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Wednesday, Dec 1, 2010 06:02 ET 
-Glenn Greenwald The moral standards of WikiLeaks critics
By Glenn Greenwald   
AP
Julian Assange at a press conference in London on Oct. 23(updated below -
Update II) 

Time's Joe Klein writes this about the WikiLeaks disclosures:


I am tremendously concernced [sic] about the puerile eruptions of Julian
Assange. . . . If a single foreign national is rounded up and put in jail
because of a leaked cable, this entire, anarchic exercise in "freedom"
stands as a human disaster. Assange is a criminal. He's the one who should
be in jail.


Do you have that principle down?  If "a single foreign national is rounded
up and put in jail" because of the WikiLeaks disclosure -- even a "single
one" -- then the entire WikiLeaks enterprise is proven to be a "disaster"
and "Assange is a criminal" who "should be in jail."  That's quite a
rigorous moral standard.  So let's apply it elsewhere:

What about the most destructive "anarchic exercise in 'freedom'" the planet
has known for at least a generation:  the "human disaster" known as the
attack on Iraq, which Klein supported?  That didn't result in the
imprisonment of "a single foreign national," but rather the deaths of more
than 100,000 innocent human beings, the displacement of millions more, and
the destruction of a country of 26 million people.  Are those who supported
that "anarchic exercise in 'freedom'" -- or at least those responsible for
its execution -- also "criminals who should be in jail"?  

How about the multiple journalists and other human beings whom the U.S.
Government imprisoned (and continues to imprison) for years without charges
-- and tortured -- including many whom the Government knew were completely
innocent, while Klein assured the world that wasn't happening?  How about
those responsible for the war in Afghanistan (which Klein supports) with its
checkpoint shootings of an "amazing number" of innocent Afghans and civilian
slaughtering air strikes, or the use of cluster bombs in Yemen, or the
civilian killing drones in Pakistan?  Are those responsible for the sky-high
corpses of innocent people from these actions also "criminals who should be
in jail"? 

Continue reading 
I'm not singling out Klein here; his commentary is merely illustrative of
what I'm finding truly stunning about the increasingly bloodthirsty
two-minute hate session aimed at Julian Assange, also known as the new Osama
bin Laden.  The ringleaders of this hate ritual are advocates of -- and in
some cases directly responsible for -- the world's deadliest and most
lawless actions of the last decade.  And they're demanding Assange's
imprisonment, or his blood, in service of a Government that has perpetrated
all of these abuses and, more so, to preserve a Wall of Secrecy which has
enabled them.  To accomplish that, they're actually advocating -- somehow
with a straight face -- the theory that if a single innocent person is
harmed by these disclosures, then it proves that Assange and WikiLeaks are
evil monsters who deserve the worst fates one can conjure, all while they
devote themselves to protecting and defending a secrecy regime that spawns
at least as much human suffering and disaster as any single other force in
the world.  That is what the secrecy regime of the permanent National
Security State has spawned.

Meanwhile, in the real world (as opposed to the world of speculation,
fantasy, and fear-mongering) there is no evidence -- zero -- that the
WikiLeaks disclosures have harmed a single person.  As McClatchy reported,
they have exercised increasing levels of caution to protect innocent people.
Even Robert Gates disdained hysterical warnings about the damage caused as
"significantly overwrought."  But look at what WikiLeaks has revealed to the
world: 

We viscerally saw the grotesque realities of our war in Iraq with the Apache
attack video on innocent civilians and journalists in Baghdad -- and their
small children -- as they desperately scurried for cover.  We recently
learned that the U.S. government adopted a formal policy of refusing to
investigate the systematic human rights abuses of our new Iraqi client
state, all of which took place under our deliberately blind eye.  We learned
of 15,000 additional civilian deaths caused by the war in Iraq that we
didn't know of before.  We learned -- as documented by The Washington Post's
former Baghdad Bureau Chief -- how clear, deliberate and extensive were the
lies of top Bush officials about that war as it was unfolding:  "Thanks to
WikiLeaks, though, I now know the extent to which top American leaders lied,
knowingly, to the American public," she wrote.

In this latest WikiLeaks release -- probably the least informative of them
all, at least so far -- we learned a great deal as well.  Juan Cole today
details the 10 most important revelations about the Middle East.  Scott
Horton examines the revelation that the State Department pressured and
bullied Germany out of criminally investigating the CIA's kidnapping of one
of their citizens who turned out to be completely innocent.  The head of the
Bank of England got caught interfering in British politics to induce harsher
austerity measures in violation of his duty to remain apolitical and removed
from the political process, a scandal resulting in calls for his
resignation.  British officials, while pretending to conduct a sweeping
investigation into the Iraq War, were privately pledging to protect Bush
officials from embarrassing disclosures.  Hillary Clinton's State Department
ordered U.N. diplomats to collect passwords, emails, and biometric data in
order to spy on top U.N. officials and others, likely in violation of the
Vienna Treaty of 1961 (see Articles 27 and 30; and, believe me, I know:
it's just "law," nothing any Serious person believes should constrain our
great leaders).

Do WikiLeaks critics believe it'd be best if all that were kept secret, if
we remained ignorant of it, if the world's most powerful factions could
continue to hide things like that?  Apparently.  When Joe Klein and his
media comrades calling for Assange's head start uncovering even a fraction
of secret government conduct this important, then they'll have credibility
to complain about WikiLeaks' "excessive commitment to disclosure."  But that
will never happen. 

One could respond that it's good that we know these specific things, but not
other things WikiLeaks has released.  That's all well and good; as I've said
several times, there are reasonable concerns about some specific disclosures
here.  But in the real world, this ideal, perfectly calibrated subversion of
the secrecy regime doesn't exist.  WikiLeaks is it.  We have occasional
investigative probes of isolated government secrets coming from
establishment media outlets (the illegal NSA program, the CIA black sites,
the Pentagon propaganda program), along with transparency groups such as the
ACLU, CCR, EPIC and EFF valiantly battling through protracted litigation to
uncover secrets.  But nothing comes close to the blows WikiLeaks has struck
in undermining that regime. 

The real-world alternative to the current iteration of WikiLeaks is not The
Perfect Wikileaks that makes perfect judgments about what should and should
not be disclosed, but rather, the ongoing, essentially unchallenged hegemony
of the permanent National Security State, for which secrecy is the first
article of faith and prime weapon.  I want again to really encourage
everyone to read this great analysis by The Economist's Democracy in
America, which includes this:


I suspect that there is no scheme of government oversight that will not
eventually come under the indirect control of the generals, spies, and
foreign-service officers it is meant to oversee. Organisations such as
WikiLeaks, which are philosophically opposed to state secrecy and which
operate as much as is possible outside the global nation-state system, may
be the best we can hope for in the way of promoting the climate of
transparency and accountability necessary for authentically liberal
democracy. Some folks ask, "Who elected Julian Assange?" The answer is
nobody did, which is, ironically, why WikiLeaks is able to improve the
quality of our democracy. Of course, those jealously protective of the
privileges of unaccountable state power will tell us that people will die if
we can read their email, but so what? Different people, maybe more people,
will die if we can't.


The last decade, by itself, leaves no doubt about the truth of that last
sentence.  And Matt Yglesias is right that while diplomacy can be hindered
without secrecy, one must also consider "how the ability to keep secrets can
hinder diplomacy" (incidentally:  one of the more Orwellian aspects of this
week's discussion has been the constant use of the word "diplomacy" to
impugn what WikiLeaks did, creating some Wizard of Oz fantasy whereby the
Pentagon is the Bad Witch of the U.S. Government [thus justifying leaks
about war] while the State Department is the Good Witch [thus rendering
these leaks awful]:  that's absurd, as they are merely arms of the same
entity, both devoted to the same ends, ones which are often nefarious, and
State Department officials are just as susceptible as Pentagon officials to
abusive conduct when operating in the dark).

But Matt's other point merits even more attention.  He's certainly right
when he says that "for a third time in a row, a WikiLeaks document dump has
conclusively demonstrated that an awful lot of US government confidentiality
is basically about nothing," but I'd quibble with his next observation:   


There's no scandal here and there's no legitimate state secret. It's just
routine for the work done by public servants and public expense in the name
of the public to be kept semi-hidden from the public for decades.


It is a "scandal" when the Government conceals things it is doing without
any legitimate basis for that secrecy.  Each and every document that is
revealed by WikiLeaks which has been improperly classified -- whether
because it's innocuous or because it is designed to hide wrongdoing -- is
itself an improper act, a serious abuse of government secrecy powers.
Because we're supposed to have an open government -- a democracy --
everything the Government does is presumptively public, and can be
legitimately concealed only with compelling justifications.   That's not
just some lofty, abstract theory; it's central to having anything resembling
"consent of the governed."

But we have completely abandoned that principle; we've reversed it.  Now,
everything the Government does is presumptively secret; only the most
ceremonial and empty gestures are made public.  That abuse of secrecy powers
is vast, deliberate, pervasive, dangerous and destructive.  That's the abuse
that WikiLeaks is devoted to destroying, and which its harshest critics --
whether intended or not -- are helping to preserve.  There are people who
eagerly want that secrecy regime to continue:  namely, (a) Washington
politicians, Permanent State functionaries, and media figures whose status,
power and sense of self-importance are established by their access and
devotion to that world of secrecy, and (b) those who actually believe that
-- despite (or because of) all the above acts -- the U.S. Government somehow
uses this extreme secrecy for the Good.  Having surveyed the vast suffering
and violence they have wreaked behind that wall, those are exactly the
people whom WikiLeaks is devoted to undermining.

* * * * *

On the issue of the Interpol arrest warrant issued yesterday for Assange's
arrest:  I think it's deeply irresponsible either to assume his guilt or to
assume his innocence until the case plays out.   I genuinely have no opinion
of the validity of those allegations, but what I do know -- as John Cole
notes -- is this:  as soon as Scott Ritter began telling the truth about
Iraqi WMDs, he was publicly smeared with allegations of sexual
improprieties.  As soon as Eliot Spitzer began posing a real threat to Wall
Street criminals, a massive and strange federal investigation was launched
over nothing more than routine acts of consensual adult prostitution, ending
his career (and the threat he posed to oligarchs).  And now, the day after
Julian Assange is responsible for one of the largest leaks in history, an
arrest warrant issues that sharply curtails his movement and makes his
detention highly likely.  It's unreasonable to view that pattern as evidence
that the allegations are part of some conspiracy -- I genuinely do not
believe or disbelieve that -- but, particularly in light of that pattern,
it's most definitely unreasonable to assume that he's guilty of anything
without having those allegations tested and then proven in court.

Finally, as I noted last night:  I was on Canada's CBC last tonight talking
about these issues; it can be seen here.  I'll also be on MSNBC this
morning, at roughly 10:00 a.m., on the same topic.

 

UPDATE:  The notion that one crime doesn't excuse another has absolutely
nothing to do with anything I wrote; it's a complete nonsequitur, merely the
standard claim of those who want to propound moral standards for others that
they not only refuse to apply to themselves, but violate with far greater
frequency and severity than those they're condemning.



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