: Iran, Hugo, and Michael Moore.

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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Dec 24, 2010 5:53 pm

barracuda wrote:In this cable release, we find a rather startling discovery of what can only be called violations of international law by the US government and the Mossad. Let me synopsise the rellevant facts here. In 2005, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement was brokered between North and South Sudan to alleviate one of the most deadly and incessant civil wars in world histroy, in which some 2 million people had died over the course of more than twenty years of fighting.

The United States was a signatory to the proceedings, and was acting by treaty as the main guarantor of the peace agreement. Meaning that they have a legal obligation to enforce the terms of the agreement in the interest of peace.

Through the reporting done by the Sunday Herald, it was discovered that the US had been encouraging and secretly approving the shipment of RUSSIAN TANKS to South Sudan via a Ukrainian source, upon a MOSSAD VESSEL.

Again, this is actionable information revealing the US and the MOSSAD in violation of INTERNATIONAL PEACE TREATY committing WAR CRIMES, confirmed and expanded upon by WIKILEAKS.

Hat tip, c2w.


.

WikiLeaks confirms Russian tanks aboard hijacked ship were bound for South Sudan

Sudan: From Fred Bridgeland, Africa Correspondent
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12 Dec 2010

The WikiLeaks whistleblower website has confirmed as true a Sunday Herald investigation that found dozens of Russian-made tanks aboard a ship hijacked by Somali pirates were destined for clandestine delivery to the army of the autonomous Government of South Sudan.

Having taken the Ukrainian ship, the MV Faina, in September 2008, the pirates were shocked to find aboard 33 Russian-made T-72 tanks, 42 anti-aircraft guns and more than 800 tonnes of ammunition.

The Kenyan government quickly condemned the hijacking of the Faina, saying that its destination was the port of Mombasa and that the tanks had been bought for use by the Kenyan Army.

A Sunday Herald investigation found that there were very few good guys in the saga. The tanks, in addition to at least 67 previously shipped, were in fact destined for delivery to the Government of South Sudan, which put it in breach of Sudan’s 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement that ended a 21-year civil war between north and south in which more than 2 million people died.

Classified US State Department cables published by WikiLeaks show not only that the Sunday Herald’s information was right as regards the tanks’ actual destination, but that Washington had encouraged the delivery of weapons to South Sudan even though it was the main guarantor of the peace agreement.

Washington encouraged the delivery of weapons to South Sudan even though it was the main guarantor of the 2005 peace agreement.

The WikiLeaks revelations about US-approved weapons deliveries come at one of the most delicate times in the history of Sudan.

The nation, Africa’s largest, is on the verge of splitting in two. Black African Southern Sudanese, mainly animists and Christians, are scheduled to vote on January 9 in a referendum for their independence from northern Sudan, which is dominated by Muslim Arabs.

If things go wrong, world governments fear Sudan could once more tip over into civil war.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has described the situation in advance of the historic referendum as “a ticking time bomb”.

The WikiLeaks documents show that an extraordinary row broke out between the United States government and the governments of Kenya and Ukraine following the hijacking of the Faina and the revelation of the secret weapons shipment.

Despite its secret approval of previous weapons deliveries via Kenya to South Sudan, it appears that the Washington administration began to lose its nerve as the affair became public and threatened “sweeping sanctions” against both Kenya and Ukraine, asserting that the tank deliveries were illegal.

The Kenyans were deeply angered and “very confused” by the threats from President Barack Obama’s administration, according to the leaked State Department cables, “since the past transfers had been undertaken in consultation with the United States.”

The American ambassador to Kenya, Michael Ranneberger, was given the impossible task of reprimanding the Kenyans despite the fact that the weapons deliveries were carried out with the full knowledge of Washington.

The cables said the American flip-flop “led to a commotion on the Ukrainian side”.

In a story worthy of John Le Carré, the Sunday Herald’s investigation, showed that the owner of the Faina – which had at least three previous names and was registered in Belize – is a Ukraine-based Israeli named Vadim Alperin, who has links to Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, and Mossad agents front companies in Kenya.

Alperin and the chief of Ukraine’s foreign intelligence service, Mykola Malomuzh, together met the Faina when it arrived in Mombasa after the United States 5th Fleet surrounded the vessel and the pirates settled for a minimal $2 million ransom, paid in dollar bills and parachuted on to the Faina’s deck from a light aircraft.

The cables indicate that the first US-approved delivery of Russian tanks via Ukraine and Kenya to South Sudan took place in 2007.

Before the Faina was hijacked, at least 67 T-72s had already been delivered to the South Sudan government in Juba.

In the northern city of Khartoum, capital of united Sudan, Ghazi Salah al-Din al-Atabani, one of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir’s top advisers, chuckled as he told a correspondent from the New York Times: “We knew it [American involvement in the delivery of tanks to the South] – yeah, we knew it.”

The Sunday Herald also revealed that Khartoum had kept quiet about South Sudan’s armaments acquisitions because it was itself in breach of an international arms embargo in relation to the separate conflict in the western province of Darfur, for which President al-Bashir has been indicted for genocide by The Hague-based International Criminal Court.

Given its problems with Darfur and the ICC, it was in the interests of the al-Bashir government to stay silent.

The leaked cables show the United States’ top diplomat in Khartoum, Alberto Fernandez, advising Washington that in the case of any future clandestine tank deliveries to South Sudan it should avoid a repeat hijacking by Somali pirates and “the attention it has drawn.”

The tanks from the Faina remain parked in a Kenyan army barracks near Nairobi.
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby Simulist » Fri Dec 24, 2010 6:14 pm

Glenn Greenwald has another fine article about WikiLeaks in Salon today: What WikiLeaks revealed to the world in 2010. Among those things WikiLeaks revealed include, but are certainly not limited to:

(1) WikiLeaks releases video depicting US forces killing two Reuters journalists in Iraq

(2) 'Ha ha, I hit 'em': Top secret video showing US helicopter pilots gunning down 12 civilians in Baghdad attack leaked online

(3) Iraq war logs: Secret order that let US ignore abuse

(4) Iraq war logs reveal 15,000 previously unlisted civilian deaths

(5) Clinton ordered US diplomats to spy on UN officials

(6) Obama and GOPers worked together to kill Bush torture probe

(7) US Pressured Germany Not To Prosecute CIA Officers For Torture And Rendition

(8) Cables show Germany Caved to Pressure from Washington

(9) Yemeni president lied about US strikes

(10) Contrary to public statements, Obama admin fueled conflict in Yemen

(11) Wikileaks: India 'tortured' Kashmir prisoners

(12) UK training Bangladesh 'death squad'

(13) UK agreed to shield US interests in Iraq probe: WikiLeaks

(14) WikiLeaks: Pope refused to cooperate in sex abuse investigation

(15) WikiLeaks, Open and shut: the case of the Honduran Coup

(16) WikiLeaks: China Behind Google Hack

(17) WikiLeaks Cables: US special forces working inside Pakistan

(18) WikiLeaks reveals the obvious dangers of Afghanistan

(19) Afghanistan war logs: Massive leak of US files exposes truth of occupation

More at the link.
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Dec 25, 2010 12:26 am

What the Wikileaks Cable Reveals

Covering Up the Murder of Nicola Calipari

By MICHAEL LEONARDI

In a cable that was released by Wikilleaks, there is clear collusion between the Italian and the US governments to bury the story of Nicola Calipari's murder and to deter any future investigations into this case. This cable has unleashed an outcry for justice and chorus of calls for a reopening of the Calipari/Sgrena investigation. His wife Rosa Villecco Calipari now a deputy for the Democratic Party in Italy, called the revelations proof that her husband had been betrayed not just once, but two times by the Italian and American Governments and secret service agencies. Giuliana Sgrena has also called for a reopening of the case as have journalists and activists alike.

It is important to note here that the US investigation into Calipari's shooting was begun five days prior to the Italians joining in the "joint" investigation and that the crime scene was not secured. Interviews were conducted with all the chain of command involved prior to the Italians arriving on the scene, the one caveat mentioned in point 7. At the top of that chain of command was John Negroponte, ambassador to Iraq in 2005 and in transition to become the Director of National Intelligence under George Bush. He was perceived as an expert on covert actions geared to protect American interests and cover up American lies and war crimes. All investigations should logically point Negroponte's way and not at a soldier fall guy as they have thus far with the Italian magistrates closing an investigation into one of the supposed trigger men Mario Lozano. The case against Lozano, just so fittingly an Italian American who loves his country of origin, was dropped due to the case being considered out of jurisdiction.

Why would they want this case buried? Since the end of the second world war, Italy has played the role of subservient partner to American Imperial crusades. Through the CIA and other agencies the United States government spent millions of dollars to defeat the Italian Communists in 1948 even working with components of the Fascist regime from which they had supposedly helped liberate Italy. After this the US remained an almost constant part, often illegally, of Italian politics in order to keep a fortuitous hold on the peninsula as the most strategic NATO military location in the Mediterranean.

Article 11 of Italy's constitution states: "Italy rejects war as an instrument of aggression against the freedom of other peoples and as a means for the settlement of international disputes. Italy agrees, on conditions of equality with other States, to the limitations of sovereignty that may be necessary to a world order ensuring peace and justice among the Nations. Italy promotes and encourages international organizations furthering such ends."

Through his work as an Italian Secret Service agent Nicola Calipari had become well aware of the lies that had taken Italy into the Iraq war in violation of its constitution. It was said that he had grown frustrated with Rome's participation in the fabrication of those lies. Can we remember back to the forged Niger yellow cake uranium documents turned over to the American Embassy in Rome? Giuliana Sgrena's work as a journalist was exposing the brutal war crimes of the American military in Fallujah. Just by taking a look at the car that has far more than 8 to 10 shots as the official story stated in 2005, it seems likely that she was a target of an assassination as well. Could it have all been a well laid trap to rid the ranks of this pesky Italian Agent and communist anti-war journalist? How quickly we might forget the words "if your not with us your are against us".

The collusion on this case was under Berlusconi's watch but seems to go much further into the mechanisms of Italy's heavily US influenced and corrupt political caste. Massimo D'Alema who was foreign minister under the Center Left's Romano Prodi now heads Italy's COPASIR -- Parliamentary Committee on the Security of the Republic. His nomination to committee chair was supported by Berlusconi and despite his communist roots D'Alema has always moved toward the center of the neoliberal body politic. It was his announcement on the floor of the senate of Italy's continued support for the so called War on Terror in Afghanistan that led to Romano Prodi's center left coalition failing a vote of confidence and subsequent downfall of the center left government.

In 1999 D'Alema was prime minister and led Italy to join NATO in bombing the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He has always been willing to violate Italy's constitution in order to please the Americans and has earned the praises of Berlusconi for his commitment to the American alliance as illustrated in another wikileaks cable: (reprinted here as link is no longer available).

In another wikileaks release from the Gulf War Logs in October sketchy details are laid out about the ambush on the car in which Calipari and Sgrena were passengers. This report states that the ex-leader of the Baghdad cell of al qaida Sheik Husain, was responsible for the kidnapping and that after receiving his 500,000 dollar payoff he called the Iraqi foreign ministry to tell them that the car carrying Sgrena and Calipari was equipped with a bomb. The story here just doesn't seem to add up though as the car is described as a blue chevy celebrity and not the white Toyota corolla that Sgrena and Calipari were driving in. This document from wikileaks talks of independent unverified sources and has never been a part of the official story, another layer of confusion to help let bygones be bygones.

It certainly seems that the cover-up suspected in this story has been exposed. Italy continues to serve the American empire anyway that it can in its unjust wars and criminal endeavors even at the sacrifice of its own servicemen. The American military presence in Italy continues to expand and as Hillary Clinton recently told Silvio Berlusconi at a recent summit for the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe, the United States "has no better friend."

Berlusconi is currently embroiled in sex scandals involving young call girls paid to have sex in his mansions while being provided with drugs. He is growingly unpopular in the polls and student led protests in recent days and weeks have created havoc across the country as Italy's social programs and public education system are slashed and burned. Berlusconi's government has been linked time and time again with organized crime within Italy and his ties to Russia's Vladmir Putin have raised questions of a Mafia state bilateralism.

Hillary and Silvio met at their summit in the oil rich country of Kazakhstan. What could be a better place for such good friends to plot their further control and distribution of the worlds natural resources? It should make all Americans shudder that what many consider as the most corrupt politician in the world, let alone the morality of his sexual follies with teenage girls, is America's best friend in the world.
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Dec 25, 2010 1:00 am

seemslikeadream wrote:


thanks slad.

what one misses even with the drip drip drip pace of leaks.

adding this:

Tuesday, 03 May 2005, 15:18
S E C R E T ROME 001506
SIPDIS
BAGHDAD PLEASE PASS TO BG VANGJEL;
JUSTICE FOR ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL, CRIMINAL DIVISION
EO 12958 DECL: 05/02/2015
TAGS PREL, MOPS, KJUS, IT, IZ, IRAQI FREEDOM
SUBJECT: IRAQ/ITALY: BERLUSCONI TRYING TO PUT CALIPARI
INCIDENT BEHIND US - ITALIAN REPORT FINDS NO INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY
Classified By: Ambassador Mel Sembler, reasons 1.4 b and d.


1. (S) Summary and Recommendation: Just prior to the May 2 release of the Italian report on the March 4 killing of intelligence officer Nicola Calipari at a U.S. checkpoint in Baghdad, Ambassador, DCM and PolMilCouns were called to PM Berlusconi's office to receive an advance copy of the report and to hear from senior GOI officials their view of the way forward. The Italians stressed that the GOI wanted to put the incident behind us, that it would not damage our strong friendship and alliance, and that it would not affect the Italian commitment in Iraq. The Italians said that while U.S. cooperation with Italy in the joint investigation had been total and thoroughly professional, Italy had to stand by the Italian reconstruction of the March 4 incident. The Italian report, they said, concluded that the shooting was not intentional and that no individual responsibility could be assigned for the shooting, thus making the magistrate's criminal investigation less likely to develop into a full criminal case.

2. (S) Recommendation (see also Para 9): While the Italian report quibbles with many findings and much of the methodology of the US AR 15-6 report on the incident, we will be best served by resisting the temptation to attack the Italian version point-by-point, and should instead continue to let our report speak for itself. While our instinct at Post is to defend the U.S. report and criticize the Italian one, we realize the consequences of doing so could be asymmetrical: while the criticism in the Italian report is unlikely to have serious negative consequences for the USG, if the GOI appears to be disloyal to its public servants - or to be rolling over to please the USG in this matter,[color=#BF0000] the consequences for Berlusconi's government and Italy's commitment in Iraq could be severe. Therefore, we strongly recommend all USG spokespeople stand by the 15-6 report while refraining from detailed criticism of the Italian draft.[/color] End Summary and Recommendation.

3. (S) Ambassador, DCM and PolMilCouns were called to the PM's office late May 2 to receive an advance copy of the Italian report on the March 4 Calipari incident, based on the joint investigation carried out with the U.S., and to hear from senior GOI officials their views on the matter. Present on the Italian side were FM Fini, U/S Letta, PM Dip Advisor (NSA equivalent and Ambassador-designate to the US) Castellaneta, SISMI Chief Pollari, a few of their senior aides, and the two Italian investigators BG Campregher and MFA official Ragaglini. (Berlusconi himself was not at the meeting and, we believe, was out of Rome until the next morning.)

4. (S) The Italians made the following main points:

-- The intent of Italian Government is that this incident should have no negative effect on our excellent bilateral relations.

-- Specifically, there should be no effect on the Italian commitment in Iraq.

-- The Italian government wants to put the incident behind us and hopes this report will contribute to that end (see below for explanation as to how it will serve that purpose).

-- An unclassified version of report would be posted on a GOI web site May 2, with classified sections redacted. The full, classified report would be given only to PM Berlusconi, but the USG could have a copy on request after Berlusconi sees it.

-- Berlusconi would discuss the report in Parliament on Thursday, May 5.

-- It would be useful for President Bush to call Berlusconi Wednesday, so that he could say before Parliament the next day that he had spoken with the President about the matter.

5. (S) As to the report itself, the Italians generally described it as supporting the "tragic accident" thesis, and highlighted the following:

-- The report says it is impossible to attribute individual responsibility for the killing.

-- It also says Italian investigators found no evidence that killing was intentional.

-- This last point was designed specifically to discourage further investigation by the prosecuting magistrates, since under Italian law they apparently can investigate cases of intentional homicide against Italian citizens outside of Italy, but not cases of unintentional homicide. (NOTE: Our contacts warn that Italian magistrates are infamous for bending such laws to suit their purposes, so it remains to be seen whether the GOI tactic will work in this regard.) Also, Castellaneta told us later that the GOI was hoping the prosecutors would find that, because the killing was unintentional, there would not be grounds for a case of "excessive legitimate defense."

-- The Italian report was written with prosecuting magistrates in mind. The Italians stressed that USA 15-6 regulations permitted some things to be covered in the joint investigation but not others, while Italian magistrates had broader scope that had to be satisfied.

-- The government will block attempts by parliamentary committees to open their own investigations (there are already several calls for this from the opposition), on the grounds that this report answers questions sufficiently.

-- The report stands behind the accounts given by Sgrena, the driver, and SISMI's Baghdad Station Chief; i.e., the "Italian reconstruction" of the incident.

6. (S) The copy of 67-page Italian report that they handed to us was a draft that was still being proofread in another room (in fact, they said it was the only hard copy in existence, and they swapped out a couple pages during the meeting as typos were corrected). We have translated and e-mailed to State EUR/WE high points (see para 10) and faxed the complete text in Italian to State EUR/WE. Our quick scan indicates that there are several pages in which the Italian investigators take issue with specific facts and findings in the USA 15-6 report, generally on the grounds that the accounts of the Italian witnesses differed significantly from those of the American soldiers. There is also an extensive critique of the inadequacy of SOPs for Traffic control Points and Blocking Positions. It argues that more complete notification to US authorities would not have changed the outcome. In a subsequent meeting with the DCM, Castellaneta said the main difference in the reports was that the US report focused on communications while the Italian report focused on preparation of the soldiers and the stress under which they were operating. The final conclusions, though, are as stated by the Italians in our meeting: no individual responsibility, no deliberate intent.

7. (S) Ambassador Sembler told the Italians that the USG shared the Italian desire to put this incident behind us and not let it affect overall bilateral relations. In that regard, it was important for the Italian government not to point accusing fingers at the U.S. or complain about lack of cooperation, and we would endeavor to continue doing so ourselves . Fini said Italy could not complain about cooperation from U.S.; the Italian report clarified that the Italian investigators had full access and he would ask Berlusconi to stress that fact in parliament on May 5. Ragaglini and BG Campregher were effusive about the "total and complete" cooperation they received from the USA investigators, including access to all evidence. The one caveat was that for five days before they arrived in Baghdad BG Vangjel had been conducting interviews within the USA chain of command re communications and U.S. knowledge of the rescue operation. The Italians, however, were given copies of everything done prior to their arrival.

8. (S) The Italians were clearly not happy about the classified portions of the USA 15-6 posted on the web being "unredacted" so easily and asked the Ambassador for an explanation. They did not push the issue after he explained it was solely a technical mistake. The Italians said they had pulled from Baghdad the SISMI Station Chief whose name was revealed in the "unredacted" version of the 15-6; he will not go back.

9. (S) Embassy recommendations for immediate next steps:

-- The NSC should try to schedule a POTUS-Berlusconi call on Wednesday.

-- The USG public reaction for now should be limited to "We've just received Italian report and are studying it." (Italian press will be furiously nit-picking, and it will not serve a useful purpose for us to get into point-by-point refutation at this stage, although we might want to do backgrounders later in Baghdad, Washington, or Rome.)

-- The Department should consider a SecState-Fini call in the next few days to confirm that we share Italy's desire to put incident behind us.

10. (U) Informal Embassy Translation of Italian Report's Conclusions:

"The Italian representatives - based on the evidence they were able to obtain - did not find elements that would allege that the facts indicate deliberate murder.

It is realistic that tension felt by the soldiers and some inexperience and stress may have made them react instinctively and with little control.

The lack of formal references to clear rules that should have been observed makes it problematic to assign specific individual responsibilities.

The facts asserted by Ms. Sgrena, the car's driver and the SISMI Chief of Station in Baghdad can be considered realistic. Based on the overall analysis, their reconstruction is coherent and plausible."

End Informal Embassy Translation of Conclusions.

11. (U) Baghdad minimize considered.

SEMBLER

NNNN 2005ROME01506 - Classification: SECRET
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Dec 25, 2010 1:11 am

OT but this:

seemslikeadream wrote:...

The collusion on this case was under Berlusconi's watch but seems to go much further into the mechanisms of Italy's heavily US influenced and corrupt political caste. Massimo D'Alema who was foreign minister under the Center Left's Romano Prodi now heads Italy's COPASIR -- Parliamentary Committee on the Security of the Republic. His nomination to committee chair was supported by Berlusconi and despite his communist roots D'Alema has always moved toward the center of the neoliberal body politic. It was his announcement on the floor of the senate of Italy's continued support for the so called War on Terror in Afghanistan that led to Romano Prodi's center left coalition failing a vote of confidence and subsequent downfall of the center left government.

In 1999 D'Alema was prime minister and led Italy to join NATO in bombing the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He has always been willing to violate Italy's constitution in order to please the Americans and has earned the praises of Berlusconi for his commitment to the American alliance as illustrated in another wikileaks cable: (reprinted here as link is no longer available).

...


couldn't he have been a plant within the party all along? (Gladio.)

*
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby vanlose kid » Sat Dec 25, 2010 1:20 am

for those who know italian.



*

GREAT NEWS FROM WIKILEAKS!!!

Image

Incredible news from Wikileaks (I'm quite beginning to like that Julian Assange dude): Italian Communist's former leader Mr. Massimo d'Alema (famous as an Interwebz's startled meme too), who was the Minister for our Foreign Affairs during the short parenthesis of the Prodi's Government, in 2007 told an U.S. Ambassador that (quote): "the Italian Judiciary is Italy's worst internal menace" (end quote). Now of course Mr. Massimo d'Alema declares: "I was misunderstood". Our Mr. Silvio Berlusconi on the contrary, wholeheartedly agrees...
>
Pubblicato da Roberto G. a 12/24/2010 01:25:00 PM

http://bobg-nowadayswhat.blogspot.com/2 ... leaks.html

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Wikileaks: «D’Alema come Berlusconi: definisce i giudici “una minaccia”»Il sito di Assange svela un cablo dell'ex ambasciatore Usa Spogli. La replica dell'ex premier: mai dette queste cose...

http://www.ilmessaggero.it/articolo.php?id=131939

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Massimo d'Alema entry in the Nonciclopedia.

*

seems the magistrates weren't so easily held off:

Judicial investigation
Italian prosecutors are now actively seeking to interview Lozano as part of their criminal investigation into Calipari's death. [4]

On December 22, 2005 the special prosecutors of the Magistrate's service of Rome announced that they were considering charging Lozano with voluntary manslaughter. [5]

On January 18, 2006, it was reported that the prosecutors had decided to charge Lozano with murder. The prosecutors indicated that despite making over twenty formal requests to the United States, they refused to formally identify Lozano. After confirming Lozano's identity, the Magistrate service appointed an attorney to represent Lozano during the charging process. If Lozano does not accept service of process and appear at his upcoming trial, he will be tried in absentia. [6]

On February 7, 2007, it was reported that Judge Sante Spinaci had agreed to allow the trial in absentia to move forward. The trial will begin on April 17. [7]

On October 25, 2007, an Italian court dismissed the charges against Lozano after determining that multinational forces in Iraq were under the exclusive jurisdiction of the country that sent them. [8]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicola_Calipari

*
-- Italy hopes to mend strained relations with the United States over indictments against CIA agents for kidnapping and a U.S. soldier for murder, Italy's foreign minister said, before meeting U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Monday.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN1931569120070319

*



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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Dec 25, 2010 7:14 pm

.

OMG, the Holy Grail: Here's one finally that makes a US Embassy look good!

.

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20101225/tp ... a8d4f.html

THE CABLE IS NOT YET SEARCHABLE ON WIKILEAKS.CH OR DAZZLEPOD.COM.
Now that so many papers have their hands on the cables, this will often be the case.

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/22/20101225/tp ... a8d4f.html

Panama president wanted to wiretap rivals - WikiLeaks

48 mins ago

Panamanian President Ricardo Martinelli tried to bully the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to turn its wiretapping program on political rivals, a State Department cable released by WikiLeaks said.


Martinelli, a supermarket tycoon elected last year, sent a "cryptic" message to the U.S. ambassador in Panama which said, "I need help with tapping phones," according to the cable from August 2009 published by Spanish newspaper El Pais.

"He made reference to various groups and individuals whom he believes should be wiretapped, and he clearly made no distinction between legitimate security targets and political enemies," the cable written by then Ambassador Barbara Stephenson said.

When the ambassador refused, Martinelli complained she was being "too legal" and made an implicit threat to stop helping the U.S. government with anti-narcotics operations in Panama if he could not get help with wiretaps, the cable said.

Martinelli said in a statement on Saturday the cable was a "misinterpretation" and denied asking to intercept politicians' phone calls. He said the government remained committed to fighting drug traffickers and money laundering in Panama.

The publication of the diplomatic messages is the latest example of the ability of WikiLeaks, founded by Australian Julian Assange, to cause international embarrassment.

A scandal over wiretapping could cause a serious challenge to Martinelli's popularity. The conservative business leader, who is one of Panama's richest men, has a nearly 60 percent approval rating. But the U.S. cable expressed worry that Martinelli was willing to bend the law to reach his political goals.

"His penchant for bullying and blackmail may have led him to supermarket stardom but is hardly statesmanlike," the cable said.

(Reporting by Elida Moreno in Panama City and Mica Rosenberg in Mexico City; Editing by Eric Beech)
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Dec 25, 2010 9:55 pm

.

Speculation on possible meanings of the Panama cable:

http://www.democraticunderground.com/di ... id=4673276

Peace Patriot wrote: Sat Dec-25-10 08:47 PM

2. We gotta watch out for the cable-writer making ass-covering statements or having...

...other agendas. These are low security communiques, so any savvy diplomat would know how easily the cable could be leaked. It could have been deliberately written for a wider audience. It's also good to know who actually wrote it (a foreign service scribbler, with the ambassador or other emissary just signing off on it--maybe not paying that much attention), who the ambassador is (what's his/her history), if possible whose eyes the cable is intended for and--most important--the CONTEXT of the cable--recent history of the country and of U.S. policy.

In this case, I have some suspicions. A rightwing political compadre of Martinelli--Alvaro Uribe, the former president and Bush Cartel operative in Colombia--is being investigated in a BIG scandal about Uribe's illegal domestic spying in Colombia. Recently, the main witness against Uribe in the spying scandal was whisked out of Colombia and given weird, overnight asylum by Martinelli IN PANAMA--out of the reach of Colombian prosecutors and over their objections. Six other witnesses in that case are asking for similar asylum. The extraordinary asylum that Uribe's spy chief was granted has caused Martineilli serious political trouble, domestically and regionally. He basically spit on the Colombian justice system. In fact, it was so risky for Martinelli that I immediately suspected that the CIA was pressuring him to do it.

If my hypothesis about the new CIA Director Leon Panetta is correct--Panetta is a Daddy Bush pal; member of his Iraq Study Group--that one of his jobs is to clean up after Junior, and if, indeed, Panetta pressured Martinelli to grant this unusual asylum to the main Uribe spying witness, then what he may be doing is covering up Bush involvement in the illegal spying in Colombia. (The spying in Colombia may be connected to the death squads targeting trade unionists and other Uribe political opponents). Uribe was also involved in pressuring Martinelli to give asylum to the witnesses against him.

Uribe has been given protection and coddling by the U.S.--academic sinecures at Georgetown and Harvard, and a prestigious appointment to an international legal commission. He leaves a trail of bloody crimes behind him, all the way back to when he was governor of Antioquia (in Medellin, Colombia). Some 70 of his closest political associates, including family members, are under investigation or already in jail for their ties to the rightwing death squads and drug trafficking, spying, bribery and other crimes. In one death squad case against Alabama-based Drummond Coal, filed here, by relatives of Drummond Coal's death squad victims, they tried to depose Uribe; he was a no-show and has asked Hillary Clinton for "sovereign immunity." Do not be surprised if she grants it. I think Uribe knows things about Bush Junta war crimes in Colombia and he is being protected/coddled in order to keep him quiet about it.

Just for instance: Clinton recently "fined" Blackwater for "unauthorized" "trainings" of "foreign persons" (don't know who) IN COLOMBIA "for use in Iraq and Afghanistan." (I suspect that the word "unauthorized" is a falsehood--part of a coverup.) Is this why the main witness against Uribe in the spying scandal got asylum in Panama? The U.S. can't afford to have him under pressure from Colombian prosecutors? (The U.S. has also whisked many death squad witnesses out of Colombia--against prosecutors' objections--Uribe colluding with the U.S. ambassador to Colombia to get this done. These witnesses were extradited on mere drug charges, and were "buried" in the U.S. federal prison system, by the complete sealing of their cases (an unusual procedure) in the U.S. federal court in Washington DC. Their cases have disappeared so completely that there aren't even case numbers for them. Victims' families have objected that they might even have been freed.)

One other thing: I think it is unlikely that a U.S. ambassador would put this allegation against Martinielli in a cable--unless there was an ulterior motive for it. The motive could be something like this: The ambassador got wind of someone planning to disclose her conversation with Martinelli and she wanted it in writing that she scoffed at this request. Or, the U.S. is doing extensive spying in Panama and surrounding countries (Venezuela comes to mind) and wanted a statement in writing that the U.S. scoffs at spying for political purposes. Or, the ambassador was aware of U.S. complicity in Uribe's domestic spying, and, again, was creating a paper trail of deniability.


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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Dec 27, 2010 9:27 am

WikiLeaks to reveal thousands of Israel documents

Julian Assange to "Al Jazeera": The Mossad is monitoring me.
23 December 10 16:55, Globes' correspondent
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is promising to disclose more documents about Israel. He told "Al Jezeera" in an interview yesterday that he has 3,700 documents relating to Israel, most of which have not been published.
Assange said that the documents refer to the Second Lebanon War and to the killing of senior Hamas official Mahmoud al-Mabouh. He added that, in six months, he will publish details a meeting between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the US Ambassador in Paris.
Assange also said that he believed that the Mossad was monitoring him.
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Dec 27, 2010 3:34 pm

27 DEC, 2010, 12.47AM IST,PTI
WikiLeaks reveals US drug agency’s intelligence role

NEW YORK: The US Drug Enforcement Administration , an agency tasked with the job of tracking drug traffickers around the world, has over the years transformed into a global intelligence organisation with its tentacles extending far beyond narcotics, according to secret American diplomatic cables .

The organisation has an eavesdropping operation so expansive it has to fend off foreign politicians who want to use it against their political enemies, the New York Times reported on Sunday, quoting a cache of cables published by WikiLeaks . The body’s vast network of informants also had on its roll David Headley, an accused in the Mumbai attacks case, who worked as a double agent for the DEA.

In far greater detail than previously seen, the cables offer glimpses of drug agents balancing diplomacy and law enforcement in places where it can be hard to tell the politicians from the traffickers, and where drug rings are themselves mini-states whose wealth and violence permit them to run roughshod over struggling governments, the report said.

Quoting the cables, the report cities an example when the President of Panama sent an urgent message to the American ambassador, demanding that the DEA go after his political enemies: “I need help with tapping phones.”

In Sierra Leone, a major cocaine-trafficking prosecution was almost upended by the attorney general’s attempt to solicit $2.5 million in bribes. In Guinea, the country’s biggest narcotics kingpin turned out to be the president’s son, and diplomats discovered that before the police destroyed a huge narcotics seizure, the drugs had been replaced by flour.

Leaders of Mexico’s beleaguered military issued private pleas for closer collaboration with the drug agency, confessing that they had little faith in their own country’s police forces.

Cables from Myanmar, the target of strict United States sanctions, describe the drug agency informants’ reporting both on how the military junta enriches itself with drug money and on the political activities of the junta’s opponents.

Officials of the DEA and the State Department declined to discuss what they said was information that should never have been made public, the Times said.

Though the cables did not offer large disclosures, they provided an insight into the story of how an entrepreneurial agency operating in the shadows of the FBI has become something more than a drug agency, the report said.

The DEA now has 87 offices in 63 countries and close partnerships with governments that keep the Central Intelligence Agency at arm’s length.


WikiLeaks tells why drug king is still free
It also says the Mexican army trusts U.S. more than its police
By DIANA WASHINGTON VALDEZ
EL PASO TIMES
Dec. 26, 2010, 9:38PM

An elaborate security system has enabled Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin "Chapo" Guzman to evade capture thus far, according to a U.S. diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks.
The cable also reveals that the Mexican army has two officers stationed at the El Paso Intelligence Center, and that the army prefers to work closely with U.S. anti-drug agencies because it distrusts its country's civilian law enforcement.
The cable covers a discussion last year between National Intelligence Director Dennis Blair and Mexican Defense Secretary Gen. Guillermo Galvan Galvan.
"(Galvan) noted that they have found 10 to 15 locations where (Guzman) moves, but that "Chapo" commands the support of a large network of informers and has security circles of up to 300 men that make launching capture operations difficult," the document said.
Guzman is battling the Carrillo Fuentes drug cartel for control of the Chihuahua state smuggling corridor, which includes border communities like Juarez, Valle de Juarez, Palomas and Ojinaga.
This year, more than 3,000 men and women have died in Juarez in violence the authorities attributed to warring drug cartels.
Galvan said the military has adopted a three-stage strategy to target Guzman, which includes establishing a physical force in the drug lord's operations area, deploying a circle of soldiers into his area of movements, and capturing him.
The general also said the military welcomes any training the U.S. government can provide.
"Galvan complained that joint operations with law enforcement entities are challenging because leaks of planning and information by corrupted officials have compromised past efforts," according to the document.
"Galvan said that (the Mexican defense secretary's) permanent deployment of two officers to the El Paso Intelligence Center will help to disseminate rapidly information to the Ciudad Juarez commander."


Karzai Releasing Scores Of Drug Traffickers In Afghanistan, WikiLeaks Cables Show

President Hamid Karzai has repeatedly released well-connected officials convicted of or charged with drug trafficking in Afghanistan, frustrating efforts to combat corruption and providing additional evidence that the United States' top ally in the country is himself corrupt.

"On numerous occasions we have emphasized with Attorney General Aloko the need to end interventions by him and President Karzai, who both authorize the release of detainees pre-trial and allow dangerous individuals to go free or re-enter the battlefield without ever facing an Afghan court," reads a diplomatic cable obtained by WikiLeaks and provided to The New York Times. "Despite our complaints and expressions of concern to the [government], pre-trial releases continue."

Karzai's ability to release prisoners comes from the transfer of detainees from the Bagram Theatre Internment Facility to the Afghan National Detention Facility, according to the cables. The transfers began in 2007, a year that saw one prisoner released pre-trial. In 2008, Karzai released 104. Halfway through 2009, when one cable was written, he had released 45 already.

The cables paint a portrait of a leader determined to free drug traffickers:

Karzai pardoned five border policemen caught and convicted of possessing 124 kilograms of heroin, which they had stashed in their government-issued, U.S.-funded vehicle. Karzai pardoned them, according to one cable, on the grounds that they were distantly related to two individuals who had been martyred during the civil war.

Karzai also "tampered with" the case of Haji Amanullah, whose father is described as "a wealthy businessman and one of [Karzai's] supporters."

"Without any constitutional authority, Karzai ordered the police to conduct a second investigation, which resulted in the conclusion that the defendant had been framed," the cable reports.

Another cable notes the difficulty of cleaning up the corruption. "While we must deal with AWK" - Karzai's brother - "as the head of the Provincial Council, he is widely understood to be corrupt and a narcotics trafficker," says one diplomat.

Karzai's frequent interventions have undermined public trust in the judicial system -- such as there is one. Former Kabul Mayor Abdul Ahad Sahebi's fate is one instance of unproven Karzai interference that the public blames him for regardless, says a third cable. "The ex-mayor's December 7 conviction and almost immediate release from jail on bail pending appeal generated a media frenzy and intense speculation over President Karzai's role in Sahebi's release," the cable says.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Cables Shine Light Into Secret Diplomatic Channels WIKI!

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Mon Dec 27, 2010 7:44 pm

JackRiddler wrote:And this list missed a whole bunch of the big ones, like the Yemeni-US construction of a mini-Gulf of Tonkin incident, the order to steal Ban-Ki Moon's credit card numbers, corporations like Pfizer and Shell routinely reporting their crimes in Nigeria to the State Department without fear of repercussion or loss of support, Arbib's service as an informant during the toppling of the Rudd government in Australia, pressure on Sweden and Spain among others to follow US corporate copyright policy, and and what am I forgettin'? Oh yeah, Lebanese defense minister Murr negotiating with Israel about which targets in his country he'd like to see BOMBED.

Plus the fanatic obsession with the real Axis of Evil: Iran, Hugo, and Michael Moore.



I don't think Arbib's stuff is that big a deal. I see it in the context of ... thats how relations work between Aus and the USA. These two countires and Canada are more alike than anywhere else on earth and we don't show a border with Canada so there is none of that neighbourly competition/dislike. The sort of thing Arbib did has been going on in Australia since WW2. With politicians from all sides of politics too. Cos we speak the same language and we live in former British colonies and fought the Japs together. So in some sense Australia might be more like the US than Canada. Half of us don't speak French.

The sort of stuff Arbib said would have been the sort of normal informal discussions over beers watching the cricket or footy that go on here. Having the same whinges about a dickhead cos they both have the same problems with him. Its probably not that good in terms of sovereignty or self discipline but it isn't that big a deal compared to other stuff.

Arbib said what he said a long time before Rudd fell, and honestly Rudd wouldn't have if he'd stuck to his guns on any number of things. He was elected to do something about Climate Change and didn't. When he finally pulled the plug on that the whole population didn't like him.

I think there's more interesting stuff in there than just Arbib's indiscretion.
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