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The New York Times Again Censoring WikiLeaks: Censorship - Standard New York Times Practice
06 December 2010 By Stephen
Lendman
On November 28, WikiLeaks began
releasing over 250,000 leaked State Department and US
Embassy cables (many designated "secret"), dating from
1966 through end of February 2010. Their content
ranges from embarrassing to important revelations
about US spying on allies and the UN, ignoring
corruption and human rights abuses in "client states,"
corporate lobbying, backroom dealmaking,
disparagements of foreign leaders, and overall
revealing a much different America than its public
persona. Most of all, it offers more proof of a sham
democracy, a lawless imperial state rampaging globally
though little, if anything, of a smoking gun nature
was disclosed.
Unsurprisingly, the London
Guardian said the documents "reveal how the US uses
its embassies as part of a global espionage network,
with diplomats tasked to obtain not just information
from the people they meet, but personal details, such
as frequent flyer numbers, credit card details and
even DNA material. Classified 'human intelligence
directives' issued in the name of Hillary Clinton or
her predecessor, Condoleezza Rice, instruct officials
to gather information on military installations,
weapons markings, vehicle details of political leaders
as well as iris scans, fingerprints and DNA."
Washington's "most controversial
target was the leadership of the United Nations." One
document requested "the specification of telecoms and
IT systems used by top UN officials and their staff
and details of 'private VIP networks used for official
communication, to include upgrades, security measures,
passwords, (and) personal encryption keys."
Candid comments also revealed
disparaging assessments of world leaders. German
Chancellor Angela Merkel was called weak, describing
her as "risk averse and rarely creative." Her
Vice-Chancellor and Foreign Minister, Guido
Westerwelle, got even harsher treatment, described as
incompetent, a man with an "exuberant personality" but
little foreign policy experience.
Christopher Dell, US ambassador
to Zimbabwe, called President Robert Mugabe
"ruthless," "clever," and "to give the devil his due,
he is a brilliant tactician." He "will not go down
without a fight....he will cling to power at all
costs."
Elizabeth Dibble, US charge
d'affaires in Rome, called Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi "feckless, vain, and ineffective as a
modern European leader." Another document described
him as a "physically and politically weak (leader
whose) frequent late nights and penchant for partying
hard mean he does not get sufficient rest," the
implication being to do his job properly. Still
another document said he appears "increasingly the
mouthpiece of (Russian Prime Minister Vladimir) Putin"
in Europe.
Der Spiegel reported more,
including:
-- America's disdain for Keynan
President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga;
-- Turkey's Prime Minster Recep
Tayyip Erdogan was called an unreliable
"fundamentalist," governing with "a cabal of
incompetent advisors in a country....on a path to an
Islamist future;"
-- America must "endure the
endless tirades of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarek,
who claims to have known that the Iraq war was the
'biggest mistake ever committed' and who advised the
Americans to 'forget about democracy in Iraq,' "
recommending a military coup once US forces leave;
and
-- Middle east cables "expose the
superpower's weaknesses....the world power is often
quickly reduced to becoming a plaything of diverse
interests," including Arab leaders using their
Washington ties to their own advantage.
Other documents expressed high
level concerns about Pakistan's growing instability, a
clandestine effort to combat Al Qaeda in Yemen, and
shifting China/North Korean relations.
Grave fears were revealed about
Pakistan's nuclear capability, officials warning of a
potential economic collapse and risk of smuggling
nuclear material to suspected terrorists.
Another cable discussed Afghan
corruption, one alleging that vice president Zai
Massoud was carrying $52 million in cash with him when
he was stopped during a United Arab Emirates visit.
In still another, Secretary of
State Clinton questioned the mental health of
Argentina's president.
The Financial Times reported that
"The leaks will reinforce suspicions that Israel is
considering an attack on Iranian facilities. According
to reports of the cables, Ehud Barak, the defense
minister, warned in 2009 that the world had six to 18
months to deal with Iran's nuclear programme."
Israel, like Washington, is
notorious for crying wolf. If an attack was planned,
neither nation would announce it.
An expected revelation ahead is
that America for years supported Turkey's Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK), an organization Washington and
Ankara designated a terrorist group. Regional expert,
Mehmet Yegin from the Center for American Studies at
the USAK research organization, told the Turkish
newspaper Hurriyet that "US support for the PKK could
have been a result of Turkey's decision in 2003 not to
allow the United States to enter Iraq through Turkish
soil."
Still more cables about:
-- a senior Politburo official
orchestrating hacker attacks that forced Google to
leave China;
-- allegations about Russia
giving Silvio Berlusconi lavish gifts and lucrative
energy contracts;
-- others about Russian
intelligence using mafia bosses to conduct criminal
operations, one cable describing "a virtual mafia
state;"
-- sharp Pentagon criticism of
Britain's military in Afghanistan;
-- inappropriate British royal
family member comments about a UK law enforcement
agency and a foreign country;
-- criticism of UK Prime Minister
David Cameron and requests for intelligence
information on individual MPs;
-- various corruption
accusations;
-- US Honduran ambassador Hugo
Llorens calling the June 2009 coup "illegal and
unconstitutional;"
-- Russia offering Israel $1
billion for drone technologies, saying it would also
cancel its sale of advanced S-300 missiles to Iran;
-- harsh criticism of US embassy
staff in the Caribbean, China, Russia and elsewhere;
-- saying Afghan President Hamid
Karzai is "driven by paranoia;"
-- Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad called another Hitler; so is Hugo Chavez,
Saddam Hussein before his capture and hanging, and
other leaders earlier so vilified to hype fear about
them;
-- various Arab leaders,
including Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, urging
Washington to bomb Iran to destroy its nuclear
capability;
-- Saudi donors named as the
biggest financiers of terror groups;
-- discussion of a
Washington/Yemen coverup over using US planes to bomb
suspected Al Qaeda targets;
-- a description of a rogue
enriched uranium shipment causing a near
"environmental disaster" in 2009;
-- technical details of
US/Russian secret nuclear missile negotiations in
Geneva; and much more besides new material to be
released.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange
provided the documents to the London Guardian,
Germany's Der Spiegel, France's Le Monde, Spain's El
Pais, and The New York Times.
Censorship -
Standard New York Times Practice
After last July's "Afghan War
Diaries" release, The Times collaborated with White
House officials to sanitize it, clearing it in advance
before publishing. Its Washington bureau chief, Dean
Baquet, confirmed that he and two reporters (Mark
Mazzetti and Eric Schmitt) "did in fact (tell them)
what we had," Obama officials "prais(ing) us for the
way we handled it, giving them a chance to discuss it,
and for handling the information with care. And for
being responsible."
Afterwards, editor Bill Keller
wrote this to readers:
"The administration, while
strongly condemning (the release), did not suggest (we
not) write about them. On the contrary, in our
discussions....while challenging some of (our)
conclusions....thanked us for handling the documents
with care (read sanitizing disturbing truths), and
asked us to urge WikiLeaks to withhold information
that could cost lives. We did pass along that
message."
In addition, he concealed daily
war crimes, including mass civilian deaths, many
willfully committed. Also, Task Force 373, death squad
assassins killing suspected insurgents, cold-blooded
murder The Times suppresses, collaborating with
imperial lawlessness.
Instead, it focused on
"Pakistan's Double Game," a July 27 editorial "confirm(ing)
a picture of Pakistani double-dealing that has been
building for years," saying "If Mr. Obama cannot
persuade Islamabad to cut its ties to, and then
aggressively fight, the extremists in Pakistan, there
is no hope of defeating the Taliban in Afghanistan."
The Times, of course, supports US imperial wars,
including the Afghan and Iraq quagmires.
On November 29, The Times
published "A Note to Readers: The Decision to Publish
Diplomatic Documents," saying:
Released documents are either
marked "secret," "noforn" (not to be shared with other
countries' representatives), "secret/noforn,"
"confidential," or unclassified. "Most were not
intended for public view, at least in the near term."
"The Times has taken care to
exclude, in its articles and in supplementary
material, in print and online, information that would
endanger (read expose) confidential informants or
compromise national security (read reveal Washington's
imperial agenda). The Times redactions were shared
with other news organizations and communicated to
WikiLeaks, in the hope that they would similarly edit
(read sanitize) the documents they planned to post
online."
"After its own redactions, The
Times sent Obama administration officials the cables
it planned to post and invited them to challenge
publication of any information that, in the official
view, would harm the national interest (again reveal
America's true agenda - global imperial
destructiveness). After reviewing the cables,
(officials) suggested additional redactions. The Times
agreed to some, but not all."
The Times said it will post only
about 100 cables, some redacted, others in full, "that
illuminate aspects of American foreign policy," but
will follow White House instructions in do doing.
The "newspaper of record," of
course, is a longstanding imperial tool, the closest
equivalent in America to an official ministry of
information and propaganda, what Times editors and
bosses know but won't say.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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