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WikiLeaks and the Afghanistan War Logs
Written By : Donald Douglas

It’s strange, since I was just listening to a 20 minute interview with Julian Assange yesterday at TED. I had planned to write about that as soon as this latest breaking news cycle winds down (JournoList, Shirley Sherrod, etc.), and now we’ve got the release of the Afghanistan war logs, which had been expected. Yeah, since the Iraq Apache video smear (and the detailed coverage at Jawa Report, et al., and my own), I’ve been gaining a sharper understanding of Assange and his hard-left enablers worldwide. It’s simply more clear by the day that America’s enemies are not just on the battlefield, but also among the global transnational issue networks working to bring down the United States and its Western allies.

I need to research the war logs and find out more on this, so expect updates. Below is a clip featuring Julian Assange for The Guardian. There’s also a big exposé at The Guardian as well, so it’s clear that the newspaper’s coordinating its coverage with WikiLeaks. See, “Afghanistan war logs: Massive leak of secret files exposes truth of occupation.” And of course, the New York Times is on the case, seemingly as deeply involved as is The Guardian. See, “Inside the Fog of War: Reports From the Ground in Afghanistan.”Also at NYT (FWIW), “Piecing Together the Reports, and Deciding What to Publish“:


The articles published today are based on thousands of United States military incident and intelligence reports — records of engagements, mishaps, intelligence on enemy activity and other events from the war in Afghanistan — that were made public on Sunday on the Internet. The New York Times, The Guardian newspaper in London, and the German magazine Der Spiegel were given access to the material several weeks ago. These reports are used by desk officers in the Pentagon and troops in the field when they make operational plans and prepare briefings on the situation in the war zone. Most of the reports are routine, even mundane, but many add insights, texture and context to a war that has been waged for nearly nine years.

Over all these documents amount to a real-time history of the war reported from one important vantage point — that of the soldiers and officers actually doing the fighting and reconstruction.

The Source of the Material

The documents — some 92,000 individual reports in all — were made available to The Times and the European news organizations by WikiLeaks, an organization devoted to exposing secrets of all kinds, on the condition that the papers not report on the data until July 25, when WikiLeaks said it intended to post the material on the Internet. WikiLeaks did not reveal where it obtained the material. WikiLeaks was not involved in the news organizations’ research, reporting, analysis and writing. The Times spent about a month mining the data for disclosures and patterns, verifying and cross-checking with other information sources, and preparing the articles that are published today. The three news organizations agreed to publish their articles simultaneously, but each prepared its own articles.

Classified Information

Deciding whether to publish secret information is always difficult, and after weighing the risks and public interest, we sometimes chose not to publish. But there are times when the information is of significant public interest, and this is one of those times. The documents illuminate the extraordinary difficulty of what the United States and its allies have undertaken in a way that other accounts have not.

Most of the incident reports are marked “secret,” a relatively low level of classification. The Times has taken care not to publish information that would harm national security interests …

There’s more at the link, but I stopped at this line. “The Times has taken care not to publish information that would harm national security interests“?

Don’t believe it for a second. The New York Times has been the radical left’s institutional organ working to bring about an American defeat in Iraq and the War on Terror, and now in Afghanistan.

Recall Heather MacDonald’s piece from 2006, on the Times‘ reporting that helped killed the Terrorist Finance Tracking Program. See, “National Security Be Damned“:


BY NOW IT’S UNDENIABLE: The New York Times is a national security threat. So drunk is it on its own power and so antagonistic to the Bush administration that it will expose every classified antiterror program it finds out about, no matter how legal the program, how carefully crafted to safeguard civil liberties, or how vital to protecting American lives.

The Times’s latest revelation of a national security secret appeared on last Friday’s front page–where no al Qaeda operative could possibly miss it. Under the deliberately sensational headline, “Bank Data Sifted in Secret by U.S. to Block Terror,” the Times blows the cover on a highly targeted program to locate terrorist financing networks. According to the report, since 9/11, the Bush administration has obtained information about terror suspects’ international financial transactions from a Belgian clearinghouse of international money transfers.

RTWT.

See also, Michelle Malkin, “NY Times Blabbermouths Strike Again.”

I’ll have more later after I read and research a bit. Meanwhile, readers can check WikiLeaks directly: “Afghan War Diary, 2004-2010.” And the Der Spiegel piece is here: “Explosive Leaks Provide Image of War from Those Fighting It” (via Memeorandum).

Cross-posted from American Power.

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  • KoS

    “The Times has taken care not to publish information that would harm national security interests …”

    wow. Just who the F*** does the times think they are? Since when do THEY get to decide what does and doesn't constitute a “national security interest”?

  • Karma Hoser

    Once again, the self-anointed liberal royalty decide that THEY know what's best for us and the country better than everyone else!!

  • Lee

    One service this has done is educate the public on the volume of information which must be reviewed. 92,000 sounds like a lot of reports, but in reality it's not. A “report” can be almost anything, from highly valuable to completely useless. All must be reviewed to determine if they contain information of value, and then that information must be confirmed. Any report can be true, false, or elements of both, and the source of that report may be honest, dishonest, or working some sort of agenda. In short, this is HARD work. It's extremely easy to look back after something has happened (e.g., 9/11 attack) and identify relevant information points. Try going through thousands of reports a day, every day, determining which are accurate, and putting the pieces together before such an attack.

  • http://www.commieblaster.com/ CommieBlaster

    Our Prediction: By November, We'll Find Obama was Behind All This

    http://www.commieblaster.com

    • Fiza1

      Is commieblaster for real? This is one sick, site site!

      • Mahatma

        Let's hope it is not for real. This is some seriously sick stuff

    • Fiza1

      Here is what the radical Christian white power neo Nazi commieblaster hate blog is all about.

      jewsribsinbearjaw.wordpress.com/commieblaster-com-exposing-the-jew-communist-agenda-for-america/

  • Christopher_Taylor

    I'd like to believe that these efforts were about the good of the country, stopping abuse and war crimes, and the desire for justice and liberty for all. The problem is I can't help but think they're more about crippling the war on terror and demonizing the military, funded by our enemies.

  • David Singleterry

    Free societies work best when everyone is sharing the same information. Had wikileaks done the same thing for, say, the bullshit intel leading up to the war in Iraq, we might have never invaded.

    • Christopher_Taylor

      Even you don't believe that stupidity.

    • Rickvid in Seattle

      Yesteryear on Wikileaks:
      - Atomic bomb nears ready – target Japan
      - Invasion of France NOT at Calais
      - Brits use German spy network in Britain to dupe Nazis
      - Allies have cracked the Japanese and German military codes
      - Jap Navy wrong – no US carriers sunk, US plans BIG surprise at Midway
      - Brits retreat to Dunkirk, secret effort to evacuate
      - Dead body on Portuguese beach NOT what it seems – attempt to fool Germans
      - Americans have it bad in Solomons, fear Japs might find out and attack
      - Roosevelt and Churchill planning secret mid-Atlantic rendezvous
      - NYT publishes Wikileaks data but does no harm to national security

  • Kiehlmeierhsp

    why the h*** wont they show the story. just because the gov is affraid to let us know how the war is realy going.we have the right to know how the war is national seceraty risk my a**

  • Rickvid in Seattle

    More Yesteryear on Wikileaks:
    - Colonial delegates sign Declaration of Independency – top secret meetings in Philadelphia
    - American army freezing in Valley Forge, war goes poorly
    - Washington executes own soldiers
    - 1776, year of loses for Americans
    - War in south lost, battles between American rebels and Loyalists cause large casualties
    - Tens of thousands of American civilians die in war, victims of illness, starvation, battle
    - Washington faces revolt by own officers
    - War drags into 5th year as British control much of American south
    - French/American alliance shaky
    - British certain of victory in Virginia

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