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US Army seeks to silence WikiLeaks Printer friendly page Print This
By Middle East Online
News Article
Saturday, Mar 20, 2010

WikiLeaks uncovers information governments, companies try to keep from public view.

WASHINGTON - A small, cash-strapped website that publishes documents governments want kept secret has caught the attention of the Pentagon.

A report by the US Army Counterintelligence Center says the whistleblower website WikiLeaks poses a potential danger to safeguarding US troops, protecting sensitive information, and "operational security."

The 2008 military analysis appeared this week on the WikiLeaks website, the latest document posted on the site that seeks to uncover information governments and companies try to keep from public view.

US Army spokesman Gary Tallman confirmed the report on the website was "genuine."

The report expresses concern that the website posted 2,000 pages of documents with precise details of military equipment in Iraq and Afghanistan from April 2007, describing them as "nearly the entire order of battle."

Tallman said that information has a "shelf life" and has become outdated.

"The information in the review is now dated to the point where it no longer presents the same national security concerns as it did when the report was generated," he said.

The 2008 army report suggests trying to expose those who leak documents WikiLeaks as a way of undermining the website.

Sites such as WikiLeaks "use trust as a center of gravity by protecting the anonymity and identity of the insiders, leakers, or whistleblowers," it said.

"The identification, exposure, termination of employment, criminal prosecution, legal action against current or former insiders, leakers, or whistleblowers could potentially damage or destroy this center of gravity and deter others considering similar actions from using the Wikileaks.org Web site."

Tallman said that "anyone who knowingly provides information marked as classified to anyone or an organization without a proper clearance or need to know is a serious matter, and subject to potential penalties under the law."

WikiLeaks, run by Sunshine Press, describes itself as a "non-profit organization funded by human rights campaigners, investigative journalists, technologists and the general public."

The site, which has to rely in part on public contributions to stay afloat, had to temporarily shut down earlier this year because of financial difficulties.

WikiLeaks says it has published more than one million documents from dissident communities and anonymous sources around the world about government and corporate corruption, human rights violations and other subjects.

The Swiss bank Julius Baer & Company LTD earlier this month dropped a legal attempt to force Wikileaks to shut down.

A US federal judge in San Francisco ruled that the website's postings of leaked documents is protected as free speech by the US Constitution.

Julius Baer went after Wikileaks in court after the website posted copies of internal documents indicating the company helped customers launder money illegally through the Cayman Islands.

Julius Baer denies the accusations.

To learn more, visit WikiLeaks.

Middle East Online

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