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Major publications release excerpts from thousands of secret US diplomatic cables obtained by WikiLeaks. Last Modified: 28 Nov 2010 21:31 GMT | ||||
Several major media organisations, including The Guardian and The New York Times, have published detailed reports on a massive trove of leaked US diplomatic cables. The files address negative perceptions of various world leaders, repeated calls for US attack on Iran, and requests for US diplomats to spy on other countries' officials. The White House has described the leaks as "reckless and dangerous". There are several explosive revelations contained within the documents including diplomatic notes detailing how Arab leaders in the Gulf have been urging an attack on "evil" Iran. The documents reveal serious fears in Washington over the security of Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme. They also detail advice given to US diplomats on how to gather intelligence and pass information of interest over to the country's spy agencies. According to media reports, senior UN figures were the target of intelligence gathering by US diplomats. The cache of documents contain allegations of corruption against foreign leaders, who are subjected to stinging criticism in the cables, with Vladimir Putin referred to as an "alpha-dog." Angela Merkel "avoids risk and is rarely creative", and Hamid Karzai is described as being "driven by paranoia." World leaders have scrambled to contain the diplomatic fallout in advance of the expected full release by Wikileaks of the full set of cables later on Sunday. The limited release comes one day after the US state department's lawyer threatened legal action over publication of the confidential material, obtained by an unknown source. Meanwhile, Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, has said the release of the classified documents by the whistle-blower website will amount to a "diplomatic history" of global affairs. "The material that we are about to release covers essentially every major issue in every country," Assange told reporters in Jordan by video link from an undisclosed location on Sunday. US officials took the unusual step on Saturday of sending a letter to WikiLeaks to warn against the release of the secret government documents, which it says will put "countless" lives at risk. The letter, from Harold Hongju Koh, the US state department's top lawyer, argued that publishing the classified files would threaten counterterrorism operations and jeopardise US relations with its allies. "No single individual has even come to harm as a result of anything that we have ever published," Assange said on Sunday. The classified documents reportedly cover correspondence between US diplomatic missions abroad and the state department in Washington and could reveal "unflattering" views that American officials held about close EU allies and countries like Russia and Turkey. US diplomats have been visiting foreign ministries hoping to stave off anger over the cables, which are internal messages that often lack the niceties diplomats voice in public. WikiLeaks has said the newest release will be seven times the size of the October publication of 400,000 Iraq war documents, the biggest leak to date in US intelligence history. The site also published 77,000 classified US files on the Afghan conflict in July. 'Violation of US law' In his letter, Koh said the release will "place at risk the lives of countless innocent individuals,'' "place at risk on-going military operations,'' and "place at risk on-going cooperation between countries". "You have undermined your stated objective by disseminating this matieral widely, without redaction, and without regard to the security and sanctity of the lives your actions endanger," he wrote. Koh said WikiLeaks should return them to the US government and destroy any copies in its possession or in computer databases.
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Monday 29 November 2010
Secret US embassy cables revealed
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Aljazeera
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