Showing posts with label Wikileaks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wikileaks. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 August 2010

The WikiLeaks website WikiLeaks releases CIA memo on U.S. terror recruits

WikiLeaks releases CIA memo on U.S. terror recruits

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The WikiLeaks website released a secret CIA memo on Wednesday warning of fallout if the United States came to be seen as an "exporter of terrorism," given al Qaeda's interest in American recruits.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange attends a seminar at the Swedish Trade Union Confederation headquarters in Stockholm August 14, 2010. The WikiLeaks website released a secret CIA memo warning of fallout if the United States came to be seen as an "exporter of terrorism," given al Qaeda's interest in American recruits. (REUTERS/Scanpix/Bertil
The document by the CIA's so-called "Red Cell" was the latest classified memo to be published by the whistle-blowing website, which last month released more than 70,000 secret U.S. military documents on the war in Afghanistan.

It has threatened to release some 15,000 more, despite Pentagon criticism that the leaks endangered the lives of sources and exposed sensitive intelligence gathering methods to enemy fighters.

The three-page CIA memo released by WikiLeaks did not appear to expose any state secrets and one U.S. official quipped it was hardly a "blockbuster." Indeed Red Cell reports are meant to provoke thought, rather than provide an authoritative assessment.

But it addressed the hypothetical and highly sensitive question about the potential impact on the United States if allies saw it as a nation whose citizens frequently operate abroad to carry out acts of terrorism.

It said the United States could lose leverage over allies to cooperate on terrorism -- particularly on "extra-judicial activities." Foreign governments might even take the extraordinary step of secretly extracting U.S. citizens suspected of carrying out extremist acts abroad.

"Primarily we have been concerned about al Qaeda infiltrating operatives into the United States to conduct terrorist attacks, but AQ may be increasingly looking for Americans to operate overseas," the document proposes.
coppied by http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/8/26/worldupdates/2010-08-26T030359Z_01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_-510682-1&sec=Worldupdates

Sunday, 22 August 2010

Sweden Defends Reversal of Warrant for Founder of WikiLeaks

We are saw the Sweden Defends Reversal of Warrant for Founder of WikiLeaks


Bertil Ericson/Scanpix, via Associated Press
Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, on Aug. 14, before he was accused of rape.

STOCKHOLM — The Swedish prosecutor’s office on Sunday defended its handling of allegations made by two Swedish women against Julian Assange, founder of the WikiLeaks Web site, saying that a senior prosecutor withdrew the arrest warrant that had been issued for Mr. Assange on a rape charge after reviewing a judgment made by a more junior official before additional information became available.
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Bertil Ericson/Scanpix, via Associated Press
Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, on Aug. 14, before he was accused of rape.

The abrupt reversal of the prosecutor’s office had added a new and bizarre turn to events involving Mr. Assange, a 39-year-old Australian. He has been locked in a dispute with the Pentagon over WikiLeaks’ posting last month of 77,000 classified Afghan war documents on the Internet, and its announcement of plans within weeks to post 15,000 additional secret documents that he has described as even “more explosive.”

Mr. Assange and others working for WikiLeaks said that “dirty tricks” by those seeking to destroy WikiLeaks were responsible for the developments here on Saturday, when prosecutors first announced that they had issued an arrest warrant for Mr. Assange, then reversed course within hours. The warrant was canceled after the chief prosecutor, Eva Finne, reviewed the case and found that “there is no longer reason to believe that Mr. Assange has committed rape,” in the words of a spokeswoman for the national prosecutor’s office, Karin Rosander.

“Another prosecutor was responsible for the matter on Friday,” Mrs. Rosander said Sunday in a telephone interview. “During Saturday, a new prosecutor took over, and new information came to light. When she looked into the matter, she found there was no reason to suspect” Mr. Assange of rape, and therefore no need for the arrest warrant.

Mrs. Rosander said a separate allegation against Mr. Assange that was cited in the prosecutor’s original statement on Saturday, involving molestation, remained under investigation. “The prosecutor will begin looking into the matter tomorrow, and she estimates that she will make a decision in the coming week,” she said.

The prosecutor’s office did not feel that an accusation of molestation — a term that covers a wide range of offenses under Swedish law, including inappropriate physical contact with another adult — was enough to justify an arrest warrant, Mrs. Rosander said. A molestation conviction carries a possible fine, or up to a year in prison.

Pending further investigation into the molestation claim, Mrs. Rosander said, the police have been trying, so far unsuccessfully, to “find” Mr. Assange, who has remained elusive since arriving in Sweden 10 days ago from Britain. He had said he hoped to establish a secure base for himself and WikiLeaks in Sweden because its press laws provide broad protections for news organizations that publish secret information. The Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet has agreed to take on Mr. Assange as a columnist in an arrangement that would qualify him for such protections.

Mr. Assange has told reporters in recent weeks that he believes he and other WikiLeaks activists are at risk of being arrested, or being singled out in other ways, in the wake of WikiLeaks’ release of the Pentagon documents.

Early Sunday, Mr. Assange responded to efforts by The New York Times to contact him with a brief e-mail to a reporter in which he described the sexual abuse accusations as “completely baseless, as I always said.”

Previously, he had responded to the Swedish accusations in Twitter feeds, a form of communication he has favored in recent weeks in his effort to disguise his whereabouts. On Twitter, he implied that the accusations were payback for WikiLeaks’ disclosures. “We were warned to expect ‘dirty tricks,’ ” he said. “Now, we have the first one.”

In its Sunday editions, Aftonbladet quoted Mr. Assange as saying that the rape claims had caused damage even though they had been dropped because WikiLeaks’ “enemies” could use them to discredit the organization.

“I do not know what lies behind this. But we have been warned that, for example, the Pentagon plans to use dirty tricks to undermine us,” Mr. Assange was quoted as saying in a phone interview from Sweden. “And I have also been warned about sex traps.”

The Pentagon press secretary, Geoff Morrell, said Sunday that any suggestion that the Pentagon was involved in the allegations was “absurd.”

Aftonbladet also quoted a woman who it said made the accusation of molestation as saying: “The accusations against Assange are, of course, not orchestrated by the Pentagon or anybody else. Responsibility for what happened to myself and the other girl lies with a man who has a skewed attitude to women and a problem taking no for an answer.” The newspaper did not identify the woman.

William Rankin contributed reporting from New York, Eric Schmitt from Washington and Ravi Somaiya from London.
Coppied by http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/23/world/europe/23wikileaks.html

Saturday, 21 August 2010

Saw the Wikileaks founder Julian Assange accused of rape

Enjoy Wikileaks founder Julian Assange accused of rape

Julian Assange was cited as saying the release of the allegations was "deeply disturbing"
Swedish authorities say they have issued an arrest warrant for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, on accusations of rape and molestation.

The warrant was issued late on Friday, said Karin Rosander, communications head at Sweden's prosecutors' office.

Swedish police have been trying to contact Mr Assange, but have not yet been able to, she told the BBC.

Wikileaks, criticised for leaking Afghan war documents, quoted him saying the charges were "without basis".

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The message, which appeared on Twitter and was attributed directly to Mr Assange, said the appearance of the allegations "at this moment is deeply disturbing".

In a series of other messages posted on the Wikileaks Twitter feed, the whistle-blowing website said: "No-one here has been contacted by Swedish police", and that it had been warned to expect "dirty tricks".

More documents due
Last month, Wikileaks published more than 90,000 secret US military documents on the war in Afghanistan.

US authorities criticised the leak, saying it could put the lives of coalition soldiers and Afghans, especially informers, at risk.

Mr Assange has said that Wikileaks is intending to release a further 15,000 documents in the coming weeks.

Ms Rosander said there were two separate allegations against Mr Assange, one of rape and the other of molestation.

She gave no details of the accusations. She said that as far as she knew they related to alleged incidents that took place in Sweden.

Media reports say Mr Assange was in Sweden last week to talk about his work and defend the decision by Wikileaks to publish the Afghan war logs.

The allegations were first reported in the Swedish newspaper Expressen.
Coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-11047025