FYI..

Trevor Timm is an activist and blogger for the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

WikiLeaks, whistleblowers and wars

The crackdown on whistleblowers is a study in contradictions, hurting both 
press freedom and foreign policy decisions.
Last Modified: 09 Mar 2012 17:01
While Bradley Manning may languish in jail for the rest of his life for leaking 
low-level documents, others who leak more sensitive material carry on 
unmolested [GALLO/GETTY]

San Francisco, CA - On February 24, the Washington Post ran a prominent story 
on a "top-secret" State Department cable that warned of Pakistani safe-havens 
for militants that were allegedly putting the "US strategy in Afghanistan in 
jeopardy". The cable was so secret, the Post reported, the US Ambassador to 
Afghanistan "sent it through CIA channels rather than the usual State 
Department ones".

Yet somehow, it still ended up on the pages of one of the biggest newspapers in 
the United States of America.

While many might have assumed this was the work of WikiLeaks and their alleged 
source Bradley Manning, it wasn't. "Several" US officials described the cable's 
contents to the Post in a seemingly coordinated effort to affect Afghanistan 
war policy. Meanwhile, during the same week the Post article ran, Bradley 
Manning was arraigned on 22 charges, including "aiding the enemy", that have 
him facing life in prison for also leaking State Department cables - none of 
which were classified as high as the cable published by the Washington Post.

 
Inside Story Americas -
Punishing the whistleblower?

Will those "several officials" be investigated, arrested and aggressively 
prosecuted for leaking such highly sensitive information? And will the Justice 
Department open up a grand jury investigation into the Washington Post for 
publishing such information, as it did for WikiLeaks?

The answer is almost certainly no, and highlights the hypocrisy in the Obama 
administration's current war on whistleblowers. But this is far from the only 
example in recent weeks; a separate incident led ABC's Jake Tapper to admirably 
confront the White House over its contradictive policy.

Two weeks ago, the White House issued multiple statements praising two 
prominent journalists who both recently died reporting from Syria, proclaiming 
their deaths were "a reminder of the incredible risks that journalists take ... 
in order to bring the truth about what is happening in a country like Syria to 
those of us at home". But as Tapper told White House press secretary Jay 
Carney, just as the administration was praising "aggressive journalism" 
overseas, its Justice Department had just finished indicting a sixth person 
under the Espionage Act for leaking classified information - a total higher 
than all of the previous presidents combined.

Former CIA agent Jon Kiriakou stands accused of leaking information to news 
organisations in 2008 about the torture methods used on two alleged al-Qaeda 
leaders and the names of the CIA agents involved. Despite the fact that torture 
is illegal in the United States, no one has been prosecuted for the CIA's 
torture programme carried out under former President George W Bush. Yet the 
Justice Department decided to prosecute someone for merely alerting the press 
about it.

"There just seems to be disconnect here," Tapper remarked. "You want aggressive 
journalism abroad; you just don't want it in the United States." While Carney 
tried to excuse the Justice Department's Espionage Act cases by claiming they 
involve highly sensitive state secrets, Tapper rightly observed, "you're suing 
a CIA officer for allegedly providing information in 2009 about CIA torture. 
Certainly that's something that's in the public interest of the United States".

Unfortunately, the administration's questionable tactics don't end there. In a 
separate leak case involving another former CIA official, the Justice 
Department just asked an appeals court to re-instate a subpoena to force New 
York Times reporter James Risen to give up his sources for a chapter in his 
2006 book, State of War. In it, Risen described a spectacularly bungled US 
intelligence mission, where a series of mishaps led to the CIA literally 
handing Iranian nuclear scientists blueprints to a nuclear bomb. Former CIA 
officer Jeffrey Sterling is accused of giving the story to Risen and faces 
years in jail, despite the clear public interest in such information.

 
Listening Post -
Bradley Manning vs the US military

The Obama administration faced an analogous CIA mishap in Iran just months ago, 
and they had no similar qualms when officials freely leaked classified 
information to explain the incident. When the CIA lost an unmanned drone over 
Iranian territory that ended up in government hands, several US officials 
continually leaked classified information to news organisations for days, 
explaining what happened, and describing the drone's capabilities - despite it 
being "one of the more sensitive surveillance platforms in the CIA's fleet". So 
far, no arrests, let alone an investigation.

In an era of increased government secrecy, where more than 77 million documents 
were classified just last year, the press is forced to rely on leaks to report 
on most subjects touching national security and foreign policy. By leaking 
information supporting its own narrative, yet aggressively prosecuting those 
who do the same with leaks which may prove detrimental to its policies, the 
Obama administration is creating a one way conduit of information where the 
facts they like get published, and those that undercut their policies or 
embarrass them do not.

Whether it is Obama's explicit intention or not, when only the government 
controls the information that enters the public sphere, the foreign policy 
decisions that result can be disastrous. Former President George W Bush's 
administration famously leaked faulty classified information supporting his 
invasion of Iraq and kept contrary (and it turns out, truthful) intelligence 
out of the papers, leading to a decade-long war.

Unfortunately, we may be seeing a repeat of the same scenario right now. The 
top secret State Department cable leaked to the Washington Post seems intended 
to have a prolonging effect on the war in Afghanistan. Troops are currently set 
to leave the country in 2013 or 2014, yet as the Post reported, the information 
in the cable "could be used as ammunition by senior military officials who 
favour more aggressive action by the United States against the Haqqani havens 
in Pakistan". Similarly, officials have also been leaking unsubstantiated 
classified information on Iran's alleged renewed ties to al-Qaeda that could be 
used to justify a future military strike.

It's vital the press can access information when reporting on such 
consequential decisions. Remember, it was also a leak - this one indisputably 
unauthorised - that may have helped end the Iraq War. The release of a 
WikiLeaks cable was one of the reasons the US was forced into the withdrawal 
all of its troops from Iraq at the end of last year, according to CNN. But if 
whistleblowers are too afraid to come forward about current events, just like 
with Iraq, we may not know until it is too late.

Trevor Timm is an activist and writer for the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Follow him on Twitter: @WLLegal

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily 
reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
Source:
Al Jazeera




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