WikiLeaks Wikipedia ting Vit

Wikileaks (c pht m l /wkiliks/, cu to t ting Anh: wiki v leak - s r r) l mt t chc phi li nhun quc t[4] chuyn ng ti cc ni dung c gi n v danh v cc thng tin r r ca cc loi ti liu cha cng b khc nhng vn gi gn tnh nc danh ca ngun tin. Website ca t chc ra mt vo nm 2006, do The Sunshine Press iu hnh.[5] T chc ny t m t l c thnh lp bi nhng ngi Trung Quc bt ng quan im, cng nh cc nh bo, nh ton hc, v nhng nh cng ngh ca cc cng ty mi thnh lp t Hoa K, i Loan, chu u, chu v Nam Phi. Bo ch v tp ch The New Yorker vo thng 7 nm 2010 ni rng Julian Assange, mt nh bo ngi c v l mt nh hot ng Internet, l ngi iu hnh t chc.[6] Ch trong vng mt nm sau khi ra mt, website tuyn b c s d liu ca h c hn 1,2 triu ti liu.[7]

Cc trang web WikiLeaks u tin xut hin trn Internet vo thng 12 nm 2006. Ngi sng lp WikiLeaks l Julian Assange, mt nh bo ngi c. Theo li ca Julian Assange trong bi tr li phng vn trn trang Medien-Okonomie-Blog: "khng th bit chnh xc cc thnh vin ban qun tr trang wikileaks. Ch bit rng, mt s trong l nhng ngi t nn t Trung Quc (nhng ngi vn duy tr quan h vi gia nh h ti qu nh), nh bo, nh ton hc, chuyn gia k thut t M, i Loan, chu u, c v Nam Phi. Lc lng tnh nguyn vin nng ct ca WikiLeaks ch c 40 ngi. "

T The New Yorker (Hoa K) a ra nhn xt: "WikiLeaks khng hn l mt t chc, m nn c gi l s ni lon truyn thng. WikiLeaks khng c i ng nhn vin lm vic c tr lng, khng c vn phng. Ngi sng lp Assange thm ch khng c nh. ng i t nc ny sang nc khc, nh s gip ca nhng ngi ng h, hoc bn ca bn. C th ni, WikiLeaks tn ti bt k ni no Assange lm vic. " [8]

T khi ra i trang website t nm 2006, WikiLeaks cng b nhiu loi ti liu mt ca nhiu nc trn th gii. Ring nm 2010, trang web WikiLeaks cng b gn 500.000 ti liu mt ca Hoa K v chin tranh ti Afghanistan v Iraq, cng vi 250.000 th tn ngoi giao ca Hoa K,...[8]

Vo ngy 5 thng 4 nm 2010, mt on video c ng ti trn website c tn gi V git ngi ngoi d kin (Collateral Murder) c cung cp bi mt binh nht tn Bradley Manning (22 tui).

on video c quay, vo nm 2007, trn mt trc thng Apache, miu t li cnh git ngi ba bi hn mt chc ngi ngoi New Baghdad trong c 2 nhn vin ca hng tin Reuters.

on video a Wikileaks tr thnh cng thng tin chnh cho cc bo co ti liu v video nc danh v chnh xc t cc chin trng xa xi.[9][10] Vo thng 7 nm 2010, Wikileaks cng b Nht k Chin tranh Afghanistan, mt b hn 90.000 ti liu v cuc chin ti Afghanistan trc y cha tng c bit n.[11][12]

Ngy 25/7/2010, WikiLeaks theo nh thng bo t trc chnh thc cng b hn 92.000 bo co mt v cuc chin Afghanistan c vit t thng 1-2004 n thng 12-2009, bt chp sc p t chnh ph M. Wikileaks chia s s ti liu mt ny cho ba t bo ln l New York Times (M), Guardian (Anh) v tp ch Der Spiegel (c) vi iu kin ba t bo ny cng ng ti vo ngy 25-7. Cui thng 8 nm , WikiLeaks tip tc tung ra s cn li gm 15000 ti liu lin quan n cuc chin Afghanistan. Cc ti liu cho thy c v s ln lin qun M - NATO x sng v ti v vo cc thng dn Afghanistan v tng h l nhng k nh bom liu cht ca Taliban. Qun i M thnh lp mt nhm st th mang tn "St Th 773" c nhim v bt gi hoc m st cc nh lnh o Taliban v Al-Qaeda - vi s lng mc tiu ln n khong 2000 ngi. Lc lng Taliban s dng cc v kh nh tn la tm nhit t i khng, sng phng lu tn cng lc lng khng qun ca M - NATO, m s v kh c cho l ly t s cc v kh m CIA chuyn giao cho Afghanistan chng Lin X vo nhng nm 1980. [13]

Ngy 22/10/2010 mt lot 391.831 ti liu v cuc chin Iraq v c th gii m t l "qu bom s tht". Mc d chnh quyn M thng bo rng h khng th c tnh c s dn thng thit mng nhng theo ti liu c cng b th 285.000 nn nhn trong t nht 109.000 ngi thit mng t thng 3-2003 n cui nm 2009 - l hu qu ca "nhng cuc tm mu" (Julian Assange). [14]

Ngy 28/11/2010, 251.287 ti liu mt ca B Ngoi giao M c tit l trn wikileaks v cn c gi n 5 trang bo ni ting nht ca M, c, Php, Anh v Ty Ban Nha. y c coi l mt v " tn cng 11/9 " vo nn ngoi giao M. V d kin n s cn nh hng lu di n quan h ngoi giao ca M v cc nc khc.

Danh sch 5 t bo c WikiLeaks cung cp ti liu:[15]

Ngy 8/4/2013, WikiLeaks tung kho lu tr tm kim, cha 1,7 triu ti liu ca B Ngoi giao M t nm 1973-1976, trong c nhiu ti liu ca cu ngoi trng Henry Kissinger.[16]

Ngy 06/12/2010, WikiLeaks tip tc cng b danh sch cc c s h tng v ngun lc quan trng trn th gii m "nu mt mt c th tc ng nghim trng n sc khe ngi dn, an ninh kinh t v an ninh quc gia M". Danh sch bao gm cc tuyn cp ngm di y bin, cc h thng vin thng, hi cng, ng ng du kh, cc cng ty kinh doanh... nhiu quc gia trn khp th gii. iu ng ni y l danh sch ny c ngoi trng M yu cu cc nh ngoi giao ca mnh thu thp. [17]

Vo ngy 1 thng 12 nm 2010, Amazon.com di sc p ca chnh quyn Hoa K quyt nh khng cho Wikileaks thu my ch na. Hin WikiLeaks ch cn duy tr trn my ch ca Bahnhof ti Thy in.[18] Theo CNN, trung tm d liu ca Bahnhof t trong mt ngn ni gn Stockholm. Cc my ch c t di su 30 mt, trong mt cn hm ngm chng bom ht nhn c xy dng t thi Chin tranh lnh. Ch c mt li duy nht dn vo khu cha my ch v cnh ca c lm bng kim loi dy ti na mt.[19]

Wau Holland Foundation l t chc phi li nhun c tr s ti Berlin qun l hu ht ngun qu ca WikiLeaks. Nm 2009, Wau Holland Foundation nhn c hn mt triu USD tin ng gp cho Wikileaks t cc t chc v c nhn.[19]

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WikiLeaks Wikipedia ting Vit

WikiLeaks – NSA Targets World Leaders for US Geopolitical …

(on 2016-02-23)

Today, 23 February 2016 at 00:00 GMT [updated 12:20 GMT], WikiLeaks publishes highly classified documents showing that the US National Security Agency bugged a private climate change strategy meeting; between UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin; singled out the Chief of Staff of UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) for long term interception targetting his Swiss phone; singled out the Director of the Rules Division of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), Johann Human, and targetted his Swiss phone for long term interception; stole sensitive Italian diplomatic cables detailing how Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu implored Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to help patch up his relationship with US President Barack Obama, who was refusing to talk to Netanyahu; intercepted top EU and Japanese trade ministers discussing their secret strategy and red lines to stop the US "extort[ing]" them at the WTO Doha arounds (the talks subsequently collapsed); explicitly targetted five other top EU economic officials for long term interception, including their French, Austrian and Belgium phone numbers; explicitly targetted the phones of Italy's ambassador to NATO and other top Italian officials for long term interception; and intercepted details of a critical private meeting between then French president Nicolas Sarkozy, Merkel and Berluscon, where the latter was told the Italian banking system was ready to "pop like a cork".

Some of the intercepts are classified TOP-SECRET COMINT-GAMMA and are the most highly classified documents ever published by a media organization.

WikiLeaks editor Julian Assange said "Today we proved the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon's private meetings over how to save the planet from climate change were bugged by a country intent on protecting its largest oil companies. Back in 2010 we revealed that the then US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton had ordered her diplomats to steal the UN leadership's biometric data and other information. The US government has signed agreements with the UN that it will not engage in such conduct. It will be interesting to see the UN's reaction, because if the United Nations Secretary General, whose communications and person have legal inviolability, can be repeatedly attacked without consequence then everyone is at risk."

The NSA data for this release: UN Sec Gen & Merkel intercept, UNHCR & WTO target selectors and assignments, Netanyahu-Berlusconi-Sarkozy-Merkel intercepts, EU-Japan WTO/Doha trade talks strategy intercept, EU & Belgium MFA target selectors and assignments and Italy target selectors and assignments.

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WikiLeaks - NSA Targets World Leaders for US Geopolitical ...

WikiLeak blog – Small Business

It looks as if WikiLeakS.org / Julian Assange's stupid decision to abandon use of PGP encryption, back in 2007 has come home to roost, with the revelation that they idiotically re-used a symmetric encryption key password and ineptly published a full archive of the controversial US Embassy / State Department Diplomatic Cables on BitTorrent peer to peer file sharing networks

The fact that they published this unredacted archive at all via BitTorrent shows how chaotic and incompetent Julian Assange and his motley crew of inexperienced acolytes had become after Daniel Domscheit-Berg and the "Architect" left them.

The end result is that there are now many people around the world, including all the repressive governments mentioned in the quarter of a million Diplomatic cables who can now simply search for key words like (strictly protect), to find the names of informants and information sources who have been in contact with US Embassy diplomats and who could therefore now be easily persecuted.

See the Cryptome.org for a direct file link to z.gpg or to this torrent link to the same encrypted compressed file via BitTorrent peer to peer filesharing.

John Young's evident glee that WikiLeakS.org have now published the full, unredacted archive of US Diplomatic Cables, is, in its own way, just as reprehensible as Julian Assange's indifference to the fate of vulnerable individual human beings named in the cables.

He of all people should know that the US Government neither has the time, the money , nor the inclination, nor the bureaucratic efficiency to warn or protect the hundreds of named informants or contacts, which have now been betrayed to the world, an action which has been universally condemned by WikiLeakS.org's former mainstream media partners and by human rights organisations.

This is in addition to the names of political dissidents who were in contact with the US Embassy in Belarus which Assange has already handed over to the Lukashenko dictatorship via the holocaust denier Israel Shamir.

Some "open source" / "full disclosure" advocates are making the spurious claim that the publication by WikiLeakS.org of the unredacted cables.csv and onto their searchable web site front end, is somehow better for any political dissidents or confidential sources who had dealings with the US Embassies and whose names are tagged with (strictly protect) and other markers.

Firstly, not all political dissidents in repressive countries have access to the internet at all, let alone to fast, secure, anonymous connections which would allow them to download the massive cables.csv file itself or to use the (insecure) WikileakS.org cable search websites.

None of these websites employ SSL Digital certificates or provide Tor Hidden services etc. to mask the identities of people searching for their own names or those of their family or friends.

Some of the people mentioned in the US Embassy cables several years ago, could in fact be in prison or under investigation for other reasons in 2011, without any or without any safe internet access at all. Being named as having been in contact with the US Embassy, even several years ago, could easily lead to charges of espionage etc. in insane countries like Iran.

Julian Assange's disregard for the Sensitive Personal Data of innocent individuals and his organisation's utter incompetence at handling such data securely, is indistinguishable from that displayed by many of the government bureaucracies you would expect him to be opposed to. Do not to trust him or WikiLeakS.org with any future whistleblower leak material, Find another post WikiLeakS.org website or organisation instead - see the listing and analyses at LeakDirectory.org wiki.

WikiLeakS.org and PGP Public Key Encryption

WikileakS.org abandoned even their limited use of PGP Encryption with the public or with the media, back in 2007, when they let their published PGP key expire.

Why have WikiLeakS.org abandoned the use of PGP Encryption ?

If they had been using Public Key Cryptography last year, to encrypt correspondence or documents or files using their recipients' individual Public Keys, then there would have been no password for the incompetent WikiLeakS.org activists to re-use .

Every copy of the controversial cables.csv file could have been encrypted with a different recipient's Public Key and would have had a different symmetric encryption key (which no human would could have been capable of revealing, even under torture).

Not even WikiLeakS.org / Julian Assange could have decrypted a seized or intercepted or publicly leaked copy of such an encrypted file, only the recipient with access to his or her own private decryption key could have done so.

Either Julian Assange is ignorant of how to use Public Key Cryptography (hardly likely for someone who has tried to write cryptographic software himself) or he and the #wikileaks twitter feed are lying again:

https://twitter.com/#!/wikileaks/status/109134616153169920

Encryption passwords (PGP) are permanent. David Leigh constantly lies, hence even in his own book, "snaky brits".

6.24 AM September 1st 2011

https://twitter.com/#!/wikileaks/status/109136557914603520

@ABCTech It is false that the passphrase was temporary or was ever described as such. That is not how PGP files work. Ask any expert.

6.32 AM September 1st 2011

To decrypt a file encrypted with PGP using a recipient's Public Key, you need to have physical access to the Private De-Cryption key, which is not accessible to anyone who copies or intercepts the encrypted file in transit.

Obviously the password which unlocks the Private De-Cryption Key from your PGP Keyring can be changed.

Symmetric encryption unprotected by Public Key encryption is just an option with PGP, but that is not how PGP is designed to be used to protect files in transit over the internet or on vulnerable USB memory sticks !

There was nothing, except for laziness or incompetence, which prevented Julian Assange or his followers from securely destroying the symmetrically encrypted cables.csv compressed file archive immediately after he gave it to David Leigh and then re-encrypting it from the master copy with a different key and passphrase. This master copy , we assume, given the dispute between Julian Assange and Daniel Domscheit-Berg, would have been held on a separately encrypted computer file system anyway.

The award winning investigative journalist at The Guardian newspaper David Leigh's book:

WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy by David Leigh and Luke Harding

did reveal on pages 138 to 139 an unnecessary password, which he rightly assumed would only be a temporary one, but which should never have been re-used by Julian Assange in the first place.

Leigh refused. All or nothing, he said. "What happens if you end up in an orange jump-suit enroute to Guantnamo before you can release the full files?" In return he would give Assange a promise to keep the cables secure, and not to publish them until the time came. Assange had always been vague about timing: he generally indicated, however, that October would be a suitable date. He believed the US army's charges against the imprisoned soldier Bradley Manning would have crystallised by then, and publication could not make his fate any worse. He also said, echoing Leigh's gallows humour: "I'm going to need to be safe in Cuba first!"

Eventually, Assange capitulated. Late at night, after a two-hour debate, he started the process on one of his little netbooks that would enable Leigh to download the entire tranche of cables. The Guardian journalist had to set up the PGP encryption system on his laptop at home across the other side of London. Then he could feed in a password. Assange wrote down on a scrap of paper:ACollectionOfHistorySince_1966_ToThe_PresentDay#. That's the password," he said. "But you have to add one extra word when you type it in. You have to put the word '"Diplomatic' before the word 'History'. Can you remember that?"

"I can remember that."

Leigh set off home, and successfully installed the PGP software. He typed in the lengthy password, and was gratified to be able to download a huge file from Assange's temporary website.

So having given Leigh instructions about downloading and installing PGP software, Julian Assange failed to instruct him to generate a Public / Private key pair and to send him the Public Key, so that Julian could individually encrypt the the cables.csv compressed archive just for David Leigh and nobody else.

At the face to face meeting described in the book, Julian Assange could easily have given David Leigh a copy of a WikiLeakS.org Public Encryryption Key for him to install when he set up the PGP software on his laptop as instructed, or pointed him to an online version.

They could have agreed a pre-shared secret for extra authentication.

David Leigh could then have been instructed to generate his own Public / Private keypair (protected in his PGP Keyring by his own strong passphrase) and to send a Digitally Signed and Encrypted copy of his Public Key back to Jullian Assange via email etc. together with the pre-shared authentication secret, all encrypted with the WikiLeakS.org Public Key. This should have been sufficient cryptographic proof that David Leigh's Public Key was the correct one, since nobody else apart from Julain Assange / WikiLeakS.org could have read the contents of that message.

Julian Assange could then have encrypted the compressed cables.csv file with David Leigh's Public Key and pointed him to the secure website he had set up for the encrypted file to be downloaded from

This encrypted file could only have been de-crypted by someone in possession of both David Leigh's passphrase and the corresponding Private Key in the PGP Keyring on David Leigh's MacBook laptop.

If WikiLeakS.org had been regularly using PGP over the years, even inexperienced members of the cult would have been familiar with these simple, well documented concepts.

If that copy of the encrypted file had somehow been published by the incompetent WikiLeakS.org crew on BitTorrent, then only David Leigh could have decrypted it (assuming he was still in control of his PGP Keyring on his laptop computer) , even if he had published his own pass phrase in his book, rather than Julian's rather pompous one.

7-Zip compression

Then he realised it was zipped up - compressed using a format called 7z which he had never heard of, and couldn't understand.

The .7z file extension is used by 7-Zip . This is freely available over the internet, on various computing platforms and does offer more options for better compression than the standard .zip compression utilities which are built in to modern versions of the Microsoft Windows or Apple OSX operating systems, at the cost of longer compression times and more use of memory.

The 7-Zip Ultra compression option seems to be what the cables.csv file was compressed with down to i.e. only 21 % of its original size.

However to achieve this amount of compression on such a big file could take quite a while, perhaps up to an hour on an average PC. Unzipping is much quicker, a couple of minutes at most.

Compression is also built in to the PGP / GnuPG encryption software, but that produces a compressed file of about 640 MB i.e. about twice that of the of the 7-Zip version, about 41% of the original size of the monolithic cables.csv file.

Like most .zip compression software these days, 7-Zip also offers encryption, using the same AES 256 bit algorithm used by default by GnuPG / PGP, but Assange et al did not bother to make use of that.

He got back in his car and drove through the deserted London streets in the small hours, to Assange's headquarters in Southwick Mews

Assange was staying at Vaughan Smith's Frontline Club for investigative / foreign / war correspondent journalists, owned by Vaughan Smith, in whose Norfolk country estate has bedrooms at numbers 7 and 9 Southwick Mews

http://www.frontlineclub.com/club/bedrooms-1.php

He is now on bail and electronically tagged living at Vaughan Smith's country estate in Norfolk, where his supporters invent state surveillance fantasies for the credulous mainstream media - see "CCTV ANPR" or just "radar activated speed signs" monitoring Julian Assange at Ellingham Hall in Norfolk ?

Assange smiled a little pityingly, and unzipped it for him.

Now, isolated up in the Highlands, with hares and buzzards for company, Leigh felt safe enough to work steadily through the dangerous contents of the memory stick.

So, in the end, Julian Assange in fact actually handed over an unencrypted copy of the file to David Leigh, on an easily lost or stolen USB memory stick. If Assange really cared about protecting innocent people from evil governments, then he would not have allowed this to happen.

It is astonishing how the WikiLeakS.org cult propaganda machine has deluded itself that somehow it was David Leigh and The Guardian which was responsible for this cryptographic and internet publication incompetence, rather than the alleged technological privacy and anonymity expert Julian Assange and his supposedly expert helpers.

TextWrangler keyword search

Obviously there was no way that he, or any other human, could read through a quarter of a million cables. Cut off from the Guardian's own network, he was unable to call up such a monolithic file on his laptop and search through it in the normal simple-minded journalistic way, as a word processor document or something similar: it was just too big. Harold Frayman, the Guardian's technical expert, was there to rescue him. before Leigh left town, he sawed the material into 87 chunks, each just about small enough to call up and read separately.

Probably 19 Megabytes for each of 86 chunks with a little bit left over in the 87th chunk.

Then he explained how Leigh could use a simple program called TextWrangler

TextWrangler is the "little brother" of BBEdit and is only available for the Apple Macintosh platform. David Leigh's laptop computer.is stated to have been a MacBook elsewhere in the book.

to search for key words or phrases through all the separate files simultaneously, and present the results in a user-friendly form.

So why had Julian Assange or his WikiLeaks acolytes not already broken the 1.6 Gigabyte file down into usable chunks and zipped them up into, ideally, several archive files for their mainstream media partners ?

This WikiLeak.org blog has criticised them in the past for not offering (multiple) floppy disk or even CD-ROM sized versions of their whistleblower leaks documents, as well as just large monolithic files.

Not everybody, especially people in third world countries under repressive governments, or even people using mobile internet devices, has access to fast broadband internet connections.

Is this the end of WikiLeakS.org ?

Now that WikiLeakS.org have no more secrets left to publish, will they actually get around to re-inventing themselves and re-launching a secure anonymous system without the destructive influence of Julian Assange ?

Or will the cult continue regardless and just get dragged into long legal cases ?

Original post:
WikiLeak blog - Small Business

WikiLeaks – The New York Times

Latest Articles

The websites founder is letting his anti-democratic ideology undermine the goals of his most famous project.

By JOCHEN BITTNER

A U.N. panel's decision is just the latest turn in a convoluted case that needs to wind down.

The foreign minister, Julie Bishop, said she was seeking legal advice after a United Nations panel found that Mr. Assange, an Australian, has been detained in violation of international law.

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, claimed a significant victory after a United Nations panel ruled that he had been detained arbitrarily and should be compensated.

By NATALIA V. OSIPOVA

Mr. Assange promised to leave the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he has been seeking refuge since 2012, if a United Nations arbitration panel ruled against him on Friday.

By NICK CUMMING-BRUCE and MADELEINE KRUHLY

The finding is a symbolic victory for the Wikileaks founder, but may have little if any practical significance.

By SEWELL CHAN and LIAM STACK

An American embassy cable issued about a decade ago also described him as crude, abrasive, arrogant and thin-skinned.

By ERNESTO LONDOO

A trove of messages made public by the State Department also touches on technology difficulties and a concussion.

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

The WikiLeaks founder has been holed up in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London since 2012, avoiding extradition to Sweden on a rape accusation.

Swedish officials said that three of the four claims against Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder, may never be investigated, but one, of rape, could continue for a further five years.

By STEPHEN CASTLE

Saudi Arabias alarm over the nuclear deal comes after a trove of documents revealed its efforts in recent years to undermine its primary adversary: Shiite Iran.

By BEN HUBBARD and MAYY EL SHEIKH

The numbers for top aides to Chancellor Angela Merkel and her predecessors are on lists released by WikiLeaks, renewing questions about the United States spying on allies.

In a letter, the WikiLeaks co-founder said that he sensed an openness to being granted asylum and that he had a child whose mother is French.

By ALISSA J. RUBIN

Surging in the polls, Icelands Pirate Party scores its first legislative victory, the decriminalization of blasphemy.

Communications between the German chancellor and her aides, purportedly intercepted by spies, were released Wednesday by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks.

Mr. Affleck had asked the host of a PBS genealogy program to omit the discovery of a slave-owning ancestor. The plea was exposed by the Sony hacking and WikiLeaks.

By JOHN KOBLIN

The network wants staffing changes on the program after an investigation showed that the actor Ben Affleck pressured producers into leaving out details about an ancestor of his who owned slaves.

By JOHN KOBLIN

Stphane Le Foll, the French government spokesman, spoke on Wednesday about documents released by WikiLeaks that alleged that the National Security Agency spied on French presidents and officials.

The Associated Press

The documents, which have not been confirmed as authentic, say the agency eavesdropped on the last three French presidents.

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The revelations appear in a trove of documents said to have come from inside the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs and released by the group WikiLeaks.

By BEN HUBBARD

The websites founder is letting his anti-democratic ideology undermine the goals of his most famous project.

By JOCHEN BITTNER

A U.N. panel's decision is just the latest turn in a convoluted case that needs to wind down.

The foreign minister, Julie Bishop, said she was seeking legal advice after a United Nations panel found that Mr. Assange, an Australian, has been detained in violation of international law.

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, claimed a significant victory after a United Nations panel ruled that he had been detained arbitrarily and should be compensated.

By NATALIA V. OSIPOVA

Mr. Assange promised to leave the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he has been seeking refuge since 2012, if a United Nations arbitration panel ruled against him on Friday.

By NICK CUMMING-BRUCE and MADELEINE KRUHLY

The finding is a symbolic victory for the Wikileaks founder, but may have little if any practical significance.

By SEWELL CHAN and LIAM STACK

An American embassy cable issued about a decade ago also described him as crude, abrasive, arrogant and thin-skinned.

By ERNESTO LONDOO

A trove of messages made public by the State Department also touches on technology difficulties and a concussion.

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

The WikiLeaks founder has been holed up in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London since 2012, avoiding extradition to Sweden on a rape accusation.

Swedish officials said that three of the four claims against Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder, may never be investigated, but one, of rape, could continue for a further five years.

By STEPHEN CASTLE

Saudi Arabias alarm over the nuclear deal comes after a trove of documents revealed its efforts in recent years to undermine its primary adversary: Shiite Iran.

By BEN HUBBARD and MAYY EL SHEIKH

The numbers for top aides to Chancellor Angela Merkel and her predecessors are on lists released by WikiLeaks, renewing questions about the United States spying on allies.

In a letter, the WikiLeaks co-founder said that he sensed an openness to being granted asylum and that he had a child whose mother is French.

By ALISSA J. RUBIN

Surging in the polls, Icelands Pirate Party scores its first legislative victory, the decriminalization of blasphemy.

Communications between the German chancellor and her aides, purportedly intercepted by spies, were released Wednesday by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks.

Mr. Affleck had asked the host of a PBS genealogy program to omit the discovery of a slave-owning ancestor. The plea was exposed by the Sony hacking and WikiLeaks.

By JOHN KOBLIN

The network wants staffing changes on the program after an investigation showed that the actor Ben Affleck pressured producers into leaving out details about an ancestor of his who owned slaves.

By JOHN KOBLIN

Stphane Le Foll, the French government spokesman, spoke on Wednesday about documents released by WikiLeaks that alleged that the National Security Agency spied on French presidents and officials.

The Associated Press

The documents, which have not been confirmed as authentic, say the agency eavesdropped on the last three French presidents.

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The revelations appear in a trove of documents said to have come from inside the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs and released by the group WikiLeaks.

By BEN HUBBARD

Read the original:
WikiLeaks - The New York Times

WikiLeaks publishes searchable archive of Clinton emails …

The secret-sharing website WikiLeaks has published a searchable archive of more than 30,000 Hillary Clinton emails that have been released by the State Department.

Unveiled on Wednesday, the archive allows users to browse through 30,322 emails and attachments sent to or from Clinton's private email server while she was secretary of state. In all, the archive comprises 50,547 pages spanning from June 30, 2010, to Aug. 12, 2014. According to the site, Clinton authored 7,570 of those documents.

More from the Washington Examiner

The petition's author claims the Islamic State could launch a terrorist attack during the convention.

03/27/16 5:17 PM

The State Department began releasing the emails in May of last year pursuant to a Freedom of Information Act request, but it is the first time that the messages have been made easily available in a searchable format. The final PDFs of all the emails were just made available by the State Department last month.

Though the department has completed its publication of Clinton emails, it is now set to review 29,000 pages of emails sent or received by Huma Abedin, who served as Clinton's deputy chief of staff from 2009-13. The department has said it plans to review at least 400 pages of Abedin's emails every month. Completion is expected by April 2017.

While Wikileaks' Wednesday release involved publicly available documents, the site has gained a reputation for illegally leaking classified information, including from the State Department. Army Pvt. Bradley Manning, now known as Chelsea Manning, is serving a 35-year prison sentence for leaking documents to the site both from the State and Defense Departments.

Also from the Washington Examiner

"We need to have a more robust effort and we need to assemble that coalition," the Wisconsin Republican said.

03/27/16 4:08 PM

The site has also published files stolen from defense firm Stratfor, the Saudi Foreign Ministry and the National Security Agency, among others.

Top Story

55 dead and more than 100 wounded include many women and children.

03/27/16 1:34 PM

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According to WikiLeaks, US government and George … – rt.com

Washington is behind the recently released offshore revelations known as the Panama Papers, WikiLeaks has claimed, saying that the attack was produced to target Russia and President Putin.

On Wednesday, the international whistleblowing organization said on Twitter that the Panama Papers data leak was produced by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), "which targets Russia and [the] former USSR." The "Putin attack" was funded by the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and American hedge fund billionaire George Soros, WikiLeaks added, saying that the US government's funding of such an attack is a serious blow to its integrity.

Organizations belonging to Soros have been proclaimed to be "undesirable" in Russia. Last year, the Russian Prosecutor Generals Office recognized Soross Open Society Foundations and the Open Society Institute Assistance Foundation as undesirable groups, banning Russian citizens and organizations from participation in any of their projects.

Prosecutors then said the activities of the institute and its assistance foundation were a threat to the basis of Russias constitutional order and national security. Earlier this year, the billionaire US investoralleged that Putin is "no ally" to US and EU leaders, and that he aims "to gain considerable economic benefits from dividing Europe."

The American government is pursuing a policy of destabilization all over the world, and this [leak] also serves this purpose of destabilization. They are causing a lot of people all over the world and also a lot of money to find its way into the [new] tax havens in America. The US is preparing for a super big financial crisis, and they want all that money in their own vaults and not in the vaults of other countries, German journalist and author Ernst Wolff told RT.

Read more

Earlier this week, the head of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), which worked on the Panama Papers, said that Putin is not the target of the leak, but rather that the revelations aimed to shed light on murky offshore practices internationally. "It wasnt a story about Russia. It was a story about the offshore world," ICIJ head Gerard Ryle told TASS.

His statement came in stark contrast to international media coverage of the "largest leak in offshore history." Although neither Vladimir Putin nor any members of his family are directly mentioned in the papers, many mainstream media outlets chose the Russian presidents photo when breaking the story.

READ MORE: Panama leak reveals more about Western journalism than Vladimir Putin

We have innuendo, we have a complete lack of standards on the part of the western media, and the major mistake made by the leaker was to give these documents to the corporate media, former CIA officer Ray McGovern told RT. This would be humorous if it werent so serious, he added.

"The degree of Putinophobia has reached a point where to speak well about Russia, or about some of its actions and successes, is impossible. One needs to speak [about Russia] in negative terms, the more the better, and when there's nothing to say, you need to make things up," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said, commenting on anti-Russian sentiment triggered by the publications.

WikiLeaks spokesman and Icelandic investigative journalist Kristinn Hrafnsson has called for the leaked data to be put online so that everybody could search through the papers. He said withholding of the documents could hardly be viewed as "responsible journalism."

"When they are saying that this is responsible journalism, I totally disagree with the overall tone of that," the co-founder of the Icelandic Center for Investigative Journalism told RT's Afshin Rattansi in Going Underground, when asked about his reaction to the ICIJ head saying that the consortium is not WikiLeaks, and is trying to show that journalism can be done responsibly by not releasing the papers in full.

"They should be available to the general public in such a manner so everybody, not just the group of journalists working directly on the data, can search it," Hrafnsson said.

READ MORE: Russian investigators to launch criminal probe after Panama data leak

The WikiLeaks spokesman also told RT he's not surprised that there have been no big American names in the leaked 11.5 million documents of the Panamanian law company.

"It seems to be skewed at least a way from American interest. There's always a possibility that it's not a journalistic bias but simply a bias in the documents themselves," Hrafnsson said, adding that Mossack Fonseca "is simply one law firm in Panama servicing and providing tax haven companies mostly out of the BVI [British Virgin Islands]."

"It doesn't even give the entire picture," he concluded.

Excerpt from:
According to WikiLeaks, US government and George ... - rt.com

Wikileaks Actu Francophone

Interview publie le 15 mars 2016 dans Pravda Report

Lavocat norvgien, le Professeur Mads Andens, est un juriste chercheur et Rapporteur Spcial de lONU sur la dtention arbitraire; il sigeait depuis 2009 au Groupe de Travail des Nations Unies sur la Dtention Arbitraire (GTDA), un panel dexperts qui a appel les autorits sudoises et britanniques mettre un terme la privation de libert de Julian Assange, respecter son intgrit physique et sa libert de mouvement, ainsi qu lui laisser la possibilit de rclamer des compensations.

M. Assange, tout dabord dtenu en prison puis assign rsidence, sest rfugi lintrieur de lAmbassade dquateur Londres en 2012 aprs avoir perdu son appel devant la Cour Suprme du Royaume-Uni contre son extradition vers la Sude, o une enqute judiciaire a t initie contre lui en rapport avec des allgations de comportement sexuel illgal. Toutefois, il na pas t formellement mis en accusation.

Dans le rendu de son opinion officielle, le Groupe de Travail a considr que M. Assange avait t soumis diverses formes de privation de libert: la dtention initiale la prison de Wandsworth Londres, suivie dune assignation rsidence puis ensuite la rclusion dans lambassade quatorienne.

Selon un communiqu de presse mis par le Bureau de lONU du Haut Commissaire aux Droits de lHomme (OHCHR), les experts ont galement conclu que la dtention tait arbitraire parce que M. Assange avait t dtenu en isolement la prison de Wandsworth, et cause de la ngligence du Bureau du Procureur sudois dans ses investigations, qui ont abouti sa longue privation de libert.

Le Groupe de Travail a, en outre, tabli que cette dtention viole deux articles de la dclaration Universelle des Droits de lHomme, et six articles de la Convention Internationale sur les Droits Civiques et Politiques.

M. Assange, fondateur et rdacteur de WikiLeaks, a par ailleurs dvoil plus de 250 000 cbles diplomatiques secrets et confidentiels, mis par des ambassades US tout autour du monde.

Dans cette interview exclusive, le Professeur Andens commente sa participation au Groupe de Travail de lONU, expliquant pourquoi le panel dfend la libert pour M. Assange, et en prsentant les considrations juridiques entourant laffaire.

Il y a de nombreuses fautes de procdure qui ont t commises par les autorits , affirme le Professeur, qui commente galement son point de vue sur le rle que joue le fondateur de WikiLeaks dans la politique internationale, sur limportance de la solidarit mondiale envers lui, et comment il considre les rcentes rvlations de WikiLeaks: lespionnage US du Secrtaire-Gnral de lONU Ban Ki-Moon et de la Chancelire allemande Angela Merkel.

Le Professeur Andens, qui prsente galement dans cette interview sa perception de la couverture mdiatique mainstream concernant laffaire Assange, est professeur la Facult de Droit de lUniversit dOslo, lancien directeur de lInstitut Britannique de Droit International et Comparatif Londres et lancien directeur du Centre de Droit Europen de Kings College, lUniversit de Londres. Il est aussi Charg de Recherche lInstitut de Droit Europen et Comparatif de lUniversit dOxford, et Charg de Recherche Principal lInstitut dtudes de Droit Avanc de lUniversit de Londres.

Il a t le Rdacteur-en-Chef du Trimestriel de Droit International et Comparatif (Cambridge University Press), Rdacteur-en-Chef de la Revue de Droit des Affaires Europen (Kluwer Law International) et prsent dans les conseils de rdaction de dix autres journaux et sries de livres, dont la Srie Nijhoff sur le Droit Commercial International.

Il est Membre Honoraire de la Socit dtudes de Droit (Royaume-Uni), Membre de lAcadmie Internationale de Droit Commercial et du Consommateur (o il est membre du conseil), Membre Honoraire de lInstitut Britannique de Droit International et Comparatif, et Membre de lAcadmie Royale des Arts.

Il a t Secrtaire Gnral de la Fdration Internationale de Droit Europen de 2000 2002, Secrtaire de lAssociation Britannique de Droit Europen de 1997 2008 et Secrtaire du Comit Britannique de Droit Comparatif de 1999 2005. Il a t le Prsident de lAssociation des Instituts de Dfense des Droits de lHomme en 2008.

Edu Montesanti (EM): Cher Professeur Mads Andens, merci daccorder cette interview. Pouvez-vous sil vous plat nous parler de vos travaux au sein du Groupe de Travail sur la Dtention Arbitraire (GTDA), pendant la phase initiale de laffaire Assange devant les Nations Unies (ONU)?

Prof. Mads Andens (MA): Je sigeais au Groupe de Travail de lONU quand la plainte a t reue, et que les changes entre lONU et les parties se sont drouls. Je nai pas pris part aux discussions du Groupe de Travail qui ont abouti lopinion sur laffaire Assange. Mon mandat sest termin en aot 2015, et la dcision a t rendue en fvrier 2016.

EM: Pourquoi vous positionnez-vous en dfense de M. Assange?

MA: Je me suis exprim en soutien lopinion rendue par le Groupe de Travail de lONU. M. Assange est en tat de dtention arbitraire, le Royaume-Uni et la Sude devraient se plier la dcision de lONU leur encontre et prendre les mesures ncessaires pour mettre un terme cette dtention.

EM: Sil vous plat, Professeur, veuillez spcifier les accusations contre Julian Assange, et qui sont ceux qui les portent contre lui.

MA: Laffaire actuelle o il est question dextradition concerne des allgations de comportement sexuel illgal. videmment, les allgations relatives WikiLeaks comprennent un puissant intrt pour lappareil scuritaire de nombreux pays.

La crainte est quil ait t permis que celui-ci influence le processus et lissue de la premire affaire.

EM: Comment percevez-vous les allgations de Washington selon lesquelles Assange a mis en pril la scurit des USA?

MA: Ce sont des allgations qui sont habituellement prsentes face lexercice du droit prsenter des informations et du droit la libert dexpression. Il y a toutes les raisons dtre sceptique de ces prsomptions.

EM: Comment percevez-vous la dcision de lONU en faveur de la libration de M. Assange?

MA: Cest trs clair. Le GTDA de lONU avait trancher sur deux questions. La premire, dcider sil y avait eu une privation de libert plutt quune restriction de libert. La deuxime, dcider si cette privation de libert tait arbitraire.

Le GTDA de lONU a clairement accept largument que les conditions dans lesquelles vit Assange nont pas t imposes par lui-mme, cest--dire que sil faisait un pas dans la rue, il se ferait arrter. Il y a aussi eu un chec substantiel de la part des autorits pour exercer une diligence raisonnable dans lexercice de ladministration judiciaire (par. 98).

La frontire entre une restriction de libert et une privation de libert est finement dfinie dans la jurisprudence europenne des droits de lhomme. La privation de libert ne consiste pas seulement en des conditions aisment reconnaissables dincarcration par lEtat. Il faut prendre en compte le laps de temps quAssange est rest lintrieur de lambassade quatorienne, et ses circonstances prsentes.

La libert doit pouvoir tre exerce dans limmdiatet. Quand lexercice dune telle libert aurait des rsultats particulirement coercitifs, tels que davantage de privations de libert ou la mise en pril dautres droits, cela ne peut tre dcrit comme la pratique de la libert. Le fait quAssange rsiste une arrestation ne rsout pas le problme, puisque cela entendrait que la libert est un droit conditionn par sa coopration.

Assange nest pas libre de quitter lambassade quatorienne de son propre gr. Il craint lextradition vers les USA et un procs pour son implication avec WikiLeaks. Les autorits sudoises ont refus de fournir des garanties de non-refoulement qui rpondent cette crainte. La dtention dAssange est arbitraire. Une raison en est quelle est disproportionne.

Il existe dautres moyens de procdure moins restrictifs. Avant dmettre un Mandat dArrt Europen, les autorits sudoises auraient pu suivre la pratique courante dinterviewer Assange dans une salle dentretien de la police britannique.

Aprs quAssange eut tabli rsidence dans lambassade quatorienne ils auraient pu compter sur des protocoles dassistance mutuelle, interroger Assange par liaison vido, et lui offrir une chance de rpondre aux allgations portes contre lui.

EM: Sil vous plat, Professeur Andens, clarifiez le terme de privation de libert.

MA: La Convention Internationale de lONU sur les Droits Civiques et Politiques et la Dclaration Universelle des Droits de lHomme interdisent les privations arbitraires de libert dans leur Article 9. Cest plus quune simple restriction de libert. Cela inclut lassignation rsidence.

EM: Quelle est votre opinion sur le choix du Royaume-Uni et de la Sude de ne pas respecter la dcision de lONU?

MA: Les dcisions rendues par le GTDA de lONU ne sont pas toujours suivies par les Etats, mais elles aboutissent rarement en des attaques aussi personnelles, telles que celles faites par des politiciens britanniques aprs la dlivrance de lopinion sur Assange.

Je sais que les mots employs par le Ministre des Affaires trangres et par le Premier Ministre ntaient pas ceux qui ont t fournis par les fonctionnaires qui sont conseillers sur les droits de lhomme et sur le droit international. Les politiciens britanniques ont vis affaiblir lautorit de cet organe de lONU pour un bnfice opportuniste court terme.

Je crains que ces politiciens naient affaibli la possibilit, pour la communaut internationale, de protger certaines des victimes les plus vulnrables aux violations des droits de lhomme.

Leurs paroles ont circul au sein des Etats responsables des pires violations des droits de lhomme. Les paroles de ces politiciens britanniques coteront des vies et de la souffrance humaine.

Le Royaume-Uni peut exercer des pressions pour glaner quelque soutien quand laffaire est apporte devant le Conseil des Droits de lHomme des Nations Unies, mais le Royaume-Uni sera assurment critiqu par dautres Etats pour sa raction, et le mritera clairement.

Les dommages causs au Royaume-Uni lONU et son autorit morale en matire des droits de lhomme sont un autre sujet, mais il ne fait pas de doute sur les dommages faits lautorit du Royaume-Uni.

EM: Sil vous plat, Professeur, pouvez-vous commenter le statut actuel de lenqute prliminaire en Sude, ainsi que la mise en accusation en attente US contre WikiLeaks.

MA: Pour ceux qui sont convaincus quAssange est coupable de viol, que vous pensiez ou non quil fait son intressant en rsistant dlibrment son arrestation (ce qui nest pas mon cas), le fait demeure que les autorits pourraient employer des moyens moins restrictifs sans compromettre lenqute initiale sur les allgations portant sur son comportement sexuel en Sude.

Cest le moment de nous rappeler quAssange na pas t dclar coupable de viol: ce stade, le procureur et les tribunaux en Sude ont tabli que ces charges taient peut-tre fondes. Le Professeur Andrew Asquith, dOxford, a dclar dans une Opinion dExpert en 2011 laquelle lquipe dAssange a fait rfrence, que Je ne considre pas que le moindre des incidents allgus dans le contenu du Mandat dArrt Europen (cest dire les allgations cites dans le mandat darrt) suffise en lui-mme constituer un quelconque dlit selon la loi britannique.

Le Vice-Prsident de la Cour Suprme de Sude nous a rappel que laccus est prsum innocent jusqu ce que sa culpabilit soit dmontre, et que lorsquil y a des dclarations contradictoires, il revient aux tribunaux de dcider si les lments requis pour une mise en accusation sont satisfaisants.

Les tribunaux sudois, ainsi que la majorit de la Cour Suprme sudoise, le Vice-Prsident ntait pas sur ce panel, ont fait savoir que le mandat darrt, mme sil ne pouvait pas tre excut contre Assange, limitait sa libert dune manire ouvrant la question de sa proportionnalit. La majorit a not avec approbation que des mesures taient dsormais prises pour interroger Assange Londres.

Avec le temps, la Cour Suprme sudoise pourrait bien voir crotre sa sympathie pour le jugement dissident du Juge Svante Johansson, pour qui les conditions de lenqute sont dsormais disproportionnes (une opinion prsente par Anne Ramberg, directrice de lAssociation du Barreau sudois et par le Juge Charlotte Edvardsson, Juge rapporteuse de la Cour Suprme, dans sa proposition (publique) au tribunal dans cette affaire).

Assurment, lancien Conseiller Juridique aux Nations Unies et Conseiller Juridique du Ministre des Affaires trangres de Sude, Hans Corell, a dclar quil ne comprend pas pourquoi le procureur na pas interrog Julian Assange pendant toutes les annes o il a t lAmbassade dquateur.

Des esprits raisonnables et judiciaires ont diverg sur beaucoup de ces questions. Sans doute ont-ils t influencs par des opinions sur lintgrit dAssange lui-mme. Mais les droits de lhomme ne sont pas conus pour favoriser les plus populaires dentre nous; ils sont conus pour nous favoriser tous.

EM: Pourquoi pensez-vous que le gouvernement britannique agisse tellement en faveur des intrts US dans cette affaire?

MA: WikiLeaks a fait des contributions trs importantes notre connaissance du processus diplomatique et politique. Elles ont chang ma perception dvnements majeurs et dinstitutions. WikiLeaks fait quil est beaucoup plus difficile de nous manipuler.

La communaut du renseignement repose sur des mthodes de travail qui sont secrtement caches. Il y a de puissantes forces institutionnelles qui veulent mettre un terme aux activits de M. Assange. Ceci est vrai pour de nombreux pays.

EM: Que pensez-vous de lquateur en ce qui concerne M. Assange, et de limportance de la solidarit mondiale envers lui non seulement de la part dautres gouvernements, mais aussi de la part dactivistes et des citoyens en gnral, Professeur Andens?

MA: Le gouvernement de lquateur a fait une contribution trs importante la protection dune sphre publique internationale, ainsi qu la protection de la libert de linformation, de la libert dexpression et de la responsabilit face aux violations des droits de lhomme. Les expressions de solidarit en sa faveur, non seulement de la part dautres gouvernements, mais galement dactivistes et dautres autour du monde sont trs importantes.

EM: Comment valuez-vous lapproche des mdias grand public concernant les rvlations de WikiLeaks, particulirement en ce qui concerne la dcision Assange?

MA: Je mtais attendu une dfense plus muscle du droit fournir des informations et la libert dexpression. Mais les mdias dans tous les pays oprent en interaction complexe avec les gouvernements, pour prendre en compte les intrts de lEtat de faons diffrentes. Selon moi, dans cette affaire, avec trop dgards pour lintrt prsum de ltat.

EM: Quel est votre avis sur les rcentes rvlations de WikiLeaks despionnage US du Secrtaire Gnral de lONU Ban Ki-Moon et de la Chancelire allemande Angela Merkel, pendant une runion prive sur la stratgie face au changement climatique Berlin, ainsi que du Haut Commissaire des Nations Unies pour les Rfugis?

MA: Elles rvlent des pratiques totalement inacceptables. Elles justifient galement le travail de WikiLeaks.

Source: http://www.cercledesvolontaires.fr/2016/03/17/mads-andenaes-du-groupe-de-travail-de-lonu-sur-la-detention-arbitraire-explique-le-cas-assange/ et http://www.pravdareport.com/world/europe/15-03-2016/133811-assange_lawyer-0/

Traduit par Lawrence Desforges

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WarDiaries.Wikileaks.org is a website which provides an easy way to search through the Iraq and Afghan War Diaries, which were made public by Wikileaks on 22nd October 2010. The documents are a set of over 391,000 reports which cover the war in Iraq from 2004 to 2009 and Afghanistan from 2004 to 2009.

From here, you can browse through all of the documents that have been released, organized by type, category, date, number of casualties, and many other properties. From any document page, clicking on the green underlined text will open a popup that links to other documents that contain those phrases, making it possible to see important search terms and connections that you might not otherwise notice.

Our hope is that this tool will be helpful to reporters and researchers who are interested in learning more about the US's war in Afghanistan and making sense of this important database. If you wish to support this work, we encourage you to make a donation to wikileaks.

Source code for this website is freely available on github we welcome any contributions, improvements or suggestions.

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