‘ A
Political Meltdown for US Foreign Policy’
WikiLeaks: US Diplomatic Cables Spark ‘Arab
Spring,’ Expose Spying at UN & Elsewhere
By Elizabeth Vos
January 14, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
Of all
WikiLeaks’ releases, probably the most
globally significant have been the more than a
quarter of a million U.S. State Department
diplomatic cables leaked in 2010, the publication of
which helped spark a revolt in Tunisia that spread
into the so-called Arab Spring, revealed Saudi
intentions towards Iran and exposed spying on the UN
secretary general and other diplomats.
The releases were
surrounded by a significant controversy (to be
covered in a separate installment of this series)
alleging that WikiLeaks purposely
endangered U.S. informants by deliberately revealing
their names. That allegation formed a major part of
the U.S. indictment on May 23 of WikiLeaks
publisher Julian Assange under the Espionage Act,
though revealing informants’ names is not a crime,
nor is there evidence that any of them were ever
harmed.
WikiLeaks’
publication of “Cablegate,” beginning on Nov. 28,
2010, dwarfed previous WikiLeaks releases,
in both size and impact. The publication
amounted to
251,287
leaked American diplomatic cables that, at the time
of publication, Der Spiegel described as“no
less than a political meltdown for United States
foreign policy.”
Cablegate revealed a
previously unknown history of diplomatic relations
between the United States and the rest of the world,
and in doing so, exposed U.S. views of both allies
and adversaries. As a result of such revelations,
Cablegate’s release was widely condemned by the
U.S. political class and especially by
then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
WikiLeaks, writing
under the Twitter handle Cable Drum, called
it,
“… The largest
set of confidential documents ever to be released
into the public domain. The documents will give
people around the world an unprecedented insight
into U.S. Government foreign activities. The
cables, which date from 1966 up until the end of
February 2010, contain confidential communications
between 274 embassies in countries throughout the
world and the State Department in Washington DC.
15,652 of the cables are classified Secret.”
Among the historic
documents
are 1.7 million that involve Henry Kissinger,
national security adviser and secretary of state
under President Richard Nixon; and 1.4 million
related to the Jimmy Carter administration.
Der Spiegel
reported that the majority were “composed by
ambassadors, consuls or their staff. Most contain
assessments of the political situation in the
individual countries, interview protocols and
background information about personnel decisions and
events. In many cases, they also provide political
and personal profiles of individual politicians and
leaders.”
Cablegate rounded out
WikiLeaks’ output in 2010, which had seen
the explosive publication of previous leaks also
from Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning
including
“Collateral
Murder,”
the
“Afghan
War Diaries” and
“Iraq
War Logs,”
the subject of earlier installments in this series.
As in the case of the two prior releases,
WikiLeaks published Cablegate in partnerships
with establishment media outlets.
The “Cablegate” archive
was later integrated with the
WikiLeaks Public
Library of U.S. Diplomacy,
which contains over 10 million documents.
Global U.S.
Empire Revealed
The impact of
“Cablegate” is impossible to fully encapsulate, and
should be the subject of historical study for
decades to come. In September 2015 Verso published
“The
WikiLeaks Files: The World According to U.S. Empire,”
with a foreword by Assange. It is a compendium of
chapters written by various regional experts and
historians giving a broader and more in-depth
geopolitical analysis of U.S. foreign policy as
revealed by the cables.
“The internal
communications of the US Department of State are the
logistical by-product of its activities: their
publication is the vivisection of a living empire,
showing what substance flowed from which state organ
and when. Only by approaching this corpus
holistically – over and above the documentation of
each individual abuse, each localized atrocity –
does the true human cost of empire heave into view,”
Assange wrote in the foreword.
‘WikiLeaks Revolt’
in Tunisia
The release of
“Cablegate” provided the
spark
that many argue heralded the Arab Spring, earning
the late-November publication the moniker of the
“WikiLeaks
Winter.”
Eventually,
many would also credit
WikiLeaks’ publication of the diplomatic
cables with initiating a chain-reaction that spread
from the Middle East (specifically
from Egypt) to the global Occupy Wall Street
movement by late 2011.
The first of the Arab
uprisings was Tunisia’s 28-day so-called Jasmine
Revolution, stretching from Dec. 17, 2010, to Jan.
14, 2011,
described as
the “first WikiLeaks revolution.”
Cables published by
WikiLeaksrevealed the extent of the Tunisian
ruling family’s corruption, and were widely
accessible in Tunisia thanks to the advent of social
media platforms like Twitter. Then-President Zine El
Abidine Ben Ali had been in power for over two
decades at the time of the cables’ publication.
One State Department cable, labeled Secret,
said:
“President Ben Ali’s
extended family is often cited as the nexus of
Tunisian corruption. Often referred to as a
quasi-mafia, an oblique mention of ‘the Family’ is
enough to indicate which family you mean. Seemingly
half of the Tunisian business community can claim a
Ben Ali connection through marriage, and many of
these relations are reported to have made the most
of their lineage.”
A June 2008 cable said:
“Whether it’s cash, services, land, property, or
yes, even your yacht, President [Zine el Abidine]
Ben Ali’s family is rumored to covet it and
reportedly gets what it wants.”
The cables revealed
that Ben Ali’s extended family controlled nearly the
entire Tunisian economy, from banking to media to
property development, while 30 percent of Tunisians
were unemployed. They showed that state-owned
property was expropriated to be passed on to private
ownership by family members.
“Lax oversight makes
the banking sector an excellent target of
opportunity, with multiple stories of ‘First Family’
schemes,” one cable read. “”With real estate
development booming and land prices on the rise,
owning property or land in the right location can
either be a windfall or a one-way ticket to
expropriation,” said another.
The revolt was
facilitated once the U.S. abandoned Ali.
Counterpunch
reported that: “The U.S. campaign of unwavering
public support for President Ali led to a widespread
belief among the Tunisian people that it would be
very difficult to dislodge the autocratic regime
from power. This view was shattered when leaked
cables exposed the U.S. government’s private
assessment: that the U.S. would not support the
regime in the event of a popular uprising.”
The internet and large
social media platforms played a crucial role in the
spread of public awareness of the cables and their
content amongst the Tunisian public. “Thousands of
home-made videos of police repression and popular
resistance have been posted on the web. The Tunisian
people have used Facebook, Twitter and other social
networking sites to organize and direct the
mobilizations against the regime,” the
World Socialist Website
wrote.
Foreign Policy
magazine reported:
“WikiLeaks
acted as a catalyst: both a trigger and a tool
for political outcry. Which is probably the best
compliment one could give the whistle-blower
site.” The magazine added: “The people of
Tunisia shouldn’t have had to wait for Wikileaks
to learn that the U.S. saw their country just as
they did. It’s time that the gulf between what
American diplomats know and what they say got
smaller.”
The Guardian
published an account in January 2011 by a young
Tunisian, Sami Ben Hassine, who wrote: “The internet
is blocked, and censored pages are referred to as
pages “not found” – as if they had never existed.
And then, WikiLeaks reveals what everyone was
whispering. And then, a young man [Mohamed Bouazizi]
immolates himself. And then, 20 Tunisians are killed
in one day. And for the first time, we see the
opportunity to rebel, to take revenge on the ‘royal’
family who has taken everything, to overturn the
established order that has accompanied our youth.”
On the first day of
Chelsea Manning’s pretrial in December 2011,
Daniel Ellsberg told
Democracy Now:
“The combination of
the WikiLeaksand Bradley Manning
exposures in Tunis and the exemplification of
that by Mohamed Bouazizi led to the protests,
the nonviolent protests, that drove Ben Ali out
of power, our ally there who we supported up
’til that moment, and in turn sparked the
uprising in Egypt, in Tahrir Square occupation,
which immediately stimulated the Occupy Wall
Street and the other occupations in the Middle
East and elsewhere. … I hope [Manning and
Assange] will have the effect in liberating us
from the lawlessness that we have seen and the
corruption — the corruption — that we have seen
in this country in the last 10 years and more,
which has been no less than that of Tunis and
Egypt.”
Clinton Told US
Diplomats to Spy at UN
The cables’ revelation
that the U.S. State Department under
then-Secretary-of-State Clinton had demanded
officials act as spies on officials at the United
Nations — including the Secretary General — was
particularly embarrassing for the United States.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
El Pais
summarized the bombshell: “The State Department sent
officials of 38 embassies and diplomatic missions a
detailed account of the personal and other
information they must obtain about the United
Nations, including its secretary general, and
especially about officials and representatives
linked to Sudan, Afghanistan, Somalia, Iran and
North Korea.
El Pais
continued: “Several dispatches, signed ‘Clinton’ and
probably made by the office of Secretary of State,
Hillary Clinton, contain precise instructions about
the myriad of inquiries to be developed in conflict
zones, in the world of deserters and asylum seekers,
in the engine room of the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, or about the United Kingdom, France,
Germany, Russia and China to know their plans
regarding the nuclear threat in Tehran.”
CNN
described the information diplomats were ordered to
gather: “In the July 2009 document, Clinton directs
her envoys at the United Nations and embassies
around the world to collect information ranging from
basic biographical data on foreign diplomats to
their frequent flyer and credit card numbers and
even ‘biometric information on ranking North Korean
diplomats.’ Typical biometric information can
include fingerprints, signatures and iris
recognition data.”
Der Spiegel
reported that Clinton justified the espionage orders
by emphasizing that “a large share of the
information that the US intelligence agencies works
with comes from the reports put together by State
Department staff around the world.”
Der Spiegel added:
“The US State Department also wanted to obtain
information on the plans and intentions of UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and his secretariat
relating to issues like Iran, according to the
detailed wish list in the directive. The
instructions were sent to 30 US embassies around the
world, including the one in Berlin.”
The State Department
responded to the revelations, with then-
State-Department-spokesman P.J. Crowley
reportedly
disputing that American diplomats had assumed a new
role overseas.
“Our diplomats are just
that, diplomats,” he said. “They represent our
country around the world and engage openly and
transparently with representatives of foreign
governments and civil society. Through this process,
they collect information that shapes our policies
and actions. This is what diplomats, from our
country and other countries, have done for hundreds
of years.”
In December 2010, just
after the cables’ publication, Assange told
Time:
“She should resign if it can be shown that she was
responsible for ordering U.S. diplomatic figures to
engage in espionage in the United Nations, in
violation of the international covenants to which
the U.S. has signed up.”
Saudis & Iran
A diplomatic
cable
dated April 20, 2008, made clear Saudi Arabia’s
pressure on the United States to take action against
its enemy Iran, including not ruling out military
action against Teheran:
“[Then Saudi
ambassador to the US Abbdel] Al-Jubeir recalled
the King’s frequent exhortations to the US to
attack Iran and so put an end to its nuclear
weapons program. ‘He told you to cut off the
head of the snake,’ he recalled to the Charge’,
adding that working with the US to roll back
Iranian influence in Iraq is a strategic
priority for the King and his government. 11.
(S) The Foreign Minister, on the other hand,
called instead for much more severe US and
international sanctions on Iran, including a
travel ban and further restrictions on bank
lending. Prince Muqrin echoed these views,
emphasizing that some sanctions could be
implemented without UN approval. The Foreign
Minister also stated that the use of military
pressure against Iran should not be ruled out.”
Dyncorp & the
‘Dancing Boys’ of Afghanistan
The cables indicate
that Afghan authorities asked the United States
government to
quash U.S.
reporting on a scandal stemming from the actions of
Dyncorp employees in Afghanistan in 2009.
Employees of Dyncorp, a
paramilitary group with an
infamous
track-record of alleged involvement in sex
trafficking and other human rights abuses in
multiple countries, were revealed by Cablegate to
have been involved with illegal drug use and hiring
the services of a “bacha bazi,” or underage dancing
boy.
A 2009 cable published
by
WikiLeaks
described an event where Dyncorp had purchased the
service of a “bacha bazi.” The writer of the cable
does not specify what happened during the event,
describing it only as “purchasing a service from a
child,” and he tries to convince a journalist not to
cover the story in order to not “risk lives.”
Although Dyncorp was no
stranger to controversy by the time of the cables’
publication, the revelation of the mercenary force’s
continued involvement in bacha bazi provoked further
questions as to why the company continued to receive
tax-payer funded contracts from the United States.
Sexual abuse
allegations were not the only issue haunting
Dyncorp. The State Department admitted in 2017 that
it “could not account for” more than $1 billion paid
to the company, as reported by
Foreign Policy.
The New York Times
later reported that U.S. soldiers had been told to
turn a blind eye to the abuse of minors by those in
positions of power: “Soldiers and Marines have been
increasingly troubled that instead of weeding out
pedophiles, the American military was arming them in
some cases and placing them as the commanders of
villages — and doing little when they began abusing
children.”
Australia Lied
About Troop Withdrawal
The Green Left
related that the cables exposed Australian Prime
Minister Kevin Rudd’s double talk about withdrawing
troops. “Despite government spin about withdrawing
all ‘combat forces,’ the cables said some of these
forces could be deployed in combat roles. One cable
said, “[d]espite the withdrawal of combat forces,
Rudd agreed to allow Australian forces embedded or
seconded to units of other countries including the
U.S. to deploy to Iraq in combat and combat support
roles with those units.”
US Meddling in
Latin America
Cables revealed that
U.S. ambassadors to Ecuador had opposed the
presidential candidacy of Raphael Correa despite
their pretense of neutrality, as observed by The
Green Left Weekly.
Additional cables
revealed the Vatican
attempted to
increase its influence in Latin America with the aid
of the U.S. Further cables illustrated the
history of Pope Francis while he was a cardinal in
Argentina, with the U.S. appearing to have a positive
outlook on
the future pontiff.
Illegal
Dealings Between US & Sweden
WikiLeaksfounder
Julian Assange wrote in his
affidavit:
“Through the
diplomatic cables I also learned of secret,
informal arrangements between Sweden and the
United States. The cables revealed that Swedish
intelligence services have a pattern of lawless
conduct where US interests are concerned. The US
diplomatic cables revealed that the Swedish
Justice Department had deliberately hidden
particular intelligence information exchanges
with the United States from the Parliament of
Sweden because the exchanges were likely
unlawful.”
Military
Reaction
On Nov. 30, 2010, the
State Department declared it would remove the
diplomatic cables from its secure network in order
to prevent additional leaks. Antiwar.com added:
“The cables had previously been accessible through
SIPRNet, an ostensibly secure network which is
accessible by millions of officials and soldiers. It
is presumably through this network that the cables
were obtained and leaked to WikiLeaks.”
The Guardian described
SIPRNet as a “worldwide US military internet system,
kept separate from the ordinary civilian internet
and run by the Defence Department in Washington.”
Political Fury
On Nov. 29, 2010, then
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said
of the
“Cablegate” release:
“This disclosure is
not just an attack on America’s foreign policy;
it is an attack on the international community,
the alliances and partnerships, the conventions
and negotiations that safeguard global security
and advance economic prosperity.”
The next day, former
Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee called for Chelsea
Manning’s execution, according to Politico.
Some political figures
did express support for Assange, including U.K.
Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn, who wrote
via Twitter days
after Cablegate was published: “USA and others don’t
like any scrutiny via wikileaks and they are leaning
on everybody to pillory Assange. What happened to
free speech?”
Other notable
revelations from the diplomatic cables included
multiple instances of U.S. meddling in Latin
America, the demand by then-Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton that
diplomatic staff act as spies,
the documentation of misconduct by U.S.
paramilitary forces, the fallout of the 2008
financial crisis in Iceland, the deployment of U.S.
nuclear weapons in Germany and other European
countries, that the Vatican
attempted to
increase its influence in Latin America with the aid
of the U.S. , that U.S. diplomats had essentially
spied on
German Chancellor Angele Merkel, and much more.
Der Spiegel
reported on Hillary Clinton’s demand that U.S.
diplomats act as spies:
“As justification for
the espionage orders, Clinton emphasized that a
large share of the information that the U.S.
intelligence agencies works with comes from the
reports put together by State Department staff
around the world. The information to be collected
included personal credit card information, frequent
flyer customer numbers, as well as e-mail and
telephone accounts. In many cases the State
Department also requested ‘biometric information,’
‘passwords’ and ‘personal encryption keys.’ ”
Der Spiegel
added: “The U.S. State Department also wanted to
obtain information on the plans and intentions of UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and his secretariat
relating to issues like Iran, according to the
detailed wish list in the directive. The
instructions were sent to 30 U.S. embassies around
the world, including the one in Berlin.”
Elizabeth Vos is a freelance reporter and co-host of
CN Live.
This article was
originally published by "Consortium
News" -
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==See Also==
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