February 14, 2011 11:43 AM

WikiLeaks Preparing to Release More Afghan Files

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CBSNews
The war in Afghanistan, and WikiLeaks

The war in Afghanistan, and WikiLeaks (CBS/AP)

(CBS/AP)  Updated at 4:12 p.m. ET

WikiLeaks spokesman Julian Assange said Thursday his organization is preparing to release the rest of the secret Afghan war documents it has on file.

WikiLeaks already has published 77,000 classified U.S. military reports covering the war in Afghanistan from 2004 to 2010, an extraordinary disclosure which some say could expose human rights abuses across the NATO-led campaign.

Special Section: Afghanistan

The disclosure also has angered the Pentagon, which has accused WikiLeaks of endangering the lives of soldiers and informants in the field, and demanded that WikiLeaks refrain from publishing any more secret data.

Speaking via videolink to London's Frontline Club, Assange said he had no intention of holding back. He gave no specific timeframe, but he said his organization was about halfway through those 15,000 or so secret files previously held back from publication.

"We're about 7,000 reports in," he said, adding that he would definitely publish them. There was no indication as to whether Assange would give the documents to The New York Times, The Guardian, and Der Spiegel - as he did before - or simply dump them on his website.

Assange said he had "no comment" about his current whereabouts.

Reporters Without Borders has criticized WikiLeaks, saying the group showed ''incredible irresponsibility'' in publishing the secret Afghan war documents.

The international media watchdog said Thursday that while the whistleblower group had often played a useful role, revealing the identity of Afghan informants ''is highly dangerous.''

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Assange is under pressure from U.S. authorities who have thrown the resources of the military and the FBI into investigating the source of his scoop. The Pentagon has a task force of about 100 people reading the leaked documents to assess the damage done and working, for instance, to alert Afghans who might be identified by name and now could be in danger.

The Pentagon says it believes the next document dump by WikiLeaks will be even more damaging to U.S. security and the war effort than the organization's initial release of some 76,000 war files.

Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said Thursday that the military believes it has identified the additional 15,000 classified documents that WikiLeaks has vowed to release.

Morrell declined to identify the documents other than to say that their exposure would be ever more damaging than the thousands already published.

Other governments also reportedly have been urged to look into Assange and his international network of activists, but it's not clear how aggressive the U.S. has been in pursuing Assange.

Earlier Thursday, Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith told The Associated Press that Washington had not approached his government about pursuing possible criminal charges against Assange, an Australian citizen, or about putting restrictions on his travel.

"Quite clearly we're working closely with the United States on these matters," Smith said, citing Australia's Defense Department and the Pentagon as the agencies working together. "These are very serious matters for concern."

Australia, which has some 1,550 troops in Afghanistan, already has launched its own investigation into whether posting classified military documents had compromised the national interest or endangered soldiers.

Asked how the Pentagon is cooperating with Australia, Defense Department spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said the U.S. task force is sharing details it finds in the leaked documents.

"Our task force is reaching out to our counterparts to update them on information that we may be finding that affects them," including information that "may affect their forces," Lapan told reporters Thursday.

"When we're coming across things that involve our allies, we are sharing info with them," he said, adding that he knows of no other form or more general military cooperation with allies on the issue. Lapan didn't name the nations that the task force has contacted.

CBS/AP
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by lucifersshadow August 15, 2010 9:12 AM EDT
The USA has been in more wars than any other country on the planet, we spend more time at war than at peace . . . that has got to tell you something . . . the problem is not over there . . . . it is right here . . . While China is finding allies and making alliances with other countries regardless of the other countries type of government, our retarded politicians think they can change the governments in other countries by using force. And for all those Cheney-like so-called "patriots" out there . . . if you break the bank with your stupid wars, where is your national security then? It did not work in Vietnam, will not work in Iraq, or Afghanastan. If the population endemic to that country wants change bad enough, they will find a way, but us going in like cowboys with a shoot first and ask questions later mentality is just plain stupidity. Then we wonder why we can't keep the deficit down, our infrastructure up-to-date, stay on the cutting edge of technology, educate, and take care of our own people. Duuuhhh! It's a no-brainer. Hopefully, in the future, our politicians will become wiser and stop trying to dictate to other countries how they should run themselves. I won't hold my breath though, they learned nothing from Vietnam, so there is nothing that says they will learn anything from their failures in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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by steven1919 August 13, 2010 3:57 PM EDT
Most americans are not dumb. They know there are things that go on behind the scenes. We just choose not to see it because it is not something that affects our every day life. That is the sad truth. But if wiki leaks wants to release info that could get our soldiers killed then they need to be treated as a terrorist threat and bombed. If they are that worried about the truth then go send out some journalists in the field to feed a direct untampered news report to the internet. The people who care and can think for themselves will gladly watch. But I will not agree with someone doing this knowing it will hurt the americans doing what they are told.
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by Benny_Acosta August 13, 2010 11:21 AM EDT
I agree with WikiLeaks. I think they should publish because it's time for the countries of the world to be honest about what they want and why. We are too many, and the times are too trying to continue on fighting and killing each other over things that never end up benefiting the average person.

We need each other. Events in one part of the world affect people in other parts of the world. Our economic problems show this. Our political problems show this. Natural disasters our showing us as well. The time for secrets is over. We (men specifically), need to be honest with ourselves and each other. We need to rise above our own petty self interests, and look out for each other. It can be done.

Come and see for yourself. http://www.perceivingreality.com
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by wyodutch August 13, 2010 8:12 AM EDT
The Empire does hate the truth.
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In another of the Empire's Wars, a man named Daniel Ellsberg turned on the light in the Empires kitchen and the public was shocked to see all the cockroaches and rats scurrying around. So shocked in fact, that the public concluded that 58,000 of it's sons and daughters in cemeteries was enough... enough.
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If Americans had the spine to shoulder the cost of these endless wars... with a surtax and a draft, the wars would have ended long ago. Since we borrow the money from red china and the only deaths are from the working class, America doesn't give a hoot about the wars.
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I think WikiLeaks will force Americans to see the cockroaches and the rats.
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by Simifanene August 12, 2010 10:11 PM EDT
Isn't anyone curious about why the government is so upset about these field reports? What are they hiding? How bad was it? Was it worse than the Abu Grey pictures of our marines stacking naked men in a pile as they stood around them with their German Sheperd dog's snipping and biting the pile of humanity? Could it be worse that our the stories of our troops torturing, (I'm sorry, I should have said enhanced interrogation, right Cheney?)? What are they hiding? It's got me thinking. How about your?
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by americanairman August 13, 2010 8:44 AM EDT
There are so many things wrong in this comment I don't know where to start, and having said that, get your facts straight or no one will take you seriously. Did you stop to think that it might not be what the government is hiding? Maybe what 25 year old special forces troop they're trying to protect or something similar? These military documents are classified for a reason. Next, it's not "Abu Grey". Try Abu Ghraib. And it was Army, not Marines, and those solidiers have been punished for their actions. Let's not dwell on the past. And no "Troops" were tortuing anyway. It was an investagation about CIA torture techniques. I don't usually like to correct comments but this one was so ignorant and stupid I couldn't resist. The only thing that has me thinking is how we can protect anyone that is over there from getting hurt from these leaked documents.
by Socialization August 12, 2010 9:30 PM EDT
Seems as if the crazy liberal anti American military class assignment was well adhered tonight on this blog.

Pathetic losers you all are....
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by MilitaryRetiree August 12, 2010 8:37 PM EDT
Maybe it's time for the Attorney General to seek an injunction against "Wikileaks" then put the CEO on trial for treason.
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by rafaeldrc August 12, 2010 8:46 PM EDT
Treason? You have to be a citizen or agent of the government to be held for treason.
by rafaeldrc August 12, 2010 7:59 PM EDT
When you maintain secrets and/or withhold the truth, but particularly, when those pieces of history are hidden by the ton, sooner or later the truth may or will leak out. I want to know just what murderous activities have been taking place. If it jeopardized soldiers, so what. Our soldiers have been killing right and left. We killed 500,000 people in Iraq - a nation with no WMD. Our soldiers are more a menace to humanity than any terrorist. Thank you Wikileaks for forcing the truth (whether we like it or not)!
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by sorerect August 12, 2010 7:11 PM EDT
Ha Ha Ha! The WikiLeaks idea is really a device to create confusing and discord within the Taliban. Don't you see, they will be cutting off heads of those they need the most. Ha Ha! Good one. Thank you Australia. Genius!
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by greenlantern1 August 12, 2010 5:30 PM EDT
Dear Sirs,
The Pentagon Papers were a forgery.
The Diem Cable, in particular, was found it E. Howard Hunt's safe!
It "proved" that JFK masterminded the assassination of Diem.
No wonder the South Vietnamese distrusted us.
If it had been genuine, why didn't Lodge keep it?
Didn't he hear of the Pumpkin Papers?
During WW2 one of our greatest generals, General George Patton, played Hitler for a sucker.
In OPERATION FORTITUDE, he convinced Hitler that the actual invasion would be at Calais right after the Normandy "diversion".
Until Wikileaks, the enemy was so bamboozled that he did not know whether to wait or to attack.
Nixon sued the Times to take the heat off him.
FOX NEWS has already said that a timetable is a stupid and that it wants Obama to fail.
FOX'S Oliver North has already claimed that Wikileaks is a "leftist" organization.
Like Nixon, covering their tracks.
How many American soldiers are dying because of there political stunts?
Clifford Spencer
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