A newly leaked CIA report prepared earlier this month (.pdf) analyzes how the U.S. Government can best manipulate public opinion in Germany and France -- in order to ensure that those
countries continue to fight in Afghanistan. The Report celebrates the
fact that the governments of those two nations continue to fight the
war in defiance of overwhelming public opinion which opposes it -- so
much for all the recent veneration of "consent of the governed" -- and
it notes that this is possible due to lack of interest among their
citizenry: "Public Apathy Enables Leaders to Ignore Voters," proclaims the title of one section.
But the Report also cites the "fall of the Dutch Government over its troop commitment to Afghanistan" and worries that -- particularly if the
"bloody summer in Afghanistan" that many predict takes place -- what
happened to the Dutch will spread as a result of the "fragility of
European support" for the war. As the truly creepy Report title puts
it, the CIA's concern is: "Why Counting
on Apathy May Not Be Enough":
As the Pentagon report put it: "the governments of China, Israel, North Korea, Russia, Vietnam and Zimbabwe" have all sought to block access to or otherwise impede the operations of WikiLeaks, and the U.S.
Government now joins that illustrious list of transparency-loving
countries in targeting them.
All of this is based in the same rationale invoked by President Obama and the Democratic Congress when they re-wrote the Freedom of Information Act last year in order to suppress America's torture
photos. It's the same rationale used by all governments to conceal
evidence of their wrongdoing: we need to suppress our activities for your own good. WikiLeaks is devoted to subverting that mentality and, relatively speaking, has been quite successful in doing so.
For that reason, numerous governments and private groups would like to see them destroyed. Corporations have sued to have the site shut down. And in addition to this 2008 Pentagon report, WikiLeaks has acquired, though not yet posted, other U.S.
Government classified reports on its activities, including a U.S.
Marine Intelligence Report and an analysis prepared by the U.S.
military base in Germany, both of which speak of WikiLeaks as a threat.
Moreover, the FBI has refused to provide any information about its
investigations and other activities aimed at WikiLeaks, citing, in
response to FOIA requests, national security and other excuses for
concealing it.
* * * * *
In my interview this morning with Assange, he described multiple incidents that clearly signal a recent escalation of surveillance and other forms
of harassment directed at WikiLeaks. Many of those events are detailed
in an Editorial
they just published, which, he explained, was part of an effort to
publicize what is being done to them in order to provide some safety
and buffer. A good summary of those events is provided by Gawker.
As but one disturbing incident: a volunteer, a minor, who works with
WikiLeaks was detained in Iceland last week and questioned extensively
about an incriminating video WikiLeaks possesses relating to the
actions of the U.S. military. During the course of the interrogation,
the WikiLeaks volunteer was not only asked questions about the video
based on non-public knowledge about its contents (i.e.,
information which only the U.S. military would have), but was also
shown surveillance photos of Assange exiting a recent WikiLeaks meeting
regarding the imminent posting of documents concerning the Pentagon.
That WikiLeaks is being targeted by the U.S. Government for surveillance and disruption is beyond doubt. And it underscores how vital their work is
and why it's such a threat.
WikiLeaks editors, including Assagne, have spent substantial time of late in Iceland because there is a pending bill in that country's Parliament that would
provide meaningful whistle blower protection for what they do, far
greater than exists anywhere else. Why is Iceland a leading candidate
to do that? Because, last year, that nation suffered full-scale economic collapse. It was then revealed that numerous nefarious causes (corrupt loans, off-shore transactions, c...
from the public and even from policy-makers, preventing detection and
avoidance. Worse, most of Iceland's institutions -- from its media to
its legislative and regulatory bodies -- completely failed to penetrate
this wall of secrecy, allowing this corruption to fester until it
brought about full-scale financial ruin. As a result, Iceland has
become very receptive to the fact that the type of investigative
exposure provided by WikiLeaks is a vital national good, and there is
real political will to provide it with substantial protections.
If that doesn't sound familiar to Americans, it should. At exactly the time when U.S. government secrecy is at an all-time high, the
institutions ostensibly responsible for investigation, oversight and
exposure have failed. The American media are largely co-opted, and
their few remaining vestiges of real investigative journalism are
crippled by financial constraints. The U.S. Congress is almost
entirely impotent at providing meaningful oversight and is, in any
event, controlled by the factions that maintain virtually complete
secrecy. As I've documented before, some alternative means of
investigative journalism have arisen -- such as the ACLU's tenacious FOIA litigations to pry documents showing "War on ...
and the reams of bloggers who sort through, analyze and publicize them
-- but that's no match for the vast secrecy powers of the government
and private corporations.
The need for independent leaks and whistle-blowing exposures is particularly acute now because, at exactly the same time that investigative journalism has collapsed,
public and private efforts to manipulate public opinion have
proliferated. This is exemplified by the type of public opinion
management campaign detailed by the above-referenced CIA Report, the Pentagon's TV propaganda program exposed in 2008, and the ways in which private interests covertly
pay and control supposedly "independent political commentators" to
participate in our public debates and shape public opinion.
Last month, I was on a panel at the New School's Conference on how information is controlled in a democracy, and also on the panel were
Daniel Ellsberg, who risked his liberty to leak the Pentagon Papers,
and The New York Times' David Barstow, who won the Pulitzer
Prize for exposing the Pentagon's propaganda program. Ellsberg
described how massive is the apparatus of secrecy in the National
Security State, and Barstow made the vital point -- which I summarized
in the clip below when speaking later that day at NYU Law School --
that the public and private means for manipulating public opinion are
rapidly increasing at exactly the same time that checks on secrecy
(such as investigative journalism) are vanishing:
Aside from the handful of organizations (the ACLU, the NYT) with the resources and will to engage in protracted FOIA litigations against the government, one of the last avenues to uncover government
and other elite secrets are whistle blowers and organizations that
enable them. WikiLeaks is one of the world's most effective such
groups, and it's thus no surprise that they're under such sustained
attacks.
This is how Assange put it to me this morning in explaining why he believes his organization's activities are so vital and why he's willing to make himself a target in order to do
it:
This information has reform potential. And the information which is concealed or suppressed is concealed or suppressed because the people who know it best
understand that it has the ability to reform. So they engage in work
to prevent that reform . . . .There are reasons I do it that have to do with wanting to reform civilization, and selectively targeting information will do that -- understanding that quality
information is what every decision is based on, and all the decisions
taken together is what "civilization" is, so if you want to improve
civilization, you have to remove some of the basic constraints, which
is the quality of information that civilization has at its disposal to
make decisions. Of course, there's a personal psychology to it, that
I enjoy crushing bastards, I like a good challenge, so do a lot of the
other people involved in WikiLeaks. We like the challenge.
The public and private organizations most eager to maintain complete secrecy around what they do -- including numerous U.S. military and
intelligence agencies -- are obviously threatened by WikiLeaks'
activities, which is why they seek to harass and cripple them. There
are numerous ways one can support WikLeaks -- donations, volunteer
work, research, legal and technical assistance -- and that can be done through their site. There aren't many groups more besieged, or doing more important work, than they.
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