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Seven Eye Popping Wikileaks about US Dealings

A sifting of recent embassy cable releases turns up these eyebrow raisers.

By Julianne Escobedo Shepherd, 1 Dec 2010, AlterNet.org

Hillary Clinton Wha!

Secretary Clinton: Who's gonna clean this up?

[Editor's note: So far, revelations of a cranky Canadian diplomat bashing his own country are among the most boring of what Wikileaks disgorged this week. Here's what's likely causing eyes to bug out in Washington -- and in some cases Ottawa, too.]

As U.S. Secretary of State Clinton addressed the Wikileaks' release of embassy cables yesterday, she didn't look happy about having to play diplomacy cleanup. While there's a lot of gossipy throwaway material fit for tabloids (like, say, the fact that Gaddafi travels with a blonde Ukranian nurse), some of the cables contain startling revelations about global governments, world leaders and the fragile balance of peace. Here are seven of the most shocking.

1. The U.S. has been secretly bombing Yemen. The U.S. has been bombing suspected terrorists in Yemen, but Yemen's government is taking responsibility. Last December, three separate strikes were played out, but weren't very successful -- out of 55 people killed in one instance, 21 were children. 



2. U.S. uses diplomats as spies. Speaking of Clinton... she ordered diplomats to spy on government officials at the UN, gathering such info as credit card and frequent flyer numbers, computer passwords... and DNA. A reporter at the press conference asked if she was embarrassed by any of the information leaked in the cables and her answer was a stern no, but we're betting she'll have an awkward time at the next diplomatic dinner with Ban Ki-Moon. At least she has company in Condi -- former Secretary of State Rice started the whole operation.



3. U.S. uses Guantanamo Bay prisoners as bargaining chips. And human dignity takes another nice punch to the gut. In efforts to resettle Guantanamo detainees, the U.S. has been using them as trump cards when dealing with other countries, even going so far to offer cash to unload prisoners. In perhaps the most disgraceful instance, Slovenia had to take a detainee if it wanted a meeting with President Obama. 



4. China's been hacking U.S. systems since 2002. One Wikileak cable states that the Chinese Politburo hacked into Google last year -- no huge surprise there, other than the fact that they cracked the company's sophisticated system of firewalls. But apparently China's an old pro at this -- it has allegedly been hacking into the systems of Western governments -- and, of course, its own national human rights activists, including the Dalai Lama -- for nearly a decade. 



5. Afghanistan is corruption Disneyland. OK, no big surprise there, but it is interesting that Ahmad Zia Massoud was caught traveling to the UAE with $52 million in cash. After being detained by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, he "was ultimately allowed to keep (the money) without revealing the money's origin or destination." Interesting. Meanwhile, President Karzai's brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai, was suspected of being a drug kingpin, although apparently that's no longer the case.

6. Iran might have long-range missiles. Practically the entire Middle East has urged the U.S. to act against Iran, according to the Wikileaks cables, including the kings of Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. Perhaps they'll reconsider if they know North Korea is said to have sold them 12 missiles with enough range to hit Russia and cities in Western Europe. As for other weapons, Iran appears to be building them piecemeal from different countries -- including Turkey, China and Germany -- under the guise of front companies, and used the Red Crescent as a front to smuggle in weaponry to war zones. As Clinton said in her address: "The concern about Iran is well-founded, widely shared, and will continue to be at the source of the policy that we pursue with like-minded nations to try to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons."

7. Putin and Berlusconi's close relationship causes alarm. "Alpha dog" Vladimir Putin and Italian partier/Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi have forged a close relationship, potentially involving shady business deals. The Guardian noted the extraordinarily close relationship between Vladimir Putin, the Russian prime minister, and Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister, which is causing intense U.S. suspicion. Cables detail allegations of "lavish gifts," lucrative energy contracts and the use by Berlusconi of a "shadowy" Russian-speaking Italian go-between.   [Tyee]

17  Comments:

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  • crh

    1 year ago

    surface democracy

    OK, so I get it. There is only an inkling of democracy in the world, and the rest is left to The Deciders. Maybe, if all money became worthless overnight, we could get rid of most of them.

  • Mathieu Y

    1 year ago

    America doesnt care?

    Of course they dont care. This information, despite coming directly from the US government, will play off to the majority of people as left wing nutjobs getting involved in business they have no reason to be involved in. It'll be decried as a conspiracy theory and a hoax despite having very real sources.

    It's not what's true, it's what is believed. And a typical hard working or down trodden citizen doesnt want to believe that the world is evil.

  • whatthe

    1 year ago

    pretty mild stuff

    The on reason this guy is alive is not so goofballs like Flannigan can call for asassination but instead to actually make us believe these leaks are credible. Moreover it eclipses other leaks.

    I am starting to lean toward wikileaks as a force run out of the pentagon.

  • boondoggle

    1 year ago

    A Global Revolution

    As Noam Chomsky stated yesterday, Wikileaks cables reveal "Profound Hatred for Democracy on the Part of Our Political Leadership" Who will lead the global revolution?

  • Van Isle

    1 year ago

    The only revelation on these

    The only revelation on these leaks is Ms. Clinton ordering US diplomats to spy in their counterparts in the UN. In saying that, it doesn't surprise me and I'm sure all the diplomats probably try and get the 'dirt' an each other and pass that info on to their own 'spy agency'. We're ruled by a bunch of psychopaths. It seems that they don't know the difference between right and wrong; the end justifys the means.

  • cboo44

    1 year ago

    Wikileaks ? Gee, the "revelations" are putting me to sleep

    Diplomats spying on other diplomats? Duh, for about 300 years. Mid-East countries wanting someone else to do their dirty work? Geez, who'd a thunk it? For as long as there have been "Mid-East countries" ! U.S. bombing kids in other countries? That's been a tradition since the 1940's, hasn't it?
    Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

  • Skywalker

    1 year ago

    A surprise?

    The U.S. patronizes Canada and we let them dictate our foreign policy and let them dictate our domestic policy. They consider us just another of their colonies and this is a surprise. The surprise is how little our leaders actually understand the risks in giving up our sovereignty

  • Conductor274

    1 year ago

    Democracy is just an old memory

    Democracy as we know it is nothing more than an old memory. Since globalization began to take root as the major policy around the world most of the planet's wealth is now in the hands of a few. Currently the middle class is being systematically eliminated which will give us a planet wide situation where there are only rich and poor people. Throughout history that situation has resulted in the rich making all the major decisions in favor of the rich to the detriment of the poor. Wikileaks has put this fact on full display and has embarrassed those rich people in charge of polishing their image. Enough of this information could very well lead to a revolution so they want to prosecute Julian Assange and make an example of him so others don't follow his lead. Democracy is dead.

  • bfearn

    1 year ago

    Wikileaks

    The people who run Wikileaks have been condemned by most Western governments and if found those whistleblowers may spend many years in prison. This says a great deal about Western leadership.

    The release of truthful praise is always welcomed by politicians, even when it is untrue. The release of truthful criticism often results in massive investigations, solitary confinement for the 'guilty', sometimes for many years and possibly death at the hands of Western assassins.

    Western democracy is a myth. Plutocracy is the true name of our system and has been for decades.

  • Tbarnston

    1 year ago

    Is any of this a suprise?

    None of this is a suprise really. Do you really believe that other countries are not playing the same games?

  • RickW

    1 year ago

    Skywalker

    Quote:
    The surprise is how little our leaders actually understand the risks in giving up our sovereignty

    You are being too kind. I think the more appropriate description would be "quislings"....
    At present, for instance, Ignatieff is doing his darndest to ensure Harper stays in power - and Harper is ensuring that this country is wrapping itself yet more tightly in the American apronstrings.

  • Lefty

    1 year ago

    Repeat that lie about Iran

    "Practically the entire Middle East has urged the U.S. to act against Iran, according to the Wikileaks cables, including the kings of Bahrain and Saudi Arabia."
    Proven BS.

    "Commenting on the revelations that several Arab leaders are urging the United States to attack Iran, Chomsky says the latest polls show "Arab opinion holds that the major threat in the region is Israel, that’s 80 percent; the second threat is the United States, that’s 77 percent. Iran is listed as a threat by 10 percent... This may not be reported in the newspapers, ... but it’s certainly familiar to the Israeli and the U.S. governments and to the ambassadors... What that reveals is the profound hatred for democracy on the part of our political leadership." "
    Democracy Now!

  • Lefty

    1 year ago

    A Profound Hatred

    Noam Chomsky: WikiLeaks Cables Reveal "Profound Hatred for Democracy on the Part of Our Political Leadership"

    http://www.democracynow.org/2010/11/30/noam_chomsky_wikileaks_cables_reveal_profound

  • Grania

    1 year ago

    Defence Fund

    Is there a credible defence fund anywhere for Assange?

  • samuidave (not verified)

    1 year ago

    Assange is the new Lee Harvey Oswald

    ... the fall guy for the inner party running the show. Who even knows how much of the information was black propaganda planted by the inner power corps, knowing it would be leaked by some ridiculously low-ranking underling?

    The entire matter stenches of political power, as it always will.

    Not a word of the information released is the tiniest bit surprising. Enjoy the show!

  • samuidave (not verified)

    1 year ago

    Skywalker ~ The U.S.

    Skywalker ~ The U.S. patronizes Canada and we let them dictate our foreign policy and let them dictate our domestic policy. They consider us just another of their colonies and this is a surprise. The surprise is how little our leaders actually understand the risks in giving up our sovereignty

    The surprise t not what they do but how little we care about electing people to represent us in any sort of accountable fashion. We cannot blame them after we give them the thumbs up every election to carry on.

  • loblollyboy

    1 year ago

    WikiGossip?

    Has there been anything in WikiLeaks which hasn't already---e.g., US missile strikes in Yemen---been speculated upon in The Economist, The Telegraph, and dozens of other journals for months if not years before this?

    As a previous UK ambassador to Saudia Arabia neatly put it: 'embarrassing, yes; damaging, no."

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