(I feel I can rightfully go all internet tough guy in this instance, because "a traitor on the inside" was mentioned as a threat in the very first lecture of the data security course I attend this semester.

Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
That does boggle the mind, although as a military intelligence analysis maybe he simply had access to a few "tiers" of classified data.Skgoa wrote:What I can't get my head around is that it seems as if the security model was "we only give accounts to people we trust, so everyone who logs in is trustworthy without limits." If Manning (sp?) could just download all that stuff and burn it to CD, they were begging for a leak right from the moment they started to plan this network.
Ah, forgot:Skgoa wrote:What I can't get my head around is that it seems as if the security model was "we only give accounts to people we trust, so everyone who logs in is trustworthy without limits." If Manning (sp?) could just download all that stuff and burn it to CD, they were begging for a leak right from the moment they started to plan this network.
This point is what lawyers and anyone involved with commerical lawsuits always finds fascinating. The things people, management, companies put in writing would shock you. People seem to have this almost irrational idea that things won't get out there. They freely write things on company email that I can't imagine why they ever thought it was a good idea. While reviewing emails I have come across the first flirtatious beginnings of an affair and read into the full blown thing raging and then the inevitable cool down and then break up all in an evenings review of company emails.Elfdart wrote:What's really funny is that the State Department was tripped up in much the same way that adolescent girls who keep diaries are: They put things in writing that they don't want anyone else to read, when writing it down guarantees that someone will see it.
I presume because they haven't had it handed to them yet. I think being able to keep your leaders accountable is a good thing, if this was strictly an anti-American effort then that would be a bit stupid, but the presumption should be that everyone is doing the same kind of dirty tricks bullshit that the US does. Highlighting everyone's over-reach should be a net positive. Even if all we're hearing about is American over-reach, it shows the kind of sleight-of-hand used by major world powers and arms everyone against it. Airing dirty laundry doesn't make you weaker unless your power is built on it. Plus, being able to confirm things like Syria and China and Russia doing stuff behind closed doors paints the same kind of shades-of-black foreign policy world most people expected.Stravo wrote:And another question of balance is why isn't Wikileaks airing Chinese or Russian dirty diplomatic laundry?
The real problem I see is that we have a system where information on American foreign policy seems to be 'classified until proven harmless' rather than 'unclassified until proven sensitive.' And where 'sensitive' can mean 'would embarrass President Bob,' not 'might provoke war between Boravia and Moronia.'Stravo wrote:I know some people think this is a good idea, the whole notion of no secrets should be kept from the people and such but there must always be a balance to this. For example one cable noted that Yemen would represent that the bombings going on in Yemen against AQ targets was governmental meanwhile in reality these are American bombings. With these kind of releases governments, especially hostile or shaky governments, would be less inclined to work with the US on these kind of operations.
In a way, they already have; some of the cables included a Chinese representative admitting that North Korea was no longer a useful ally and describing the North Korean government as "psychopathic". That could affect the leverage China has on North Korea. But, as mentioned earlier, Wikileaks works with what they get; it's not like they've orchestrated an intelligence operation against American interests.Stravo wrote: And another question of balance is why isn't Wikileaks airing Chinese or Russian dirty diplomatic laundry?
None of this material was top secret.Stravo wrote:It always makes me think twice about the things I put down in writing when communicating with colleagues and clients. Now I see this phenomenon extends to top secret government communications as well.
mizuno wrote: And this has got to be the worst timing to release the korea information, the South is ready to fire back, the North just found out their only major "ally" is ready to drop them and they have nukes and a crazy leader.. wikileaks couldn't have held on to this information for a few months longer? Worst timing ever
New York Times wrote:
WASHINGTON — Besieged by criminal inquiries and Congressional investigators, how could the world’s most controversial private security company drum up new business? By battling pirates on the high seas, of course.
In late 2008, Blackwater Worldwide, already under fire because of accusations of abuses by its security guards in Iraq and Afghanistan, reconfigured a 183-foot oceanographic research vessel into a pirate-hunting ship for hire and then began looking for business from shipping companies seeking protection from Somali pirates. The company’s chief executive officer, Erik Prince, was planning a trip to Djibouti for a promotional event in March 2009, and Blackwater was hoping that the American Embassy there would help out, according to a secret State Department cable.
But with the Obama administration just weeks old, American diplomats in Djibouti faced a problem. They are supposed to be advocates for American businesses, but this was Blackwater, a company that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton had proposed banning from war zones when she was a presidential candidate.
The embassy “would appreciate Department’s guidance on the appropriate level of engagement with Blackwater,” wrote James C. Swan, the American ambassador in Djibouti, in a cable sent on Feb. 12, 2009. Blackwater’s plans to enter the anti-piracy business have been previously reported, but not the American government’s concern about the endeavor.
According to that cable, Blackwater had outfitted its United States-flagged ship with .50-caliber machine guns and a small, unarmed drone aircraft. The ship, named the McArthur, would carry a crew of 33 to patrol the Gulf of Aden for 30 days before returning to Djibouti to resupply.
And the company had already determined its rules of engagement. “Blackwater does not intend to take any pirates into custody, but will use lethal force against pirates if necessary,” the cable said.
At the time, the company was still awaiting approvals from Blackwater lawyers for its planned operations, since Blackwater had informed the embassy there was “no precedent for a paramilitary operation in a purely commercial environment.”
Lawsuits filed later by crew members on the McArthur made life on the ship sound little improved from the days of Blackbeard.
One former crew member said, according to legal documents, that the ship’s captain, who had been drinking during a port call in Jordan, ordered him “placed in irons” (handcuffed to a towel rack) after he was accused of giving an unauthorized interview to his hometown newspaper in Minnesota. The captain, according to the lawsuit, also threatened to place the sailor in a straitjacket. Another crew member, who is black, claimed in court documents that he was repeatedly subjected to racial epithets.
In the end, Blackwater Maritime Security Services found no treasure in the pirate-chasing business, never attracting any clients. And the Obama administration chose not to sever the American government’s relationship with the North Carolina-based firm, which has collected more than $1 billion in security contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001. Blackwater renamed itself Xe Services, and earlier this year the company won a $100 million contract from the Central Intelligence Agency to protect the spy agency’s bases in Afghanistan.
Tell you what - why don't we just assume this response was based on you being a tad emotional about this instead of actually being a response?MarshalPurnell wrote:Oh, but maybe Thanas's peerless, white virginal shining knight of Europe will ride in and restore an international order based on collaboration, mutual respect, reason and justice?
Bolded because you seem to be unable to read. Has france unilaterally invaded and is currently occupying another country? Is France abducting and torturing the citizens of its allies? Is France opening a torture camp on French soil?MarshalPurnell wrote:Thanas made the claim "The US is currently the only western democracy which tortures and flaunts international law and human rights so outrageously." That is a false claim, disproved by only a single counterexample, the French Republic.
Name them, especially on this scale.There are of course others within the European Union that also violate human rights in more or less similar ways;
Oh, really. Name the terrorists we carded off to Syria or so that they got their penis slashed with knives. Go on.and one merely has to go back to the 1980s to implicate even more in accused abuses of the rights of terrorists.
Bull.He did not say that Europe represented an alternative, but as the only other Western democratic force with anything like the potential to exercise the scale of influence and power as the US it was certainly implied.
Are you incapable of reading? I said "so outrageously". Obvious qualifier right there. And I fail to see how "allowing to refuel" = "torture accomplices" in any way of the word especially as we know from the case of al-Masri that the German governenment was not provided any specific details about the flights and were they were headed. And btw, if Germany was so complicit in this, why did the CIA need to charter private planes and file false flight plans to the German authorities?Broomstick wrote: Stop pretending either Europe or Germany has some virginal purity - which is what you did. If you had claimed that the US is simply dirtier I would have no qualms with that but you claimed your country had no part in this sort of thing, which is untrue. If Germany is so virtuous why aren't there people protesting every time one of those "torture flights" refuels? Or at least whenever the public finds out it has happened, as I expect it's all kept very hush-hush when it actually is occurring.
Yes, it is not. However, as long as it does not open up a gulag and wages a war of aggression, I can safely say that Germany is a saint compared to the USA. Your act is pretty much comparing a thief who stole 10 cent to a multi-million dollar embezzler to claim that the latter is not so bad.You're so busy trying to point out how awful my nation is you can't see you're standing in mud yourself. Again, I am in no way claiming my country is better, I am in no way denying the US does awful things. You act as if getting me to admit something (none of which I've denied) somehow absolves your country of sin. It doesn't. YOU are the one in denial. Get down off your pedestal, Thanas. Your country isn't perfect, far from it.
The Guardian wrote:
Russia is a corrupt, autocratic kleptocracy centred on the leadership of Vladimir Putin, in which officials, oligarchs and organised crime are bound together to create a "virtual mafia state", according to leaked secret diplomatic cables that provide a damning American assessment of its erstwhile rival superpower.
Arms trafficking, money laundering, personal enrichment, protection for gangsters, extortion and kickbacks, suitcases full of money and secret offshore bank accounts in Cyprus: the cables paint a bleak picture of a political system in which bribery alone totals an estimated $300bn a year, and in which it is often hard to distinguish between the activities of the government and organised crime.
Among the most striking allegations contained in the cables, which were leaked to the whistleblowers' website WikiLeaks, are:
• Russian spies use senior mafia bosses to carry out criminal operations such as arms trafficking.
• Law enforcement agencies such as the police, spy agencies and the prosecutor's office operate a de facto protection racket for criminal networks.
• Rampant bribery acts like a parallel tax system for the personal enrichment of police, officials and the KGB's successor, the federal security service (FSB).
• Investigators looking into Russian mafia links to Spain have compiled a list of Russian prosecutors, military officers and politicians who have dealings with organised crime networks.
• Putin is accused of amassing "illicit proceeds" from his time in office, which various sources allege are hidden overseas.
The allegations come hours before Putin was due to address Fifa's executive committee in Zurich in support of Russia's bid to host the 2018 World Cup. Putin last night abruptly cancelled his trip, complaining of a smear campaign to "discredit" Fifa members. In an angry interview with CNN's Larry King Live, recorded before the latest disclosures, Putin also denounced the cables and warned the US not to stick its nose in Russia's affairs.
He made clear he was not amused by a US diplomat's description of him as "Batman" and President Dmitry Medvedev as "Robin". "To be honest with you, we did not suspect that this [criticism] could be made with such arrogance, with such rudeness, and you know, so unethically," Putin remarked.
The principal allegations stem from a Spanish prosecutor, José González, who has spent more than a decade trying to unravel the activities of Russian organised crime in Spain. Spanish authorities have arrested more than 60 suspects, including the top four mafia bosses outside Russia.
In a startling briefing for US officials in January, González said Russia was a "virtual mafia state" in which "one cannot differentiate between the activities of the government and OC [organised crime] groups".
González said he had evidence – thousands of wiretaps have been used in the last 10 years – that certain political parties in Russia worked hand in hand with mafia groups. He alleged that intelligence officials orchestrated gun shipments to Kurdish groups to destabilise Turkey and were pulling the strings behind the 2009 case of the Arctic Sea cargo ship suspected of carrying missiles destined for Iran.
At the summit of what is known in Russia as the power "vertical" lies the Kremlin, a prime beneficiary of the entrenched system of kickbacks, bribes, protection money and suspect contracts.
In a detailed and apparently plausible analysis of how corruption in the capital works, the US ambassador John Beyrle cited one source as saying: "Everything depends on the Kremlin … [former Moscow mayor Yuri] Luzhkov, as well as many mayors and governors, pay off key insiders in the Kremlin."
Beneath the Kremlin is a broad layer of top officials – mayors and governors – collecting money based on bribes almost like their own personal taxation system. At the next level down the FSB, interior ministry and police collect protection money from businesses, licit and illicit.
"Criminal elements enjoy a krysha [a term from the criminal/mafia world literally meaning roof or protection] that runs through the police, the federal security service, ministry of internal affairs (MVD) and the prosecutor's office, as well as throughout the Moscow city government bureaucracy," Beyrle noted. "The Moscow city government's direct links to criminality have led some to call it 'dysfunctional' and to assert that the government operates more as a kleptocracy than a government."
González said the FSB had two ways to eliminate "OC leaders who do not do what the security services want them to do". The first was to kill them. The second was to put them in jail to "eliminate them as a competitor for influence".
Sometimes the FSB put crime lords in prison for their own protection. Luckier crime leaders might end up in parliament. "The government of Russia takes the relationship with organised crime leaders still further by granting them privileges of politics, in order to grant them immunity from racketeering charges," Beyrle noted.
The US is not alone in its assessments. In one cable, the Foreign Office's Russia director, Michael Davenport, is quoted as calling Russia a "corrupt autocracy".
The cables also reveal that the Americans believe Putin was likely to have known about the operation to murder Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006.
The Kremlin has denied involvement but a remark by another US ambassador in Moscow, Williams Burns, sums up US attitudestowards the new Russia: "Whatever the truth may ultimately be [about Litvinenko] – and it may never be known – the tendency here to almost automatically assume that someone in or close to Putin's inner-circle is the author of these deaths speaks volumes about expectations of Kremlin behaviour."
Russia's foreign intelligence chief said yesterday that he would order his spies to study the cables relating to Russia. Mikhail Fradkov, the head of Russia's foreign intelligence service (SVR), told the ITAR-TASS news agency: "There are many issues which have been revealed by the disclosure by WikiLeaks – this is material for analysis. We shall report our conclusions to the leadership of the country."
Sort of confirmed what we knew already, but still very interesting nonetheless.I thought this cable was interesting to read. It's a report on Islamic extremism in France.
On the issue of the Interpol arrest warrant issued yesterday for Assange's arrest: I think it's deeply irresponsible either to assume his guilt or to assume his innocence until the case plays out. I genuinely have no opinion of the validity of those allegations, but what I do know -- as John Cole notes -- is this: as soon as Scott Ritter began telling the truth about Iraqi WMDs, he was publicly smeared with allegations of sexual improprieties. As soon as Eliot Spitzer began posing a real threat to Wall Street criminals, a massive and strange federal investigation was launched over nothing more than routine acts of consensual adult prostitution, ending his career (and the threat he posed to oligarchs). And now, the day after Julian Assange is responsible for one of the largest leaks in history, an arrest warrant issues that sharply curtails his movement and makes his detention highly likely. It's unreasonable to view that pattern as evidence that the allegations are part of some conspiracy -- I genuinely do not believe or disbelieve that -- but, particularly in light of that pattern, it's most definitely unreasonable to assume that he's guilty of anything without having those allegations tested and then proven in court.
Bob Gates wrote:
Let me just offer some perspective as somebody who’s been at this a long time. Every other government in the world knows the United States government leaks like a sieve, and it has for a long time. And I dragged this up the other day when I was looking at some of these prospective releases. And this is a quote from John Adams: “How can a government go on, publishing all of their negotiations with foreign nations, I know not. To me, it appears as dangerous and pernicious as it is novel." …
Now, I’ve heard the impact of these releases on our foreign policy described as a meltdown, as a game-changer, and so on. I think -- I think those descriptions are fairly significantly overwrought. The fact is, governments deal with the United States because it’s in their interest, not because they like us, not because they trust us, and not because they believe we can keep secrets.
Many governments -- some governments deal with us because they fear us, some because they respect us, most because they need us. We are still essentially, as has been said before, the indispensable nation. So other nations will continue to deal with us. They will continue to work with us. We will continue to share sensitive information with one another. Is this embarrassing? Yes. Is it awkward? Yes. Consequences for U.S. foreign policy? I think fairly modest.
MarshalPurnell wrote:Oh, but maybe Thanas's peerless, white virginal shining knight of Europe will ride in and restore an international order based on collaboration, mutual respect, reason and justice?
What? Seriously, it is a fact that the majority of the war crimes, human rights and international law violations commited by First World nations in the period from 1990 to 2010 falls to the USA. To get Germany seriously implicated in something requires you to actually go much deeper into history.Broomstick wrote: Stop pretending either Europe or Germany has some virginal purity - which is what you did. If you had claimed that the US is simply dirtier I would have no qualms with that but you claimed your country had no part in this sort of thing, which is untrue. If Germany is so virtuous why aren't there people protesting every time one of those "torture flights" refuels? Or at least whenever the public finds out it has happened, as I expect it's all kept very hush-hush when it actually is occurring.
Manning is accused of hacking, not just downloading. Hacking, as in deliberately going around/defeating security systems.Skgoa wrote:What I can't get my head around is that it seems as if the security model was "we only give accounts to people we trust, so everyone who logs in is trustworthy without limits." If Manning (sp?) could just download all that stuff and burn it to CD, they were begging for a leak right from the moment they started to plan this network.
Except Julian Assange has been quoted as one of his motives being to damage US foreign diplomacy. IF WikiLeaks starts airing out confidential diplomatic communications from other nations maybe I'll believe this is all about openness and honesty but that remains to be proven. If we don't see that other material from other nations than what it is really about is damaging the US. So... a year from now let's see what happens. If everything from WikiLeaks is about bad stuff from the US then it's plainly and anti-US campaign (deserved or not) and the abuses going on in the rest of the world can just be ignored as far as Assange is concerned. If they actually do publish dirt on other countries, including other major players, then maybe it really is all about transparency and whilstleblowing. Let's check in next December on that.Covenant wrote:I presume because they haven't had it handed to them yet. I think being able to keep your leaders accountable is a good thing, if this was strictly an anti-American effort then that would be a bit stupid, but the presumption should be that everyone is doing the same kind of dirty tricks bullshit that the US does.Stravo wrote:And another question of balance is why isn't Wikileaks airing Chinese or Russian dirty diplomatic laundry?
Assange claims he does have stuff like that already. He's just choosing to air out the American dirty laundry first. Well, he's made no secret of the fact he doesn't like the US, which is his prerogative I suppose, but if that's the case he shouldn't be surprised if a lot of Americans aren't feeling too warm and fuzzy about him at the moment.Covenant wrote:I presume because they haven't had it handed to them yet.Stravo wrote:And another question of balance is why isn't Wikileaks airing Chinese or Russian dirty diplomatic laundry?
So far, WikiLeaks has concentrated overwhelming on American dirty fingers. Like I said, I'm giving it a year before I make a conclusion in my own mind, but right now it appears largely anti-US. If he starts airing out bad crap from other nations that will certainly change how I look at his operation.I think being able to keep your leaders accountable is a good thing, if this was strictly an anti-American effort then that would be a bit stupid,
Much ado about not much - which enable the media to avoid reporting on the really hard stuff that's going on that SHOULD be talked about, but isn't.I haven't read anything shocking yet. This just looks like hard-knuckles diplomacy. If anything I find it remarkable how much hand-wringing people do as opposed to actual arm-twisting.
Another one of those things I saw/heard on the TV, which makes it difficult to link to - I've been trying to find a link or a decent attribution but without much success. But it definitely was Mr. Assange speaking, not someone saying he said that (It stuck in my mind because the name made me think he was French but when he spoke he definitely sounded Australian). The other reason I want to find it is to review it myself, to see if it was sharply trimmed enough that it might be a quote out of context or if it really is the stand-alone thought. I heard it before all hell broke loose with this current release of stuff, so it didn't stick in my mind as clearly as if I had heard it today and I'd like to refresh my memory for accuracy's sake.loomer wrote:Wikileaks has a long history of publishing information on just about everyone (they've only stopped the old way of things recently), Broomstick. I'd also like to see the source of that quote.