JihadJane
not a camel
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2008
- Messages
- 91,141
I'm not sure I wouldn't push him myself.
Wouldn't that be murder?
I'm not sure I wouldn't push him myself.
It provides solid, undeniable documentation and reveals things that have not appeared in the press.
Do you genuinely think that that is the only thing worth commenting on in the documents or are you just aping the latest, politically correct spin?
"Don't laugh at me, You're next!" really old, bad, cheating joke...What I thought was originally a funny joke has been raped so hard the room stinks. This guy says that if the government murders him, he's just going to release more documents. Then I called this blackmail. So... he's blackmailing the government for the right to live. That's what lawyers do to the MOB in John Grisham novels.
What I thought was originally a funny joke has been raped so hard the room stinks. This guy says that if the government murders him, he's just going to release more documents. Then I called this blackmail. So... he's blackmailing the government for the right to live. That's what lawyers do to the MOB in John Grisham novels.
What I thought was originally a funny joke has been raped so hard the room stinks. This guy says that if the government murders him, he's just going to release more documents. Then I called this blackmail. So... he's blackmailing the government for the right to live. That's what lawyers do to the MOB in John Grisham novels.
The alturnative reading is that he is bribing the taliban to kill him.
No they got leaked. There was an investigation but no charges, and likely there never would be like all the other torture that will never be prosecuted.
The charges only came out after someone leaked the photos to the press, this caused an up roar and they knew they had to put someone in prison for it.
CUMBERLAND, Md., May 7 — Ivan Frederick was distraught. His son, an Army reservist turned prison guard in Iraq, was under investigation earlier this year for mistreating prisoners, and photographs of the abuse were beginning to circulate among soldiers and military investigators.
So the father went to his brother-in-law, William Lawson, who was afraid that reservists like his nephew would end up taking the fall for what he considered command lapses, Mr. Lawson recounted in an interview on Friday. He knew whom to turn to: David Hackworth, a retired colonel and a muckraker who was always willing to take on the military establishment. Mr. Lawson sent an e-mail message in March to Mr. Hackworth's Web site and got a call back from an associate there in minutes, he said.
That e-mail message would put Mr. Lawson in touch with the CBS News program "60 Minutes II" and help set in motion events that led to the public disclosure of the graphic photographs and an international crisis for the Bush administration.
...
The irony, Mr. Lawson said, is that the public spectacle might have been avoided if the military and the federal government had been responsive to his claims that his nephew was simply following orders. Mr. Lawson said he sent letters to 17 members of Congress about the case earlier this year, with virtually no response, and that he ultimately contacted Mr. Hackworth's Web site out of frustration, leading him to cooperate with a consultant for "60 Minutes II."
"The Army had the opportunity for this not to come out, not to be on 60 Minutes," he said. "But the Army decided to prosecute those six G.I.'s because they thought me and my family were a bunch of poor, dirt people who could not do anything about it. But unfortunately, that was not the case."
That wasn't wiki leaks, eh? That was a leak by a defendant in the case in question. You do understand that, right? The people already charged with the wrongdoing (well, a few of the ones at low ranks) were who leaked that story.So how does this compare to leaking the abu graib pictures become public and forcing the military to actually look like it cares about what happened?
No, that would not have earned the army any respect. You might be surprised to learn how many of us in uniform were really pissed off at how that case was handled.And imagine how much more respect that the army would get if they had managed to keep the truth about Pat Tillmans death secret.
He is still a hero to me, though his death by friendly fire was tragic. What the institution did to his family with that absurd attempt to prioritize some PR game over the simple sad case of blue on blue was just plain wrong.They would have a great hero instead of a very public marker of their failures.
It's a difficult balancing act, I can assure you, handling operational security and classified info. One of the weirdest things I learned a long time ago is that a lot of things end up classified that don't need to be. This is due in part to the time it takes to go back and declassify the bits that don't matter.There certainly are things that need to be kept secret, but it is also used to keep the public in the dark and control public opinion.
Can you dig up an example document where they didn't black out names and put Afghani citizens at risk?
a 2008 report that includes a detailed interview with a Taliban fighter considering defection and ends with "[t]he meeting ended with [named person] agreeing to meet intel personnel." Both his father's name and village are also included in the report;
Julian Assange responded to the criticism by insisting that any risk to informants’ lives was outweighed by the overall importance of publishing the information.
He also asserted that many informers in Afghanistan had "acted in a criminal way" by sharing false information with NATO authorities
and that the White House did nothing to help WikiLeaks vet the data.
Assange also felt that the U.S. should have had tighter controls over sensitive information, saying "[t]he United States appears to have given every UN soldier and contractor access to the names of many of its confidential sources without proper protection
The disclosure of thousands of documents by WikiLeaks about the U.S. war effort in Afghanistan set off a storm of controversy. U.S. officials decried the leak for exposing their sources of information. But there is some question about why sources' real identities were in the documents, which appear to have been widely distributed on a classified Pentagon computer network.
Some of the 90,000 classified documents published by WikiLeaks contain the names of Afghans who have provided information to U.S. forces in one form or another.
Speaking on ABC's This Week, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the leak put those Afghans in danger, as well as the soldiers they have helped.
"I believe that this information puts those in Afghanistan who have helped us at risk," Gates said. "It puts our soldiers at risk because they [the Taliban] can learn a lot, our adversaries can learn a lot about our techniques, tactics and procedures from the body of these leaked documents. And so I think that is what puts our soldiers at risk, and then, as I say, our sources. And, you know, growing up in the intelligence business, protecting your sources is sacrosanct."
Yes, there was already a prosecution underway, and there had been a fairly long investigation beforehand as well. The release of the photos did not prompt any new prosecutions, although it did end up ruining the careers of some higher ranking officers who weren't directly involved except for being in the chain of command.

Julian Assange responded to the criticism by insisting that any risk to informants’ lives was outweighed by the overall importance of publishing the information.
Oh, ya, that's top notch journalism right there.
I’m sure the Taliban think tank and research analysts who work there are pouring thru those documents as we speak.
Ya, its not like a person's career is a big deal or anything.
These leaks are specific enough to present a very real threat to some of our friends and their families and will most likely have the effect of keeping someone else from helping us in the future because we can't seem to keep their secrets a secret.
... The facts are that there are some very intelligent and western university educated members of the Taliban ...
Well, his family was in the cement and construction business, sort of follows, eh?OBL has a civil engineering degree, IIRC.
Let's hope no-one helps the US launch and prosecute any more bloody wars of aggression.
Sounds good to me. Why don't you email Assange and let him know that you're qualified to make strategic decisions on behalf of the U.S. and its allies. Better yet, why don't you tell him that you're authorized to make such decisions. I'm sure he'd be very grateful to add such rare and vital competencies to his repertoire.I suppose a body count could be seen as a negative, but what about the revelation that the Paks are aiding the Taliban? Seems to me that a bit of whacking of each other in that scenario might be to our advantage.