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An unvarnished look at US foreign policy

The cables also revealed that Arab states had called for air-strikes on Iranian nuclear installations, that Beijing was losing patience with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il, and included many unflattering assessments of leading politicians in the American diplomats’ host countries.

An unvarnished look at US foreign policy
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Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. File Photo

Chennai

November 28, 2010, was the day the bomb dropped — with five leading Western publications initiating the simultaneous publication of secrets from the engine room of American diplomacy. Their raw material: 251,287 documents from the superpower’s State Department, most of them top secret and confidential, gathered by American embassies around the world. Together, they gave a less than pretty picture of US foreign policy.

The embassy cables had been made available to the publications by the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks. Never before had journalists been able to access such a large cache of secrets at once. Among other things, they proved that Washington had instructed its diplomats to spy on people working at the United Nations, up to and including the UN secretary-general. The cables also revealed that Arab states had called for air-strikes on Iranian nuclear installations, that Beijing was losing patience with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il, and included many unflattering assessments of leading politicians in the American diplomats’ host countries.

“From our point of view, the embassy cables were the climax of the 2010 WikiLeaks revelations,” recalls journalist Marcel Rosenbach of Germany’s weekly magazine Der Spiegel. WikiLeaks was founded in 2006 by Julian Assange but its big breakthrough did not come until 2010. It started in April, with the publication of the video “Collateral Murder,” a video of attacks by two US helicopter gunships on civilians in Baghdad — two Reuters journalists were among those killed in the attack. The “Afghan War Diary” and “Iraq War Logs,” published in collaboration with international media outlets, provided a shocking, unsparing look beyond the well-oiled PR machinery of the State Department and the Pentagon and into the harsh reality of those two theatres of war.

Initially, the embassy cables were published by WikiLeaks’ media partners in installments. But a data breach resulted in the entire cache of unredacted Cablegate material becoming, and remaining, publicly accessible. Names, including the people American diplomats were communicating with, were not blacked out — something Wikileaks was heavily criticized for. “The material is still topical,” Marcel Rosenbach tells DW. “It’s become something like a public archive, and it’s still relevant for reports, even now. We keep seeing references to WikiLeaks and to these cables in contemporary reporting.” In the archive, one can read, for example, how in 2009 a former US official in Brussels was astonished at “how easy EU institutions are to penetrate and how malleable they can be if approached with an apt understanding of the EU coalition building process.”

A spark for the Arab Spring?

WikiLeaks also exposed corruption and the abuse of power in the Arab world — for instance in Tunisia — in great detail. It highlighted government doublespeak in which real aims were the opposite of those announced in public. The publication of the embassy cables also coincided with the first sparks of protest in the Arab world. Rosenbach believes the cables were, “at least a factor in what came to be known as the Arab Spring and everything that transpired in the months that followed.” But the WikiLeaks revelations had consequences for journalism, too, says Rosenbach: “It was an example of a new way of dealing with geopolitical material of potentially global interest. And it established itself as the journalistic standard for dealing with mass document leaks like these.” WikiLeaks has also altered our understanding of information in general, says Sam Forsythe, an information warfare expert who works for the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF). Forsythe explains that, with WikiLeaks, a non-state actor capable of disrupting international relations arrived on the scene. One that acted on a strategic level — but using journalistic methods.

— This article has been provided by Deutsche Welle

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