Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Deceits, Plots, Insults: America Laid Bare: Diplomatic communiqués released by Wikileaks shine unprecedented light on the US and how it sees the world
The doors to a previously hidden world of diplomatic intrigue and insults were dramatically thrown open last night as the whistle-blowing website Wikileaks published its vast tranche of secret American diplomatic communiqués. The release of hundreds of thousands of secret messages from staff at US embassies revealed how Washington has struggled to confront the geopolitical realities of a post-9/11 world.
Even though a significant number of the secret messages date back to before Mr Obama took office, the White House was aggressive yesterday in its condemnation of their release by Wikileaks, saying the publication could "deeply impact" US interests abroad and put lives "at risk". (REUTERS/Gary Hershorn) It also exposed the often less than diplomatic language used by State Department insiders to describe some of the planet's most powerful leaders. Contained within the quarter of a million secret memos are revelations that:
*The Obama administration has ordered diplomats to gather vast amounts of personal, biometric and banking details about key global figures, including the United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon;
*Key Arab allies in the Middle East, including King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, have pleaded with Washington to take military action against Iran's nuclear programme;
*Tehran is thought to have obtained from North Korea a cache of Russian-designed missiles that could be fired at targets as far away as Berlin;
* US officials warned their German counterparts not to arrest CIA officers who were suspected by Berlin of being involved in America's "extraordinary rendition" programme – the secret global abduction and internment of suspected terrorists;
* Washington has grown increasingly wary of Italy's close ties to Russia, with one official describing Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi as the "mouthpiece of [Vladimir] Putin" in Europe.
* Officials from the US Drug Enforcement Administration accused the Afghan Vice-President, Ahmad Zia Massoud, of travelling to the United Arab Emirates with $52m in cash;
The communiqués – most written between 2006 and 2009 – use colourful language to describe political leaders in ways bound to cause embarrassment in Washington and abroad. The Russian President, Dmitry Medvedev, is referred to as a "pale and apprehensive man", while Nicholas Sarkozy of France is "an emperor with no clothes" and Afghanistan's Hamid Karzai is "driven by paranoia".
Some of the harshest criticism is reserved for key anti-American leaders opponents. The Iranian President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is described by one official as being "like Hitler", while North Korea's dictator Kim Jong-il is called a "flabby old man".
The German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, is praised as a strong US ally but dismissed as "risk-averse and rarely creative". Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, meanwhile, is derided as "an alpha dog" who plays Batman to Medvedev's Robin.
One of the most revealing personal details is the disclosure that the Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, is accompanied at all times by a "voluptuous blonde" Ukrainian nurse.
There are also claims of "inappropriate behaviour" by an unnamed member of the British Royal Family.
Iran's nuclear programme surfaces frequently in the memos and is viewed as a key concern by the Americans and their Arab allies. Reports from US embassies in the Middle East suggest that King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia urged Washington to take military action against the Islamic republic and to "cut off the head of the snake". According to Wikileaks, leaders in Jordan and Bahrain also backed the use of armed force if necessary. One of the reports quotes Zeid Rifai, the then head of the Jordanian senate, telling a senior US official: "Bomb Iran, or live with an Iranian bomb. Sanctions, carrots, incentives won't matter."
A message dated 24 February this year says that US officials believe the Iranians have stockpiled 19 advanced BM-25 missiles, based on a Russian design, with help from North Korea. They are thought to have a range of 2,000 miles – 800 miles further than any missile Iran has had before. The Tehran regime is not yet thought to have the technology to build a nuclear warhead small enough to fit inside a BM-25, but the memos offer growing evidence that Tehran has the ballistic capability to target western Europe.
The messages also reveal some of the diplomatic pitfalls of America's so-called "war on terror". In 2007, the US fell out with Germany over arrest warrants that were issued for CIA agents accused of being involved in rendition. A senior US diplomat told a German official "our intention was not to threaten Germany, but rather to urge that the German government weigh carefully at every step of the way the implications for relations with the US".
There is also mounting concern about Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, which the US fears could be seized by Islamist militants. The leaked memos suggest that, since 2007, US officials have mounted a top secret but so far unsuccessful attempt to remove enriched uranium from a Pakistani research plant. In a message dated May 2009, the US ambassador, Anne W Patterson, says that Pakistan refused to grant American technicians access to the reactor because they feared that local media might get hold of the story and portray the visit as "the US taking Pakistan's nuclear weapons".
The cache of messages also casts aspersions upon the way US embassy staff are involved in collecting personal data about foreign nationals, blurring the line between standard diplomatic work and outright espionage. State Department personnel working at the UN, for example, were ordered in a July 2009 directive approved by Hillary Clinton to gather the credit card and frequent-flier details, work schedules, biometric data and other personal information about foreign dignitaries, including senior British representatives at the UN. They were also asked to collect details of "private VIP networks used for official communication, to include upgrades, security measures, passwords, personal encryption keys". Similar communiqués were sent to US staff in Burundi, Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda. One asked staff to acquire "internet and intranet 'handles', internet email addresses, website identification URLs; credit card account numbers; frequent-flier account numbers; work schedules and other relevant biographical information".
Classified State Department documents reveal that US embassy staff in Berlin recruited a German politician to supply them with confidential information about Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition government shortly after it was elected in 2009.
Even though a significant number of the secret messages date back to before Mr Obama took office, the White House was aggressive yesterday in its condemnation of their release by Wikileaks, saying the publication could "deeply impact" US interests abroad and put lives "at risk".
Last night, the US ambassador to London, Louis Susman, said: "Releasing documents of this kind place at risk the lives of innocent individuals – from journalists to human rights activists and bloggers to soldiers and diplomats. It is reprehensible for any individual or organisation to attempt to gain notoriety at the expense of people who had every expectation of privacy in sharing information."
The founder of Wikileaks, Julian Assange, rejected the suggestion that the publication of the memos would endanger lives. "As far as we are aware, and as far as anyone has ever alleged in any credible manner whatsoever, no single individual has even come to harm as a result of anything we have ever published," said the 39-year-old Australian.
Despite Washington's fears that a vast amount of uncensored information was to be published by the website, Wikileaks went some way towards redacting the names of informants it believes might be persecuted.
What has been released?
* Most of the cables were written between 2006 and 2009 although a small number go back to the early 1990s.
* They are thought to have been downloaded from SPIR-Net, the Pentagon's global secret-level computer network, by Bradley Manning, a former Iraq-based army intelligence analyst.
* In total the cache comprises more than 251,000 documents, 11,000 of which are marked "secret". An additional 9,000 or so carry the label "noforn", meaning the information should not to be shared with those outside of the US, and 4,000 are marked "secret/noforn". The rest are either marked with the less restrictive label "confidential" or are unclassified.
* That such a large amount of confidential data can be so easily copied and leaked is testament to how the US government has struggled to combine better communication between its various government agencies and the need to protect secret information.
* More than 2.5 million government employees have access to SIPR-Net.
- Posted in

108 Comments so far
Show AllPvt. Bradley Manning's name surfaces in the news periodically, but I've heard nothing about his whereabouts.
Which AmeriKKKan torture chamber is this hero renditioned?
As I understand Pvt. Manning has been arrested and will probably be court marshaled and faces prison. He really should be given the Medal of Honor. This Nation cannot keep these type of secrets from the citizens of this Nation. Hell, every other country knows most of it anyway. It is this Nation that thinks that its citizens are not worthy of the truth.
How about Adrian Lamo who exposed Bradley to the FBI? He must be feeling real good for a job well done?
Manning is a whistle-blower. Lamo is a rat. There is a big difference.
Why do Arabs leader urge quietly and why does Israel ask openly for an attack on Iran by US?
Why odn't Russia,Turkmenistan,Pakistan,Afghanistan,China,India are not heard asking for attack on Iran? They are the immediate neighbours.
Answear-1- Arabs leaders may not be actually asking but wants to be on the good side of US protectors who are eager to for an attack on Iran.
Answear 2-Arabs leaders, elected ( who is elected? ), unelected and inherited,dont want to see a street uprising by the disaffected public.
Answear 3- Industry wants to sell arms to Arabs and needs an excuse that should come from the Arabs for the sale to be considered legitimate and for the industry to withstand any charges of endangering peace and fuelling arms race.
Answear 4- Cable transmittals ignored the more cautious stand from Arabs leaders.
Answear 5- WiKilekas have received selective leaks.
Good question and answers.
Answer#6: Sunni Arabs hate and fear Shia Arabs and (gasp!) Persians.
I was hoping no one would post a rejoiner until he corrected all the "answears" but now it is too late.
Deleted
DELETED ... because of malfunctions on my postings. ?????????
SaboCat,
Never fails. "People in glass houses should never throw stones," SaboCat
You focus on KAH's "answears," but in your post, the correct word is: "rejoinder," not "rejoiner."
peace, cm
I am certain I wrote "rejoinder - must have been a keyboard slip-up. Rrepeating the same spelling error 6 times (probably by copying and pasting) shows too much carelessness to not make a brief comment about - or maybe his reading vision is even worse than mine.
What does 'hate" mean in this context?
Arabs supported overwhelmingly Hizbullah while Egyptian and Saudi leaders were bashing them. Arabs support Iranain endeavour to enrich neuclear material.They have Shia and Sunni have differences .That could be politically exploited just as happens in US over Black -White, Mexican-American, latino-Black. But one thing you can remain sure if tomorrow Mexico gets screwed by Colombia or Hondurus , the "Rainbow colaition" of 1980s would be herad and amplified again even if for some reason US state department leaks otherwise in confidence.
What a silly remark.
KAH -
Answer 6: I read somewhere (not sure, but I think on Juan Cole's excellent Middle East focused website) that there is an intriguing cultural difference between the general practices of western diplomats and Arab diplomats. I know this is hazardous stereotyping, but the gist of the analysis goes like this:
Traditionally, European and American diplomats speak candidly, off-the-record, to other diplomats with the understanding those communications will be kept secret, and then lie publicly to the media. Arabs, in contrast, tend to do the exact opposite. They lie off-the-record, in private, but say what they really mean in their public diplomatic pronouncements.
I've always been intrigued by that cultural disconnect, if it is a real phenomenon.
Bill from Saginaw
Kah, you asked:
"Why do Arabs leader urge quietly and why does Israel ask openly for an attack on Iran by US?"
Well, do the Saudi's love Israel? They don't even officially recognize it.
Now that it has been revealed that a major attack on Iran would produce a rain of missiles on Tel Aviv with no retaliation on Saudi Arabia it makes a lot of sense to me that they would urge this secretly.
The open secret probably not in the leaks is Iran does not want or need a nuke weapon when they are capable of replying with unacceptable destruction.
Israel has changed its tune about urging an attack lately now that they aren't so sure they would come out ahead.
Answer 6: OPEC wants Iran out of its membership.
Interpret that in any way you want.
Don't be too overjoyed at this unless you hate America. It could prove costly to many others...not America.
What American could love what our country has become?
mightymite
I had a terrible headache this morning, until i read your post. Laughter really is the best medicine.
Excellent point. People's reactions are very telling in that they show their support for the stooges of the corporations that the US has become (or not). How could anyone possibly be against holding those responsible for the death, destruction and mayhem of the last thirty years to account?
maybe the same reason a child lies to protect an abusive parent,
the tormenter is also the "safe" haven.
Does the slaughter and imprisonment of millions of original native "american" inhabitants ring a bell? This, empire, has been the norm since the european invasion of this continent.
You have to hate the US in order to be happy about primary historical documents coming out? Would you prefer to live in blind illusion?
Joe
As Mark Twain said wisely,
"Loyalty to the American people always, loyalty to the government when it *deserves. it."
Liars and schemers of global dominance deserve no loyalty. I find it highly ironic BTW Mite that conservatives like you who claim to abhor the state are the first to identify all of the American people with the state whether we want that or not, and to defend the states right to lie to us and keep us in the dark. Why is that? Do really in fact love the worst most murderous and destructive aspects of the state?
I as an individual human being see the state as capable of producing both great harm, and great good, but do *not* identify with it as an individual human being. Yet apparently you do when conflate Americans with the state, rather than correctly seeing society and the state as being separate entities. Do you ever actually think about the deeper meaning of the propaganda words you repeat from hate radio, or hate tee vee sources? Words do have meanings you know..
Sigh!
Mark Twain, American
http://www.latimes.com/features/books/la-ca-twain-autobiography-20101114,0,339312.story
the only thing i can reply to this post is what a dick you are mightymite.
somehow revealing the truth about our current wars and occupations of iraq and afghanistan and what our so called "diplomats" are doing overseas is dangerous to 'merka and our god given way of live.
you make me want to puke mighty. people like you defend war criminal repugs and dims while too many people all over this country are being reduced to eating cat food due to this economy and policies that are the direct result of the same said asshole repugs and dims.
matt
galveston tx
The issue is not one of \"State Secrets\" being disclosed to foreign governments, but the far bigger problem of \"EMPIRE secrets\" being clearly seen by Americans at home.
It seems to me that all the tremendous angst, consternation, and difficulty of the US in messaging, dealing and explaining what is coming out from Wikileaks really does not have anything to do concerns about the normal \"roughness', candor, or embarrassment of explaining the supposed foreign 'damage' of how normal diplomacy works, but rather the shock of American citizens at home seeing how an EMPIRE conducts global policy.
If the leaked information contains what I strongly think that it will clearly reveal, the real danger that 'our' (sic) government is fearing is that of how average American citizens will react to seeing that their own supposed government is acting like an EMPIRE with the rest of the world ---- and that the American people will realize that they have been being lied to for decades, and that their government, far from acting like a normal democracy (or democratic republic) has been acting like an Empire and IS an Empire.
That's the real threat that has all of the politicians from both 'Vichy' parties, and their professional bureaucratic and technocratic underlings, and more importantly the ruling-elite of this previously well hidden global corporate/financial/militarist EMPIRE posing as the nation called America nervous as bankers in church ---- that the people will now see them as phonies, shills, pimps, and treasonous slugs for an Empire whose disguise is now coming off.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Alan,
I wish you were right, but the US people will hear very little about these leaks except for the selective items that support the official line being fed the US people - like the story about North Korea missles gonig to Iran. This was the only leaked cable among hundreds that the major US wire services media saw fit to post, and the only one 98% of USAns now know about from their 6 o'clock news.
(Of course, a sovereign nation has the right to acquire any and all military hardware, from anyone it feel like, to defend itself, but I digress.)
Also, the great majority of the USAn people, indoctrinated as they are with hyper nationalist, racist, US-exceptionalism, rather like the US being an empire.
The real damage, a very positive development in my opinion, will be how the other 6.6 billion people of the world come to regard the USA.
You are correct. For the most part Americans do like being an empire.
As for how the other 6.6 billion people. Do you really think this is going to change one mind?
Even one mind?
I do not.
People in the world like the US or don't like the US and things like this aren't going to make anyone change their minds. All it does is make the left and the right angry at each other and will land Assange in jail with Manning for the rest of his life...
You would see a larger swing of world opinion if Madonna went on tour again or if Avitar II opened in Paris instead of New York.
Diplomacy is not looking to get laid in a bar. Who you go home with one night or what you say or do doesn't matter in the long run to your allies. Just doesn't.
We'll see now if the Tea Party has any real teeth. If the Tea Party is truly about "smaller" government, then they should be up in arms over the leaks and the extent to which our Government keeps its dealing with foreign sovereign powers under the table.
Of course, that was just a "rhetorical challenge" wasn't it? We know that the Tea Party is very much on the side of the empire regarding these leaks.
By "small government" they only want the HHS, HUD, Interior, Labor, Transportation, EPA - and the equivalent agencies at the state and local level, to be smaller. They are all for bigger militaries, police departments, and spy agencies.
Heh, heh. I agree, though the libertarian faction of that cult are for reducing the military, especially it's presence overseas. Here's hoping that someone holds the feet of the Tea Party to the fire.
The average american will react by accepting what ever the press feeds them. They will swallow the Pentagon and white house BS of, " Assange is a traitor", yawn, and change the channel to something they can relate to, like a 'reality' show. Sadly, this will blow over as quickly as the last leak. To suddenly accept your government as liars, is to expose your own complicity. This, is not so easily accepted. Those that have already accepted the ruse, will experience a moment of vindication. This momentary thrill, will also pass quickly and be replaced with the daily thought of, "We are completely fuc#ed."
maybe, but i think the slow leak over a period of weeks combined with the world-wide interest,
this storm may not blow over quickly.
this may be worse than katrina.
I hope you are right, but, there is little precedent to convince us that the american public will suddenly sour on their sheep like patriotism and embrace some much needed dissent.
isreal murdered two Iranian nuclear scientists with car bombs this morning.
I cannot wait to hear Oilybomber condemn this state sponsered terrorism,... yeah like never.
Don't be so quick to blame Israel for this particular act.
Iran has a standing 'fatwa' or religious edict that condemns anyone working on nuclear weapons to death.
This may simply have been housecleaning.
Unless Israel and it's thuggish Mossad are publicly claiming responsibility... Israel won't tolerate any nuclear rivals in the Middle East...
Non Serviam - I will not serve.
Most foreign intelligence agencies will view this as old news of little value.
If 2.5 million Americans have access to this information it will have little value to most governments.
This "leak" cannot be equated with the outing of Valerie Plaime and her network.
It cannot be equated with the intergovernment planning that went into the genocides of Iraq and Afghnistan.
This is not the Pentagon Papers ...leaks from the military were sealed decades ago.
More bread and circus for the masses . Eat up and enjoy the show.
I am in total agreement with you. Maybe it's the product of a growing cynicism about international leadership in general, but I find very little that's shocking in regards to the substance of these leaks - at least as far as they're being made clear in the press. Aren't the deeds described the sort of things intelligence agencies always do? I am a bit surprised as the negative characterizations of some world leaders; people in the 21st century ought to be aware of the hazards of being blunt in electronic communication. Even that is not earth-shaking though; just a diplomatic faux pas, as far as I can tell.
Each of the comparisons you made has merit. The previous events you cited all had a significant impact; the new releases seem on the level of sports commentary to me.
Todd S -
I agree.
Historically, before there ever was an OSS, a CIA, an NSA, or a Department of Homeland Security, espionage was practiced out of American embassies by diplomats, embassy staff employees and military attaches. The concept of candid, back channel communications between ambassadors abroad and the political powers-that-be back stateside (and parlor intrigue to penetrate that line of copmmunication) goes back to Ben Franklin's posting to Paris by the Continental Congress.
This Wikileaks dump is temporarily embarassing, yes, but definitely not the equivalent of the Pentagon Papers or the Downing Street memos. Nor is it putting innocent lives at risk. It exposes hypocrisy all the players always knew was there anyway.
Bill from Saginaw
"More bread and circus for the masses"
I wouldn't be so sure that every nation would feel good about USA ordering the spying on all its major diplomats and politicians even if some have suspected it privately.
The Russian spying on the USA is small potatoes and does not equate with this.
We'll see how the Empire thrives now with this boost to it's ego.
Note how the AP release (also on CD this morning) doesn't have word one about what is actually in the leaks--- only "official" reaction to it. The pieces from Britain actually contain some news.
Just doin' bidness.
The business of America is business.
Mafioso Templata Americana.
this much squirming from only a few hundred cables carefully picked and spun by NYT types....
there are hundreds of thousand more cables to go!
drip drip drip.
watch the cockcroaches scurry for cover.
Regarding all of this wikileaks stuff:
In 2000, the Constitution of the US was shredded for the world to see by the ascension of W to the throne through his selection by the USSC.
The US then launched a war in retaliation for the supposed terrorist attacks of 911 which ho-hum were never properly investigated and remain so to this day.
A domestic police state was created with the PATRIOT act.
Then, the US blatantly lied to launch a war against a independent nation killing hundreds of thousands if not millions and making refuges of millions more.
It tortured and imprisoned innocent people and does to this day.
It won't hold any of its leaders accountable for any of these actions.
Now we have the drone bombing of innocent people in Pakistan/Yemen/Somalia etc etc etc
And this is just what we've done in the last decade!
And so, I'm supposed to be surprised by the mendacity and craven nature of the United States government only now?!!
Oohh, we think Putin is Batman and and Kim Jon Il is flabby!!
Who freaking cares?
In light of the grievous and blatant war crimes and acts of aggression we've committed in just the last 10 years, how can any of this Wikileaks crap been seen as anything other than a smoke screen?
HELLO!!
We don't need any more revelations of criminality.
We don't need any more evidence as to the true nature of our leaders.
This stuff might be interesting for scholars, etc, but the horse left the barn YEARS ago concerning the illegality of the actions by our government.
Other than that this is like watching a Biography Channel expose on serial killers.
Gee, I didn't know John Wayne Gacy liked to eat peanut butter and banana sandwiches!!
Wow, Ted Bundy had a golden retriever as a child!
Richard Speck's favorite color was mauve!
Excellent
the struggle is between the people of the world and the global fascist elites and their local henchmen/women.
it is important for people to know who among their "leaders" are on their side, through these exposed information.
understandably, the global elites, like egyptian dictator, saudi king, and yemeni puppet president, are freaking out, for fear that this will help lead to popular uprising in their respective countries.
Exactly so. Maybe this so called exposed leak was meant (in part) to expose these gulf leaders running their mouths, and whoops! Now they have mud on their face, and maybe, just maybe the masses will revolt. Isn't that the plan all along? Destabilize the region at the local level for some distractions while another US invasion is on the way.
I thought that when you started comparing people to Hitler, you automatically lost the argument. Didn't our embassy guys get that clue? Or are they just getting their talking points from Israel (I know that's where their marching orders come from)?