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Posts Tagged ‘wikileaks’

Julian and Goliath

Monday, August 30th, 2010

I find the efforts of Julian Assange and his anonymous band of merry “Wikimen” to be admirable. Trying to combat a growing world trend towards opacity in government is a noble cause. However, I’m very much afraid they are too little, too late.


The sheer size of the juggernaut that is the modern American security state, the huge number of people, and the vast sums of money spent to keep classified information secret render any efforts by Wikileaks moot. The recent cache of 75,000 documents released to the Guardian, the New York Times and Der Speigel may seem like a staggering number. But the cache is a teardrop in the ocean compared to the number of classified documents produced every year by the United States government. As diligent as Wikileaks is, they can’t possibly keep up with the tsunami of pages of information that the American public has a right to know but will never see. They are no match for the legions of Homeland Security bureaucrats dedicated to keeping Julian Assange and others like him from getting access to that information. They are also no match for the legions of propagandists dedicated to spinning and marginalizing any leaks that do occur so that the effect of their release on public opinion is nullified. In short, obtaining and publishing a few classified documents is simply not going to stem the tide of secrecy in the United States.

Several commentators have attempted to draw parallels between Assange and Daniel Ellsberg. Because the Pentagon papers had an effect on ending the Vietnam war, many believe that Wikileaks can do the same for Obama’s war in Afghanistan. I believe, however, these comparisons to be specious. Ellsberg was a leaker who went directly to the newspapers with information he had helped create. Wikileaks by contrast, doesn’t do any of it’s own hacking or spying. It merely acts as a facilitator, a middleman, a warehouse of information to which leakers can come to disseminate secrets. Totally different animal. Totally different effect.

Also the times are totally different. During the 60’s and 70’s, media outlets like The Washington Post and CBS news not only had the ability to change public opinion, they reveled in their role as independent commentators. Nowadays, the fourth estate is totally toothless. Virtually all media outlets are owned by multinational corporations. Faux news outlets such as Rupert Murdoch’s FOX, Disney’s ABC, and General Electric’s NBC dominate what people hear and see. In contrast to previous generations, modern news broadcasting seems to see its role as being a cheerleader for different political party lines. As both major parties agree on promoting war this virtually assures that public opinion towards military actions such as those in the Middle East will not change.

Moreover, propaganda and message management has been honed to a fine craft. The introduction of “embedded reporting” spelled the end of independent war reporting. Can anyone imagine Walter Cronkite being allowed the freedom to report on the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan the way he did in Viet Nam? Or take the Pentagon papers. Assuming Daniel Ellsberg managed to find someone who would print them today they would be marginalized in the media and largely ignored by a public anesthetized and dumbed down by a steady stream of beer ads, football, and “reality TV.”

But the main reason why it is too late for Assange and company to change history is that the only constituency that really matters, the Obama administration, is deaf to their message. The same coalition of ideologues and corporate cronies who brought forth the invasion and occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan during the Bush Administration are still calling the shots… and they are not about to change course because of a few leaked documents. If you doubt this, consider the following:

1 The Downing Street Memos: The closest thing to a smoking gun you will ever find that proves President George W. Bush took America to war based upon a lie. The Downing Street memos created a small stir when the first came out and then were quietly and successfully buried in the press. The Obama administration shows absolutely no interest in opening an investigation.
2 The Bybee Memo: The infamous Bybee memo which in effect legalized torture: By itself, this document should have been enough to charge principals in the White House with war crimes. But again, after an initial furor the memos were buried.
3 Warrantless Wiretapping: The spying on American citizens without a warrant, a program in which, by his own admission, George W. Bush knowingly broke the law – and then lied to the American people about it. A policy such as this surely should have been considered grounds for impeachment. However, not only has the Obama administration failed to investigate, they have reinforced and institutionalized these surveillance policies. And the press has resonded without so much as a whisper of doubt.

Now we have the Wikileaks cache – what the Guardian and the New York Times refer to as “The Afghan logs.” It is perhaps not surprising that the governments response has been to excoriate Wikileaks in the press, claiming that Assange and his friends have “blood on their hands,” for releasing the documents. There have been calls for everything from indicting Wikileaks to tarring and feathering Assange. (Something that is currently happening with the recent molestation allegations against the Wikileaks founder.) But once again, the only thing that truly matters to the government is marginalizing the information contained in the Afghan logs and nullifying the effect they have on public opinion.In many ways, the Obama administration seems less worried about what the documents contain and more worried about making sure they do not negatively affect the public’s perception of the conflict.

Nowhere is there any interest in the press or the Government to respond to the documents honestly with an eye to questioning the wisdom and efficacy of the policies that produced them. In this regard, Wikileaks efforts have to be judged as a failure.

Julian Assange and Wikileaks may be fighting the good fight against government secrecy. But they are out manned, out gunned, and facing an ideological, bureaucratic and corporate enemy that is too large and well entrenched to be dislodged by printing a comparative handful of secret documents. I applaud the members of Wikileaks for their courage and determination but I’m afraid the outcome of this struggle is a forgone conclusion. In the Bible, David may have brought down mighty Goliath with a simple slingshot. In this case, however, Goliath is backed up by legions of cyber-secrecy warriors, a propaganda machine that never sleeps and a trillion dollar security and surveillance leviathan that gobbles up secrets like chum in a can. David (Assange) on the other hand stands armed only with a straw and a spitball.

From where I’m standing, the odds of victory in this struggle are not good.

Don’t get me wrong. I am rooting for Wikileaks. I hope they prevail. I really do. But if I were gambling man, in this fight, my money would definitely have to be on Goliath.

Tags: Assange, Ellsberg, Goliath, government, Julian, propaganda, secrecy, secrets, Thomas Vincent, Vincent, wikileaks
Posted in Daily Rant, Politics, economics, media, warfare | 1 Comment »

The Irony of Hubris

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

The blogosphere has been lit up recently by accusations of rape/molestation against Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. (A Google search of “Wikileaks Rape” turned up 11 million hits.)

Several writers, including Assange himself, have derided the whole thing as a clumsy “dirty tricks” smear campaign orchestrated by the C.I.A. and the Pentagon.

I disagree… at least about the clumsy part.

If the C.I.A./Pentagon did have anything to do with the accusations leveled against Assange the plot shows a remarkable degree of elegance and subtlety. Either that or they got real lucky.

Consider, for example, the ironies of the situation:

1) Assange, a secretive man, finds himself embroiled in a tawdry and very public sex scandal that if even partly true completely dismantles his carefully cultivated a image as a man of mystery.

2) Wikileaks, a crusading whistle blower organization famous for leaking some 95,000 secret and embarrassing documents finds itself embarrassed when its founder finds details of his private sex life “leaked” to the press by an as yet unnamed whistle blower.

3) Assange, who came to Sweden seeking a safe haven for Wikileaks under their liberal whistle blower protection laws, find himself a victim of those same laws that protect the anonymity of his accusers.

I am in no way supporting or condemning Assange in all of this. I find the question of whether Julian Assange is guilty or innocent of the charges leveled at him largely irrelevant. Nether do I find the narrative that the C.I.A./ Pentagon was involved in a honey trap plot particularly compelling by itself.

I do find it fascinating that people in the news – mostly men it must be noted – persist in looking like deer in the headlights when they find details of their personal lives splashed across the tabloids. Elliot Spitzer, Mark Sanford, Larry Craig, and yes, even Bill Clinton. What sort of hubris runs through the veins of public officials who think that they alone will be exempt from sex scandals. Assange himself has intimated that he received warnings from Australian security agents that he could find himself the target of some form of dirty tricks smear campaign. And yet apparently he had “consensual” sex with at least one of the women named in the suit. What was he thinking? That he was some kind of super spook, that no aspect of his private life (like any his sexual activity) would ever wind up being made public? Did he think he was invincible?

The lessons of Spitzer, Sanford, Craig, and Clinton seem obvious to me. If you are a public personality, especially one who delights in “crushing bastards,” and you’ve been warned that those same bastards are out to entrap and smear you, don’t act so surprised and “disturbed” when your private sex life winds up on the front page.

For me, the ultimate irony of the Assange imbroglio is that the Wikileaks founder has made headlines by raising institutional information transparency to almost Holy Grail status, while at the same time insisting on maintaining a cult of personal privacy.

I hate to be the one to break it to him but life just doesn’t work that way.

Anyone who generates as much media buzz over their cause as Assange can’t expect to maintain a total “cone of silence” around their personal life. Anyone who acts as a front man for a crusade against government secrecy has to assume that anything he does in private won’t remain private for long. Whether he was the victim of dirty tricks or whether he simply got his comeuppance for acting like a dick in bed matters not one whit. By clinging to a fantasy image of an international man of mystery, one who is above the slings and arrows of tabloid journalism, Assange is guilty at the very least of extreme naivité. If he is the victim of a smear campaign, by his own hubris he made it awfully easy for his enemies.

Ultimately, the only thing the Assange scandal proves is that while he may be a successful blogger and hacker and exposer of secrets, as a super spy, I’m afraid he’s looking more and more like a total amateur.

Tags: Assange, C.I.A., dirty tricks, government, honey trap, hubris, irony, Pentagon, rape, scandal, sex, spy, Thomas Vincent, Vincent, wikileaks
Posted in Daily Doubt, Ethics, Politics, media, warfare | No Comments »

Real Outrage

Friday, July 30th, 2010

The response from the White House to the release of documents by the independent site WikiLeaks has been yawningly predictable. Following a pattern set by the previous administration, the White House, the Pentagon, the Afghan government and the Pakistan government have all roundly denounced WikiLeaks as an irresponsible, rogue organization with no respect for the United States security or the safety of our soldiers serving overseas.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the leak was “potentially severe and dangerous.” Admiral Mike Mullen said he was “appalled… and frankly, outraged that anyone in their right mind would think it valuable to make public even one sensitive report, let alone tens of thousands of them…”

One can’t help but notice the similarities to Claude Rains protests in “Casablanca.” “I’m shocked, shocked that anyone would want to make public the news that there is killing going on in Afghanistan.”

The White House added its two bits as well: “The United States strongly condemns the disclosure of classified information by individuals and organizations which could put the lives of Americans and our partners at risk, and threaten our national security.”

In a somewhat bizarre twist, President Obama tried simultaneously to deny the documents contained any new information, while at the same time using the release of the documents to garner support for his supplemental spending bill.

“We failed for seven years to implement a strategy adequate to the challenge,” Obama said today, of the period starting with the 9/11 attacks. That is why we have increased our commitment there and developed a new strategy, Insisting that the strategy “can work”, he ended with a plea to the House of Representatives to join the Senate in passing a bill to provide funds for the Afghan war as a matter of urgency.

But with all the criticism of WikiLeaks, all the opprobrium heaped upon WikiLeaks director Julian Assange, even with all the slings and arrows Obama has leveled at his predecessor’s failures in Afghanistan, there is one thing conspicuously absent from the administration’s comments.

Nowhere in any of the statements coming out of the White House is there any re-evaluation of our policy towards Afghanistan. There is plenty of soul searching about the strategy employed, but no where is there any admission on the part of the administration that America’s initial policy toward Afghanistan could be – in a word – wrong.

Perhaps the clearest expression of what I’m talking about is found in Professor Marjorie Cohn’s piece, published after Obama had accepted the Nobel Peace prize.

The UN Charter provides that all member states must settle their international disputes by peaceful means, and no nation can use military force except in self-defense or when authorized by the Security Council. After the 9/11 attacks, the council passed two resolutions, neither of which authorized the use of military force in Afghanistan.

“Operation Enduring Freedom” was not legitimate self-defense under the charter because the 9/11 attacks were crimes against humanity, not “armed attacks” by another country. Afghanistan did not attack the United States. In fact, 15 of the 19 hijackers hailed from Saudi Arabia. Furthermore, there was not an imminent threat of an armed attack on the United States after 9/11, or President Bush would not have waited three weeks before initiating his October 2001 bombing campaign. The necessity for self-defense must be “instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of means, and no moment for deliberation.” This classic principle of self-defense in international law has been affirmed by the Nuremberg Tribunal and the UN General Assembly.

All the outrage from the White House over the WikiLeaks documents and the potential harm they could do to our “war effort” in Afghanistan and not one peep about the possibility that maybe our war effort might just be a tad illegal, immoral, unjust, and unnecessary? Like his predecessor, President Obama decrees that fighting a war in Afghanistan is vital to America’s security, and like loyal vassals, the congress and the media all line up and say yes sir.

The current round of attacks on WikiLeaks seem to focus on how they will have “blood on their hands” if anyone dies because of the revelations. As if the United States hands are clean over the secretive special forces assassination squad that has resulted in the deaths of untold numbers of innocent civilians. Senators like Lindsay Graham can stand up and call for prosecution for WikiLeaks
,Secretary of Defense Gates can make veiled threats of “targeting” Julian Assange (perhaps not so veiled considering the tactics employed by the Pentagon to date in its prosecution of the “War on Terror,”) but where is the outrage over the hundreds of deaths caused by Nato forces?

The recent missile attack that killed at least 45 civilians including women and children is but the latest example. The administration can castigate WikiLeaks all it likes but it doesn’t alter the fact that it is the administration’s own illegal actions that are leading to many of the deaths in Afghanistan. If anyone has blood on there hands it is those who okayed the invasion and subsequent occupation of that already war torn land.

The main point that is being missed in all the administration outrage is not that the Wikileaks exposes flaws in the US strategy in Afghanistan. If anything the real outrage over the revelations in the WikiLeaks documents should be that they reaffirm the essential legal, moral, and ethical flaw in US imperialist Policy towards the Middle East. The question is not whether the WikiLeaks documents harm the US war effort or not. The question is whether the US has a right to engage in a War effort at all.

Tags: afghanistan, Assange, Gates, Marjorie Cohn, Mullen, Obama, outrage, Policy, strategy, Thomas Vincent, Vincent, war, wikileaks
Posted in Daily Doubt, Politics, warfare | No Comments »

Afghanistan: the Myth of Truth

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

I find the recent release of classified documents about Afghanistan by the independent web site “wiki leaks” fascinating, not for what the documents reveal, but instead for the White House and Pentagon response to their appearance on the world stage.

As reported by the fawning corporate media, the Obama Administration’s comments on the leaked information continue to focus on the legality of the leaks, the possible negative effect on America’s security, and the potential harm they could cause to our soldiers currently fighting in Afghanistan.

However, nowhere in the government’s response is there any mention of the questions the wiki leaks material raises about the wisdom of a foreign policy that costs billions, puts our soldiers in harms way, and which continues to result in the deaths of countless innocent civilians. The government avers they are sticking by their guns in Afghanistan but no one seems willing to ask the question why.

Recent revelations that US monetary aid to Afghanistan has been winding up in the pockets of the Taliban were embarrassing enough. But add to this wiki leak’s reporting that our own military has concluded the Pakistan security services (the ISI) has been secretly giving aid to the Taliban and a picture emerges of a foreign policy that is dysfunctional if not outright criminal.

Why are we are giving billions in military aid to Pakistan – in large measure to encourage them to fight the Taliban – if we feel the Pakistan secret service is turning around and giving aid the very enemy we are ostensibly trying to defeat? Am I the only one who sees this strategy – of giving aid to our “friends” who turn around and give aid to our “enemies” – as slightly, um, counterproductive?

While we are on this tack, does anyone still believe the Obama Administration’s stated reason why we have 94,000 soldiers stationed in Afghanistan? You know the argument I’m talking about, right? – That our national security is at stake in Afghanistan and Pakistan. That the only way for us to be safe is to “…disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and to prevent its capacity to threaten America and our allies in the future.” source

According to the party line, we have to stabilize Afghanistan in order to prevent the Taliban from regaining power, from which point they could move on to destabilize and overthrow Pakistan thus gaining access to Pakistan’s nuclear weapons – which they will, of course, immediately hand over to al Qaeda. (Who will then presumably fashion them into shoe or underwear bombs that can be used by their legions of martyrs to wage radioactive Jihad on American cities.)

The writers of “Ocean’s Eleven,” “Twelve,” and “Thirteen” couldn’t come up with a danger scenario more convoluted, far-fetched, and just plain absurd as this. The administration’s rationale for why we are shelling out 4 billion dollars every month in military hardware and weaponry to “stabilize” a country whose total yearly per capita GDP is only 800 dollars is so laughable that one almost can’t believe the President can say the words with a straight face.

The wiki leaks documents only add to the farce. Are we really to believe that the Obama administration is sending soldiers overseas to fight an enemy who is funded by our own tax dollars?

The significance of the wiki leaks documents is not that the war is going badly; it is not that releasing the material is illegal or that it could endanger our troops. The important thing about the wiki leaks revelations is that they widen the already gargantuan hole in the official cover story as to why the United States continues to wage war in Afghanistan.

It’s patently absurd to claim that we need to exert our military might in places like Afghanistan solely to protect ourselves from terrorism. Obama knows this. General McChrystal and General Petraeus know it. General James “mad dog” Mattis, Obama’s choice as the new CENTCOM commander, definitely knows it.

Everybody knows.

However, if everybody knows that the official reason for continued US military action in Afghanistan is a joke, then like his predecessor, Barrack Obama has taken the country to war based upon a lie.

This is the true danger of the wiki leaks documents. They reaffirm unequivocally the bare naked truth which everybody knows but is afraid to state: the Emperor – indeed the empire itself – is not wearing any clothes.

Seeing an empire parade around butt naked… it’s not a pretty sight.

Tags: afghanistan, Al Qaeda, Empire, foreign policy, government, Obama, pakistan, Policy, wiki leaks, wikileaks
Posted in Daily Rant, Ethics, Politics, warfare | 2 Comments »

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