Blogs: Pourquoi moi non plus je ne lis plus Eolas (Never a poet has more freely interpreted nature than a jurist reality)

22 décembre, 2010
Mon cher Busiris, nous savons tous ici que le droit est la plus puissante des écoles de l’imagination. Jamais poète n’a interprété la nature aussi librement qu’un juriste la réalité. Hector (Jean Giraudoux, La Guerre de Troie n’aura pas lieu)

Eolas est le pseudonyme d’un avocat parisien trentenaire, qui a emprunté au gaélique irlandais ce mot qui signifie « connaissance, information ». On est d’office mis dans l’atmosphère du blog, avec prière de s’en montrer digne. A priori, il n’avait rien pour plaire. Une mise en page ultra-sobre, des textes longs, parfois très longs, une matière austère – le droit, avec une appétence particulière pour celui, aride entre tous, des étrangers – un ton de donneur de leçons qui ne souffre guère la critique, un art du soufflet épistolaire à vous glacer les doigts sur le clavier. Mais aussi, entre deux salves contre la presse et son incurie, ou contre tous ceux, en général, qui s’aventurent à parler de la chose juridique sans la rigueur nécessaire, un humour redoutable et quelques joyeux moments de légèreté. (…) La garde des sceaux est la seule à s’être vu décerner deux prix Busiris, une distinction parodique inventée par Eolas, en hommage à ce personnage de juriste sicilien déniché chez Giraudoux, dans La guerre de Troie n’aura pas lieu, capable de démontrer d’abord que la manoeuvre des navires grecs est belliqueuse et ne peut être réparée que par la guerre, puis d’argumenter avec la même vigueur en sens inverse lorsque Hector menace de le tuer. Moins savamment résumé, ce prix couronne donc tous ceux qui, avec le même aplomb, soutiennent tout et le contraire de tout. Le Monde

Puisque Julian Assange prétend informer, pourquoi ne pas le soumettre alors à la question que la justice pose traditionnellement aux journalistes  : le droit à l’information du public justifie-t-il les atteintes aux autres droits qui ont été nécessaires pour le satisfaire ? Ce qui nous amène à une autre question, plus vaste : la transparence totale,  mais pour quoi faire ? (…) Car le secret ne dissimule pas forcément l’intéressant, de même que l’information capitale n’est pas forcément secrète. (…) Informer n’est plus art de révéler ce qui est secret, mais capacité de comprendre et d’expliquer ce à quoi tout le monde peut avoir accès. Plus que jamais le vrai journalisme va devoir s’inscrire dans le réel, aller sur le terrain, interroger les acteurs de l’actualité, rassembler les pièces d’un puzzle, observer, éclairer, expliquer, dégager le sens. Car  l’information, la vraie, hurle mais on ne l’entend pas. Elle est noyée dans la masse, illisible, technique, éparpillée, écrasée par l’anodin, le kitsch, le racoleur, maquillée par la pub, le marketing, etc. Et Assange sans s’en rendre compte ne fait que rajouter à ce déluge d’informations incompréhensibles. Aliocha

Attention: un Busiris peut en cacher un autre!

Comment, en deux questions, un blog arrive à en ramener un autre que l’on avait longtemps considéré comme brillant à ses soudain aveuglantes limites …

Retour à l’heure où, sur la loi anti-piratage, le célèbre avocat blogueur masqué se voit tout d’un coup bombardé Conseiller du Prince

Sur le billet d’une journaliste-juriste qui redonne (au moins dans ce billet-là) envie de lire du bon journalisme et de la bonne analyse juridique …

Et qui justement sur la question du pirate d’informations confidentielles Julian Assange, renvoie à ses chères études tout ce que semble avoir à en dire notre Maire Eolas national.

A savoir un interminable pinaillage sur les procédures contradictoires qui, en un énième étrillage du malheureux Eric Besson, finit par en oublier d’envisager même une seconde… le point de vue opposé!

Autrement dit,  la question qu’on aurait logiquement attendue d’un juriste et que, comme le rappelle très justement notre journaliste-juriste, la justice pose traditionnellement aux journalistes: « le droit à l’information du public justifie-t-il les atteintes aux autres droits qui ont été nécessaires pour le satisfaire? »

Ou, plus prosaïquement, comment l’avocat qu’il est (et qui a prouvé à l’occasion qu’il peut aussi dépasser les pinaillages désincarnés et stériles du juridicisme) aurait réagi au recel et à la divulgation à tous vents de dossiers confidentiels qui lui auraient été volés ?

Sans parler, d’un point de vue plus journalistique, l’autre question de l’intérêt de noyer ainsi le public sous un tel déluge d’informations en un temps où, comme elle le dit si bien, l’important n’est plus tant de « révéler ce qui est secret » que « la capacité de comprendre et d’expliquer ce à quoi tout le monde peut avoir accès » ….

Passionnant Julian Assange…

La Plume d’Aliocha

8 décembre 10

Voilà, ça y est, ils ont arrêté l’ange maudit de l’information, Julian Assange. Ce n’est pas pour avoir violé le secret des grandes démocraties que Julian Assange est entre les mains de la justice, mais parce qu’il est accusé d’avoir violé deux femmes ou, plus précisément, d’avoir eu avec elles des rapports sexuels non protégés avant de disparaître dans la nature. Le destin est farceur. L’homme qui terrorise la diplomatie mondiale se retrouve dans les filets de la police pour une banale histoire de viol, de vrais viols. Présumés. Et peut-être même fabriqués. Quand les autres viols, ceux du secret, sont beaucoup plus évidents, à défaut d’être déjà démontrés juridiquement. Il y a des gens comme ça, dont la vie est frappée du sceau de l’extravagance. Assange, ou le goût de la transgression…

Mais revenons à Assange le révolutionnaire de l’information. Nous voici tous bien embarrassés.  Faut-il monter au créneau pour sauver Wikileaks ? Et déjà l’on se demande si Julian Assange et Wikileaks font encore cause commune, tant la personnalité de son inventeur semble controversée jusqu’au sein même de son organisation. Serait-on en train de passer à côté de la grande évolution du journalisme, de la transparence, et de la démocratie, en laissant David se défendre seul contre Goliath ? Ses intérêt sont-ils aussi les nôtres ? Grave question si l’on songe qu’il n’y a que dans les légendes et les paraboles que le faible triomphe du fort. Or, Julian Assange est en bien fâcheuse posture. Il a défié et vaincu la plus grande puissance du monde dans l’univers virtuel, le voici confronté à l’immense pouvoir que conserve le réel, celui de contraindre les corps, d’arrêter, d’emprisonner, de punir. Fabuleux combat qu’on dirait tout droit sorti des studios d’Hollywood. Ses légions déjà se vengent en paralysant les sites qui se sont rendus complices des ennemis de Julian. Splendide et jouissif pouvoir des hackers. Comment résister à la tentation d’applaudir ?

Mettons à part l’enthousiasme naturel que suscitent tant de prouesses aventureuses. Que penser sérieusement de ce drôle de jeune homme aux cheveux pâles et au teint aussi blafard qu’une lumière d’écran d’ordinateur ? On le croirait tout droit sorti d’un épisode des Mystères de l’Ouest ou d’un James Bond. Sorte d’ange blond utilisé à contre-emploi. Justement. Ange ou démon, Julian Assange ? Démocrate visionnaire ou fou mégalomane en passe de mettre la planète à feu et à sang ? Pour comprendre Assange, sans doute faut-il tenter de plonger dans son esprit. Qu’a-t-il voulu faire ? Utiliser le formidable outil qu’est Internet pour permettre aux détenteurs d’informations confidentielles de les mettre à disposition du plus large public tout en conservant la protection de l’anonymat. Et ça a marché ! Les sources ont craché et les plus grands journaux ont relayé. Et pour cause, il réalisait le fantasme absolu du journalisme : pénétrer les secrets d’Etat. Ne plus s’en tenir aux déclarations des uns et des autres mais passer de l’autre côté du miroir, tenir en main les preuves tangibles, secrètes, cachées, inaccessibles. La caverne d’Ali Baba !

Seulement voilà, les fantasmes c’est bien connu ne devraient jamais se réaliser. Etait-il judicieux de s’attaquer aux secrets des démocraties ? N’y avait-il pas de meilleure cause à défendre ? A-t-on besoin de cette transparence totale ? Quels dangers Julian Assange nous fait-il courir, en livrant ainsi nos secrets aux yeux de tous, y compris de nos ennemis ? Chacun hésite, tergiverse, de sorte que notre Robin des bois de l’information peine à trouver des émules en dehors du cercle restreint des geeks. Et pourtant, les secrets d’Etat sont nos secrets. Il nous les rend, ce qui devrait nous inspirer un minimum de gratitude. Car c’est pour nous qu’il oeuvre, pour la liberté, la démocratie, pour le peuple contre la tyrannie des Etats, fussent-ils démocratiques.

Même la presse est embarrassée. Vous la voyez danser d’un pied sur l’autre ? Rendre compte avec une hypocrite objectivité des malheurs qui s’abattent sur l’ange blond ? C’est qu’Assange la fascine autant qu’il lui fait peur. Il perturbe les règles, il joue à grande échelle, il exhume des dizaines de milliers de documents quand on se contentait il n’y a pas si longtemps encore d’une page ou deux que, pompeusement, l’on nommait scoop.  Et puis il joue à cache-cache. Gare au pirate ! Plus généralement, l’information ne se négocie plus entre gens responsables, dans un cadre professionnel identifié,  moitié off moitié on, non désormais tout est sur la table, l’utile et le dérisoire, le dangereux et l’anodin. Livré par des anonymes à un site introuvable, tenu par des inconnus, à destination d’autres inconnus.

Puisque Julian Assange prétend informer, pourquoi ne pas le soumettre alors à la question que la justice pose traditionnellement aux journalistes  : le droit à l’information du public justifie-t-il les atteintes aux autres droits qui ont été nécessaires pour le satisfaire ? Ce qui nous amène à une autre question, plus vaste : la transparence totale,  mais pour quoi faire ? Jusqu’à présent le journalisme avait vent d’une affaire et partait en chasse. De presque rien, une confidence, un soupçon, il devait tirer un dossier argumenté, solide, pièces à l’appui. Puis trier, peser le pour et le contre, séparer le bon grain de l’ivraie, avant de publier. Et ce faisant, d’engager sa responsabilité. Assange inverse la mécanique. On publie la matière brute et puis on voit ce qu’il en sort. En ceci, il est parfaitement dans son époque, celle de la transparence. Aujourd’hui tout est devenu public ou presque, il suffit de savoir chercher, et surtout de comprendre ce qu’on trouve. Il n’a fait que franchir l’ultime barrière du secret diplomatique et militaire.

Tout est là, il ne reste plus qu’à trier. Au risque de se faire engloutir par la montagne d’informations mises au jour. Au risque aussi de ne plus voir l’essentiel. Car le secret ne dissimule pas forcément l’intéressant, de même que l’information capitale n’est pas forcément secrète. Au fond Assange n’a fait qu’utiliser le virtuel pour réaliser un fantasme suranné, celui de dévoiler le caché. Son combat, aussi étonnant que ça paraisse, est sans doute déjà dépassé. En tout cas dans les grandes démocraties. En réalisant un rêve d’enfant, c’est-à-dire d’avant le web, il a oublié que le monde entre temps avait changé.

Informer n’est plus art de révéler ce qui est secret, mais capacité de comprendre et d’expliquer ce à quoi tout le monde peut avoir accès. Plus que jamais le vrai journalisme va devoir s’inscrire dans le réel, aller sur le terrain, interroger les acteurs de l’actualité, rassembler les pièces d’un puzzle, observer, éclairer, expliquer, dégager le sens. Car  l’information, la vraie, hurle mais on ne l’entend pas. Elle est noyée dans la masse, illisible, technique, éparpillée, écrasée par l’anodin, le kitsch, le racoleur, maquillée par la pub, le marketing, etc. Et Assange sans s’en rendre compte ne fait que rajouter à ce déluge d’informations incompréhensibles.

Assange est un pirate. C’est un bateleur aussi qui n’hésite pas à trouver scandaleux que si peu de journalistes meurent dans l’exercice de leur métier. Hâtons-nous d’en rire de peur d’être tenté de plonger ce héros virtuel dans la dure réalité pour lui rappeler que, dans la vraie vie, les héros ne meurent pas pour de faux.

Alors, finalement, faut-il condamner Assange ou au contraire le défendre ? Je laisse à d’autres le soin de prendre parti, personnellement, je n’en sais rien. Ce dont je suis sûre en revanche, c’est qu’il faut l’observer et réfléchir. Car il est une métaphore de notre monde moderne, celui qu’on est en train de façonner. Il nous interroge sur notre rapport à l’information, au secret, à la transparence, au pouvoir. Il est l’enfant génial et monstrueux de son époque, l’indice de ce que sera demain. D’un futur qu’il faut, au choix, souhaiter ou redouter.

Comme Jérôme Kerviel, il nous montre accessoirement que la planète entière peut, du jour au lendemain, se trouver mise en péril par un pirate dont le pouvoir réside moins dans l’habileté que dans la capacité à s’émanciper des règles pour jouer des failles de nos systèmes infiniment sophistiqués. Vertigineuse perspective…

Passionnant Julian Assange.

A comparer avec:

Prix Busiris pour Éric Besson

Eolas

19 décembre 2010  

 Éric Besson nous démontre une fois de plus sa spectaculaire capacité d’adaptation en décrochant un nouveau prix Burisis dans ses nouvelles attributions de ministre de l’industrie.

Quelques éléments de contexte sur l’attribution de ce prix.

Mes lecteurs auront naturellement entendu parler de l’affaire WikiLeaks. Ce site fondé en 2006 s’est fait une spécialité de se procurer des documents confidentiels, principalement américains, et de les publier.

Récemment, ce site a beaucoup fait parler de lui en publiant, par l’intermédiaire de 5 journaux de divers pays (Le Monde en France, El Pais en Espagne, The Guardian au Royaume-Uni, Der Spiegel en Allemagne, et le New York Times aux États-Unis), des câbles diplomatiques américains, publication qui a provoqué l’ire de ce pays.

Faute de voie de recours légale (la publication de ces documents ne tombe pas à ma connaissance sous le coup de la loi, car les responsables du site WikiLeaks ne sont pas tenus au secret diplomatique : c’était aux États-Unis de prendre les précautions suffisantes pour que ces documents ne fuitent pas) On devine aisément que ce pays déploie toute son influence pour colmater cette brèche. Ainsi, les sociétés PayPal, Visa et Mastercard refusent désormais de fournir leur service pour faire des dons à ce site (mais rassurez-vous, elles acceptent toujours de fournir leurs services pour la boutique du Ku Klux Klan— vous m’excuserez de ne pas faire de lien).

Étant confrontée à des problèmes répétés d’hébergement, WikiLeaks va recourir aux services de la société française Octopuce, qui loue des serveurs appartenant à la société OVH, située à Roubaix (Ch’Nord).

La société OVH va accepter ce nouveau client indirect avec l’enthousiasme qui accueille un vendeur de cordes dans la maison d’un pendu, sentant le doux vent des ennuis. 

Et en effet, le ministre chargé de l’Industrie, de l’Énergie et de l’Économie numérique n’a pas tardé à réagir et à exprimer sa désapprobation de l’hébergement de ce site sur le sol français. Las, dans notre République, le courroux d’un ministre ne fait pas loi. Et comme ledit ministre avait, dans son précédent poste, montré ses lacunes dans la maîtrise du droit, il a écrit le 3 décembre dernier au Conseil général de l’industrie, de l’énergie et des technologies (CGIET), une lettre (pdf) lui demandant de lui indiquer les voies légales d’obtenir l’interdiction de l’hébergement de ce site, et fissa. Il s’agit ici de la technique bien connu du droit administratif de la patate chaude. À ma connaissance, le CGIET n’a pas répondu à ce jour, mais ce billet y pourvoira.

Le même jour, le dirigeant d’OVH a décidé de passer à l’offensive et s’est livré à une très étrange manœuvre judiciaire.

Il a saisi le président du tribunal de grande instance de Lille et de Paris d’une requête visant à voir déclarer si cet hébergement par la société Octopuce était ou non illicite.

Ici, devant cette mer de mékéskidis aux yeux arrondis, des explications s’imposent. Prenez une aspirine, on va faire de la procédure. C’est indispensable pour savourer le prix Busiris du jour.

Comme je l’explique souvent, mais ne le rappelle jamais assez, le point essentiel de toute action en justice est qu’elle consiste à demander au juge de trancher une question dont il est saisi. Pour qu’une question soit tranchée, encore faut-il qu’elle se pose, c’est-à-dire que deux points de vue s’opposent.

Le droit est la science des exceptions, et ce principe en connaît. Il existe des actions où les parties sont d’accord, mais où la loi exige que le juge y passe pour s’assurer que cet accord respecte la loi. Par exemple : le divorce par consentement mutuel, où le juge va s’assurer que l’accord des plus-pour-longtemps époux respecte l’intérêt des enfants et l’égalité des époux.

Cette confrontation des points de vue est le cœur de tout procès : on l’appelle le principe du contradictoire, qui ne signifie pas que le juge dit une chose et son contraire, mais que les deux points de vue ont pu loyalement s’exprimer, ce qui suppose qu’avant l’audience, chaque partie ait connaissance de l’argumentation et surtout des preuves produites par l’autre.

Il existe des cas exceptionnels où un juge statue à la demande d’une seule personne, et rende une décision sans confrontation des points de vue. Cela se justifie par un nécessaire effet de surprise. Ainsi, en droit pénal, le juge des libertés et de la détention doit-il être saisi par le parquet qui souhaite faire effectuer une perquisition en dehors des heures légales (6h00 – 21h00) dans le cadre d’une enquête sur de la délinquance organisée (art. 706-89 du CPP). Vous comprendrez aisément qu’on ne puisse demander à la personne concernée de faire valoir ses arguments.

En matière civile, c’est le domaine de l’ordonnance sur requête (art. 493 et s. du Code de procédure civile). Une partie saisit le président du tribunal ou le juge qu’il délègue d’une demande motivée expliquant les mesures qu’il souhaite voir autoriser par le juge. Cela se fait très simplement, en se présentant au greffe du tribunal avec sa requête en deux exemplaires (l’usage exige qu’on rédige également le projet d’ordonnance, que le juge n’ait plus qu’à la signer après l’avoir le cas échéant modifiée à la main). Le juge examine la requête et les pièces produites à l’appui, entend l’avocat, lui pose les questions qu’il souhaite et rend sa décision sur le champ : refus, acceptation, avec éventuellement des réserves. C’était autrefois le domaine des autorisations des constat d’adultère qui ont fait la joie des pièces de boulevard. Là aussi, la mesure demandée doit être incompatible avec un débat contradictoire préalable. On le comprend quand il s’agit d’autoriser un constat d’adultère, ou d’effectuer une saisie conservatoire pour s’assurer que des fonds présents sur un compte ne vont pas disparaître le temps que le procès à venir soit fini. Une des questions qui est inévitablement débattue est : en quoi la mesure ordonnée est-elle incompatible avec ce principe du contradictoire ? Si l’avocat n’a pas de bonnes raisons à donner au juge, il verra sa requête rejetée, ainsi que quand la mesure paraît non nécessaire au juge. Dernière particularité liée à sa nature : l’ordonnance sur requête n’est jamais définitive : toute personne concernée par ses effets peut revenir devant le juge pour lui demander de la modifier ou de l’annuler (on dit  la rapporter). Par voie de conséquence, il n’y a pas de délai d’appel pour le tiers concerné par la mesure.

Revenons-en à OVH. Elle va présenter deux requêtes aux fins d’ordonnance, une au juge de Lille et une autre au juge de Paris, demandant au juge de lui dire si oui ou non, héberger Wikileaks est légal au regard du droit français. L’idée étant, on le comprend facilement, de se mettre à l’abri de l’ire ministérielle, en brandissant une autorisation du juge.

Mais comme vous l’avez compris, l’objet d’une ordonnance sur requête n’a jamais été de trancher un point de droit, mais d’ordonner des mesures provisoires.

C’est donc de manière très prévisible que les deux juges des requêtes vont rejeter les requêtes d’OVH. Le juge de Paris se contentera d’une brève mention que le requérant « se devait à tout le moins d’agir en présence de la société Octopuce », c’est-à-dire qu’ici le débat contradictoire s’imposait. Le juge lillois sera plus disert :

Il n’appartient pas au président du tribunal, saisi sur requête (…) de dire si la situation décrite est ou non constitutive d’un trouble manifestement illicite. Il appartient à la société requérante, si elle estime que sa responsabilité peut-être engagée, d’elle-même suspendre l’hébergement des sites WIKILEAKS, sans nécessité d’une autorisation judiciaire pour ce faire.

Autrement dit : “je suis président du tribunal, pas votre directeur juridique. Assumez vos responsabilités.” Ou encore “Comment ? La justice ne m’empêche pas d’être libre ?”

Et c’est maintenant qu’entre en scène notre héros du jour, Éric Besson. Nous l’avons vu, il est hostile au principe de l’hébergement de Wikileaks en France. Nous passerons sur l’absurdité de vouloir dire qu’un site internet est quelque part dans le monde. Le prix Busiris s’intéresse aux aberrations juridiques, pas informatiques.

Il va s’emparer de ces non-décisions de justice, par lesquelles deux juges ont refusé de dire quoi que ce soit, pour leur faire dire quelque chose. Il a en effet déclaré dans un communiqué adressé à l’AFP :

Toutes les requêtes d’OVH ont été rejetées. La justice n’a pas voulu autoriser l’hébergement d’un tel site en France. C’est une bonne nouvelle pour tous ceux qui sont choqués par les activités irresponsables du site WikiLeaks.

L’aberrance juridique du propos devrait vous apparaître au vu de mes explications ci-dessus. La justice n’a pas refusé d’autoriser l’hébergement du site Wikileaks. Elle ne l’a pas autorisé, ni interdit, elle n’a rien dit, si ce n’est l’évidence : la procédure mise en œuvre n’est pas appropriée.

Le motif d’opportunité politique est ici manifeste : il s’agit de récupérer un non événement pour faire la chasse à un site qui ne fait rien d’illégal en droit français mais embête notre ami américain.

Quant à la mauvaise foi d’Éric Besson, elle ressort de la nature même du propos, qui consiste à faire dire à la justice ce qu’elle n’a clairement pas dit, il n’est que de lire l’ordonnance lilloise pour le comprendre, en espérant que son autorité de ministre suppléera à la réalité, et que le lecteur n’aura pas lu la décision de justice ainsi interprétée (interprétée comme on interprète un hymne funèbre s’entend).

Monsieur Éric Besson se voit donc attribuer son quatrième prix Busiris, avec encouragements de l’Académie.

Voir enfin (merci Michel):

Contre Eolas

La Plume d’Aliocha

28 octobre 08

Lorsque j’ai découvert le blog d’Eolas, il y a environ 3 ans, j’ai été surprise et séduite par la qualité de ses articles, leur fréquence, leur haute tenue, leur valeur pédagogique, leur style… Il y a un an j’y suis revenue, j’y ai trouvé les mêmes vertus et le blog m’a « attrapée ». Très vite toutefois, j’ai observé que ce lieu de débat devenait régulièrement un arène où tous les coups étaient permis, les propos durs, les jugements sans appel. Et puis j’y ai vu autre chose aussi. Un communautarisme juridique que je ne connaissais que trop bien et que je trouvais là exacerbé jusqu’à son paroxysme bien que le blog se soit fixé pour objectif de vulgariser. Celui qui comprenait, adhérait, félicitait était adoubé. Mais malheur au contradicteur, à celui qui doutait ou peinait à comprendre. Malheur surtout à celui qui tentait d’expliquer à son tour sa logique à lui. Elle n’était pas juridique et donc ne pouvait être que nulle et non avenue. La petite communauté alors faisait bloc et le lynchage n’était jamais loin. J’avoue avoir pris plaisir à ces empoignades, j’aime les bons mots et puis dans bien des cas, les fessées publiques étaient objectivement méritées. En tant que juriste, j’y ai fait ma place, trouvé un rôle, au point d’oublier certaines de mes valeurs, mais j’y reviendrai. Disons que j’ai été durant quelques mois, sans m’en apercevoir, une journaliste sur le terrain, je me suis fondue dans le paysage et j’ai observé, par réflexe professionnel, ça laisse des traces. Parfois la brutalité des réactions était si hors de proportion que je me suis révoltée au risque de rompre la fragile concorde entre le Maître et moi. D’ailleurs avant de me battre avec Eolas pour défendre la presse, je l’ai fait pour me défendre, puis défendre les victimes inutiles de ses saillies. Je trouvais tellement dommage que certains se détournent de lui pour une réflexion trop vive, un mouvement d’humeur. Au fond, je crois maintenant que ce mode de fonctionnement m’a toujours choquée, mais l’intérêt que je trouvais à le lire méritait bien de supporter quelques inconvénients. Je m’étais peut être aussi laissée contaminée. C’est toujours ainsi la vie, un subtil équilibre, rien n’est jamais parfait mais on s’accommode, on s’adapte. Sauf qu’hier cet équilibre a dérapé. Pourquoi ?

Un esprit libre

Sans doute à cause d’un effet d’accumulation. D’abord, je n’aime pas les arènes, et si je sais combattre je ne le fais que rarement, ce n’est pas dans mon caractère, c’est encore moins dans ma philosophie de l’existence. A mes yeux la violence, fut-elle seulement verbale, ne doit être que l’ultime recours, lorsque toutes les autres solutions ont été épuisées. Au surplus, je doute que les affrontements à mort puissent avoir une quelconque vertu intellectuelle. On ne convainc pas en agressant, on n’évolue pas sur le chemin de la connaissance en massacrant ses interlocuteurs, on ne se fait pas comprendre en humiliant. On ne fait tout au plus qu’affirmer sa supériorité intellectuelle. Triste victoire.  La polémique qui m’a opposée ces derniers mois à Eolas, je la connais par coeur. Depuis 12 ans j’affronte régulièrement les spécialistes dont je parle dans mes articles.  Tous ont une bonne raison de mépriser les journalistes. J’ai fait ma place, travaillé jour et nuit pour exercer mon métier le mieux possible, fini dans bien des cas par connaître les dossiers mieux que ceux que j’interviewais. Dans ces moments-là, journalistes et experts sont enfin réconciliés dans un quête commune du savoir. Ce sont de beaux moments, je vous assure. Parfois, j’ai tendu la main à mes détracteurs les plus virulents, je les ai fait entrer dans mon métier et ils ont appris à en mesurer la difficulté et les contraintes, à le comprendre, puis à l’estimer. Quand je suis arrivée chez Eolas, j’ai pensé qu’il était possible de faire de même, que sa rage contre les journalistes n’était pas incurable. J’étais persuadée qu’il suffisait de dialoguer pour se comprendre et s’apprécier. Ce d’autant plus que nous partagions lui et moi une culture juridique commune. Elle devait immanquablement nous rapprocher. Je me suis trompée, ou j’ai échoué. Cette main tendue est restée dans le vide. Au fond je crois savoir pourquoi, la petite communauté eolassienne a voulu me récupérer dans ses rangs, elle a rêvé que je me joigne au grand concert des détracteurs de la presse. J’aurais pu le faire, voilà qui aurait flatté ma vanité. Imaginez le rôle de journaliste privilégiée que j’aurais obtenu en tapant sur mes confrères. En pointant des erreurs que les juristes eux-mêmes n’apercevaient pas, en dénonçant telle mécanique secrète de la presse qui aurait amplifié le scandale et la rage. Ah ! la belle place que j’aurais eue. Le malheur, c’est que je suis une journaliste, une vraie, que je ne cherche ni le pouvoir, ni la gloire, ni la satisfaction d’appartenir à une communauté d’élites. Tout ce qui m’intéresse c’est de découvrir, de comprendre et de raconter. Un journaliste, c’est un esprit libre. On ne se lève pas devant un ministre, on n’applaudit pas à la fin d’un discours, on ne s’incline devant rien ni personne.  Pour nous le savoir n’est pas un pouvoir, ce n’est pas non plus un temple sacré à protéger, c’est une richesse à partager avec le plus grand nombre. Les pressions, les attaques, les menaces, les chantages sont notre lot quotidien. On s’en moque, mieux, on y prend souvent plaisir, par nature nous sommes un gigantesque pied de nez à toutes les formes de tyrannie. C’est difficile  à expliquer, cela paraîtra sans doute incroyable à ceux qui nous lisent et nous écoutent, encore plus à ceux qui nous jugent médiocres, lâches, paresseux et futiles, mais c’est bien cette petite flamme qui anime tous ceux qui font le métier de journaliste. Même les moins bons, même ceux qui ont renoncé, même ceux qui cirent les pompes du pouvoir ont cet état d’esprit, c’est le métier qui veut ça. Il suffirait, pardon, il suffira d’un rien, bientôt, j’en suis sûre, pour que la petite flamme redevienne un grand feu, chez nous tous.

Les jeux du cirque sont terminés

Et c’est précisément cet esprit journalistique qui hier s’est révolté.  Il y a un conflit insurmontable et profond entre Eolas et moi. Ce n’est pas de ma part du corporatisme, je ne pense pas que ce le soit non plus chez lui. C’est juste l’affrontement de deux caractères irréconciliables. Et de deux visions du savoir aussi. J’ai entendu parler d’une république des blogs. Fort bien, mais quelle est sa vertu si elle aussi devient la victime des jeux de pouvoir, si les lieux de débats se transforment en arènes sanglantes, si le partage du savoir n’est plus qu’un tyrannie des sachants ? Eolas ne cessera jamais d’attaquer la presse et c’est bien parce que je l’ai compris que pour moi la bataille s’arrête ici. Je m’en excuse auprès de tous ceux qui appréciaient nos échanges. Les jeux du cirque sont terminés. Il protège son système, c’est son droit. Il se braque sur ses convictions, refuse d’entendre d’autres logiques que la sienne et chasse sans pitié ses contradicteurs, c’est un style, je le respecte, mais je n’y adhère pas. Car ce faisant, il attaque mon métier sur des vétilles, niant sa mission, refusant de comprendre que le journalisme consiste à informer de l’actualité, lancer les débats, que le premier jet, la première dépêche est souvent un débroussaillage, qu’il faut ensuite en parler, approfondir et que les journaux le font très bien en se concurrençant entre eux, en éclairant le sujet dans les jours qui suivent, en ouvrant leurs colonnes aux experts. Non, pour Eolas, la première faute, fut-elle d’un seul, est mortelle, la presse envoyée au box des accusés, moquée, décrédibilisée, condamnée à mort. Elle a offensé la science, violé le sens des mots, trompé le public. Comment lui expliquer, moi qui ai fait son métier, à quel point la presse est différente du métier d’avocat ou de juge ? Comment lui expliquer que l’écrit n’a pas la même valeur, que l’article de presse ne fait que lancer une nouvelle dans l’espace public à charge pour celui-ci de l’évaluer, la discuter, l’admettre ou la réfuter quand l’acte  judiciaire peut ouvrir ou fermer la porte d’une prison, ruiner ou au contraire enrichir, changer à tout jamais le cours d’un destin. Je ne parviendrai pas à lui faire entendre cela parce qu’il s’y refuse. Il n’est pas le seul, mais il est celui qui s’emporte le plus violemment, qui condamne sans appel, moque, ridiculise, jette aux chiens. Tout cela va trop loin.

Un blogueur d’exception

Fidèle à mes convictions, je finirai cette critique par un éloge. Le blog d’Eolas est d’une qualité exceptionnelle, Eolas lui-même est un des meilleurs juristes que j’ai rencontré. Il me semble qu’en tant que blogueur il ouvre une voie nouvelle, c’est un pionnier. Tout le monde dit qu’il faut faire court sur Internet, il écrit des articles très longs et les lecteurs suivent. Quand le débat public dérape il est souvent le premier à oser le recadrer et il ne se trompe pas. Si nous ne nous étions pas disputés, j’aurais écrit un billet sur la révolution journalistique que constitue le fait de citer une source anonyme issue d’Internet et de montrer ainsi qu’on lui accorde la même foi qu’à un expert connu et identifié du monde réel. C’est une double victoire pour Eolas. J’aurais aussi écrit, suivant en cela Narvic qui a été le premier à identifier le phénomène, que son appel à témoignages de magistrats était une révolution. Mais au fond je suis lasse de toujours entendre, essayer de comprendre et de n’avoir jamais droit à une quelconque réciprocité parce que mon métier est présumé coupable et que cette présomption là est irréfragable.

On peut dans la vie s’obstiner à ne voir que ce qui ne va pas et on peut s’y épuiser. Il n’y a qu’un pas vite franchi entre Cyrano et Don Quichotte. C’est ce que je risque si je continue à polémiquer avec Eolas. Au fond, Philarete a raison, on peut aussi regarder ce qui va bien, continuer d’espérer, garder les yeux fixés sur son étoile. La presse aujourd’hui s’interroge, elle souffre, pour des raisons bien plus profondes que des querelles sémantiques de spécialistes. Ces critiques là, elle les subit depuis sa naissance, elles font partie de son quotidien, elle y a survécu et elle continuera d’y survivre.  J’aurais aimé qu’Eolas et moi parvenions à les surmonter pour avancer ensemble. Il ne l’a pas souhaité. Tant pis. La phase de doutes que traverse ma profession est autrement plus importante à mes yeux.


WikiLeaks: Retour sur l’homme qui voulait être Dieu (Looking back at the man who wanted to be God)

12 décembre, 2010
1,300 people were eventually killed, and 350,000 were displaced. That was a result of our leak. On the other hand, the Kenyan people had a right to that information and 40,000 children a year die of malaria in Kenya. And many more die of money being pulled out of Kenya, and as a result of the Kenyan shilling being debased. Assange (concernant les élections présidentielles kényanes de  2007)
It’s actually fairly irrelevant to talk about whether what Julian is doing is a bad thing or a good thing, because if he wasn’t doing it, somebody else would. He’s a function of technological change. It’s because the technology exists to create these enormous databases, and because it exists it can be leaked. And if it can be leaked, it will be leaked. David Leigh
The problem is not that the purloined cables exposed U.S. hypocrisy or double-dealing. Good God, that’s the essence of diplomacy. That’s what we do; that’s what everyone does. Hence the famous aphorism that a diplomat is an honest man sent abroad to lie for his country. Nothing new here. What is notable, indeed shocking, is the administration’s torpid and passive response to the leaks. What’s appalling is the helplessness of a superpower that not only cannot protect its own secrets but shows the world that if you violate its secrets – massively, wantonly and maliciously – there are no consequences. Charles Krauthammer
J’avais mon propre cheval. J’avais construit mon propre radeau. J’allais pêcher. Je descendais dans les puits et les tunnels des mines. Julian Assange
Le mieux est d’intervenir contre les injustices avant qu’elles ne soient commises, lorsqu’elles n’en sont qu’au stade de l’intention. Julian Assange
Utilisez des ‘tags’ trompeurs, comme ‘Tea Party’ ou ‘Bieber’. Anonymous (Groupe de cybermilitants)
Des Etats-Unis nous est arrivé un mot qui désigne l’art de tout vendre avec une bonne histoire: le storytelling. A l’origine, ce sont des recettes de marketing appliquées à la vie publique. Pour susciter l’adhésion à une candidature politique comme à une marque de lessive, rien ne vaut un récit bien formaté. Les grandes entreprises l’ont compris; le candidat Obama aussi. Mais ils ne sont pas les seuls à savoir tirer les ficelles du storytelling. En l’espèce, le fondateur de WikiLeaks est un expert: la grande réussite de Julian Assange, c’est d’abord la mise en récit de sa vie. (…) Dans une interview de juillet dernier publiée par le Spiegel, Julian Assange évoquait ainsi son projet: «Le mieux est d’intervenir contre les injustices avant qu’elles ne soient commises, lorsqu’elles n’en sont qu’au stade de l’intention.» L’idéal de WikiLeaks serait donc de fouiller les intentions ou les consciences. Comme l’oeil de Dieu poursuivant jusque dans la tombe les Caïn qui tuent leurs frères afghans ou irakiens. (…) Julian Assange prétend vouloir fonder un journalisme «scientifique», mais c’est en utilisant des motifs religieux qu’il fascine. Tissée avec les attributs du divin, son histoire habilement mise en scène fonde la légende du premier «hacktiviste» universellement connu. Il est l’homme qui joue à être Dieu. Le Matin

Enfance à la Tom Sawyer, 37 déménagements, lecteur assidu de Soljenitsyne, génie de l’informatique, air de mutant, vie de nomade intercontinental, SDF de l’ère numérique, habitant des fuseaux horaires, génial hacker, prophète du «journalisme scientifique », « combattant pour la vérité et pour la vérité », « tendance génétique au nomadisme » …

A l’heure où la  future « Personne de l’année » annoncée de Time magazine et accessoirement notoire pirate d’informations sensibles attend dans une prison britannique sa probable extradition en Suède voire aux Etats-Unis …

Et où, au nom de la même transparence, des sites de cybermilitants en sont à demander à leurs soutiens d’utiliser des ‘’tags trompeurs’’ …

Retour, avec un article du quotidien suisse Le Matin, sur celui qui derrière son image complaisamment serinée par nos médias  de croisé de la transparence  (contre, s’il vous plait, la soi-disant conspiration autoritaire qui dirige les Etats-Unis!) …

Se trouve être, face à la particulière  ineptitude de l’actuelle Administration américaine mais aussi grâce à la crasse complaisance de nos médias, un maitre du « récit bien formaté » et un mégalomane prêt à « fouiller jusqu’aux intentions et aux consciences » …

DECRYPTAGE

Julian Assange est un homme qui joue à être Dieu

Julian Assange: il est très attentif à ce qu’il laisse filtrer sur sa vie. Sa biographie est aussi contrôlée que celle d’un dirigeant nord-coréen

Le fondateur de WikiLeaks a tissé sa légende en utilisant des motifs religieux.Sa grande réussite médiatique, c’est le récit de sa vie

Michel Audétat

Le Matin Dimanche

12 décembre 2010

Des Etats-Unis nous est arrivé un mot qui désigne l’art de tout vendre avec une bonne histoire: le storytelling. A l’origine, ce sont des recettes de marketing appliquées à la vie publique. Pour susciter l’adhésion à une candidature politique comme à une marque de lessive, rien ne vaut un récit bien formaté. Les grandes entreprises l’ont compris; le candidat Obama aussi. Mais ils ne sont pas les seuls à savoir tirer les ficelles du storytelling. En l’espèce, le fondateur de WikiLeaks est un expert: la grande réussite de Julian Assange, c’est d’abord la mise en récit de sa vie.

Cette vie a été racontée partout. Dans la presse ont proliféré des portraits qui insistent tous sur sa personnalité mystérieuse, inclassable, romanesque. En réalité, ils dérivent d’une source pratiquement unique: un article fleuve publié en juin 2010 par le New Yorker. Sous la plume de Raffi Khatchadourian apparaissent ici tous les détails qui vont se propager comme des virus à travers la presse mondiale. Les 37 déménagements du jeune Australien. Le Commodore 64 sur lequel le futur hacker fait ses gammes. Le premier cercle d’Alexandre Soljenitsyne qu’il aurait lu trois fois…

Ceux qui ont fréquenté Julian Assange expliquent souvent le soin avec lequel il filtre les détails de sa propre existence. Et on constate que certains d’entre eux, pourtant élémentaires, manquent au tableau. On connaît l’année de sa naissance (1971), mais pas le jour. Et le même flou règne sur le lieu: a-t-il vu le jour à Townsville ou sur Magnetic Island? Cet autodidacte brouille ses origines. Pour un peu, on le dirait incréé. Tel un dieu: le propre de son storytelling, c’est de jouer avec les attributs du divin.

1 Omniprésence

Julian Assange a un air de mutant. Avant d’être sous les verrous, il a mené une vie de nomade intercontinental, sans autre domicile que des chambres d’hôtels ou l’abri temporaire offert par des militants. L’article du New Yorker raconte comment fut montée, en avril dernier, la révélation de la vidéo où l’on voit une attaque menée à Bagdad par un hélicoptère Apache. Une maison est discrètement louée à Reykjavik. Le créateur, penseur, stratège et seul maître à bord de WikiLeaks s’y installe avec une poignée de collaborateurs et une demi-douzaine d’ordinateurs. Puis, une fois l’opération menée, le camp est levé. Et Julian Assange s’évanouit dans la nature.

Un jour en Asie, un autre à Genève, Julian Assange apparaît comme un SDF de l’ère numérique. Soustrait aux pesanteurs terrestres, cet habitant des fuseaux horaires prend soin de mettre en scène sa légèreté immatérielle et son omniprésence. Des témoignages le décrivent en outre toujours rivé à son écran, sans manger ni dormir. Comme si, délié de toutes les contingences humaines, il ne devait être que pur esprit.

A cet égard, les plaintes des deux Suédoises ayant conduit à son arrestation sont le grain de sable qui dérègle le storytelling. Elles ont d’abord mis fin à son omniprésence en l’assignant à un domicile cellulaire fixe. Mais elles rappellent aussi que Julian Assange, loin d’être un pur esprit, possède un corps et une sexualité.

2 Omnipotence

Au départ, Julian Assange a songé s’en prendre à des puissances opaques comme la Chine ou la Russie. Or, très vite, on a vu son combat se concentrer sur les Etats-Unis. Son histoire singulière, c’est celle d’un petit gars sorti d’Australie septentrionale, autant dire de nulle part, qui parvient à faire trembler les murs du Pentagone grâce aux révélations tonitruantes de WikiLeaks – version techno des trompettes de Jéricho. Seul face à la première puissance mondiale, Julian Assange la met au défi. Il la nargue. Il ne paraît pas douter de son propre pouvoir.

Rien d’étonnant si ce fantasme d’omnipotence s’accompagne d’une tendance paranoïaque que les portraits de Julian Assange soulignent volontiers: on sait que la méfiance à l’égard des autres va de pair avec une surestimation de soi-même.

3 Omniscience

Le rêve prophétique de WikiLeaks, c’est la fin du secret. C’est penser un monde où l’exposition permanente de la corruption et des crimes, sous la lumière blanche des documents, rendrait leur perpétuation impossible. Grâce à WikiLeaks, qui est comme une extension de lui-même, Julian Assange voit tout, sait tout des turpitudes humaines: il se présente à l’image d’un Dieu omniscient.

Dans une interview de juillet dernier publiée par le Spiegel, Julian Assange évoquait ainsi son projet: «Le mieux est d’intervenir contre les injustices avant qu’elles ne soient commises, lorsqu’elles n’en sont qu’au stade de l’intention.» L’idéal de WikiLeaks serait donc de fouiller les intentions ou les consciences. Comme l’oeil de Dieu poursuivant jusque dans la tombe les Caïn qui tuent leurs frères afghans ou irakiens.

Julian Assange prétend vouloir fonder un journalisme «scientifique», mais c’est

 en utilisant des motifs religieux qu’il fascine. Tissée avec les attributs du divin, son histoire habilement mise en scène fonde la légende du premier «hacktiviste» universellement connu. Il est l’homme qui joue à être Dieu.

Voir aussi :

http://www.liberation.fr/monde/01012306799-un-tom-sawyer-du-net-obsede-par-la-verite

Un «Tom Sawyer» du Net obsédé par la vérité

Portrait : Autodidacte, Assange est passé du statut de génial hacker à celui de prophète du «journalisme scientifique».

LORRAINE MILLOT Washington, de notre correspondante

Libération

 08/12/2010

L’avantage, en prison, c’est que «[je pourrai] enfin passer une journée à lire un livre», avait confié Julian Assange en octobre à l’un des derniers journalistes américains qui ont encore réussi à déjeuner avec lui, dans un petit restaurant éthiopien de Londres. Le fondateur de WikiLeaks n’est pas seulement un génie du piratage informatique, chevalier d’Internet, il est aussi un lecteur avide, pétri de références littéraires, qui s’inspire de Horace, Mark Twain ou Soljenitsyne.

«J’ai eu une enfance assez Tom Sawyer», a raconté Assange à Raffi Khatchadourian, un journaliste du New Yorker qui avait pu l’accompagner plusieurs semaines, au printemps, en Islande et aux Etats-Unis : «J’avais mon propre cheval. J’avais construit mon propre radeau. J’allais pêcher. Je descendais dans les puits et les tunnels des mines.» Né en 1971 sur la côte nord-est de l’Australie, il a décrit son enfance comme une suite d’aventures qui l’auraient prédestiné à une vie errante de combattant pour la «vérité» et pour «l’individu» face aux autorités et corps constitués. Sa «tendance au nomadisme» est «génétique», a-t-il expliqué au New Yorker. Son nom de famille viendrait d’un immigrant chinois, appelé Ah Sang, arrivé en Australie au XVIIIe siècle, tandis que ses ancêtres maternels venaient d’Ecosse et d’Irlande.

Correspondance. Comédienne, sa mère le trimballe au gré de ses spectacles et de ses amours. A 14 ans, Julian dit avoir déjà déménagé 37 fois. Sa mère fuit le père de son deuxième fils, craignant qu’il ne lui enlève l’enfant, et se méfie aussi des écoles : «Je ne voulais pas que leurs esprits soient brisés», a-t-elle expliqué au sujet de l’éducation de ses fils, qui s’est faite en grande partie à la maison, par correspondance ou en fonction de leurs lectures. De cette enfance en Australie, dans le Queensland, Julian Assange dit aujourd’hui, dans un éditorial pour The Australian rédigé juste avant de se rendre, avoir gardé l’expérience de «gens qui disent ouvertement ce qu’ils pensent». De là viendrait l’essence de WikiLeaks, instrument «pour rapporter la vérité», explique-t-il.

A l’adolescence, c’est dans l’informatique que ce Tom Sawyer des temps modernes trouve un nouveau, gigantesque, terrain d’exploration. A 16 ans, il acquiert son premier modem, Internet n’existe pas encore mais il s’amuse à pénétrer les systèmes informatiques les plus protégés. Il se fait appeler Mendax, d’après le «splendide mendax» («le menteur glorieux») de Horace. Avec d’autres amis hackers, il explore déjà les réseaux du ministère américain de la Défense, du laboratoire nucléaire de Los Alamos, mais aussi de compagnies privées comme Nortel, les télécoms canadiens.

En 1991, la police australienne l’arrête et le menace de 31 chefs d’accusation pour piratage informatique (après une enquête de plusieurs années, il s’en tirera par une amende). Assange se compare alors à Soljenitsyne. Il lit trois fois le Premier Cercle et se mesure aux savants soviétiques envoyés au goulag : «Comme les parallèles sont proches avec mes propres aventures !» écrit-il. Au même moment, Assange se bat aussi pour la garde de son fils, qu’il a eu à 19 ans avec une fille de 16 ans, vite épousée et vite quittée. Selon sa mère, qui l’a soutenu dans cette bataille comme elle le soutient aujourd’hui, c’est à ce moment-là que ses cheveux bruns auraient perdu leur couleur.

En 2006, quand il fonde WikiLeaks, Assange explique avoir pour «première cible» les «régimes extrêmement oppressifs en Chine, Russie et Eurasie centrale». «Mais nous espérons aussi aider ceux en Occident qui souhaitent révéler le comportement illégal ou immoral de leurs propres gouvernements et entreprises», ajoute-t-il. A 35 ans, il donne enfin un sens à son goût de l’aventure : «WikiLeaks a inventé un nouveau type de journalisme : le journalisme scientifique», explique-t-il aujourd’hui encore, dans son éditorial envoyé à The Australian. En publiant l’intégralité des documents d’ordinaire gardés secrets par les gouvernements ou les entreprises privées, il permet à chacun de vérifier où est la vérité, plaide-t-il. A un journaliste du Guardian, en juillet, il précise le fond de sa pensée : la plupart de ceux qui se disent aujourd’hui journalistes sont des lâches, qui laissent à d’autres le soin de prendre des risques pour récolter l’information. A peine «un millier» de journalistes ont été tués depuis 1944, souligne-t-il. «C’est une honte internationale que si peu de journalistes occidentaux aient été tués ou arrêtés sur le champ de bataille», assène-t-il au Guardian.

«Impérieux». En parlant ainsi, comme un enfant du Queensland, il est clair qu’Assange ne se fait pas que des amis. Le patron de WikiLeaks est un «micro-mégalomane qui s’embarrasse de peu ou d’aucun scrupule», a résumé le journaliste et écrivain américain Christopher Hitchens. Ces derniers mois en particulier, alors qu’il vivait caché, accaparé par sa mission de sécurisation et publication des centaines de milliers de documents dérobés aux Etats-Unis, Assange était devenu «fantasque»,«impérieux», «dictatorial», ont décrit plusieurs anciens collaborateurs de WikiLeaks qui ont préféré quitter l’aventure. La plupart des journalistes qui l’ont interrogé confirment qu’il supporte mal la critique. En octobre, il était même parti au milieu d’une interview avec CNN, refusant de répondre à une question sur les accusations de viol portées contre lui. Mais si les polices européennes et américaines ne le retiennent pas trop longtemps, il a déjà promis d’écrire d’autres chapitres de son épopée. «J’ai plein d’autres idées, a-t-il confié cet été au Guardian. Dès que WikiLeaks sera suffisamment fort pour prospérer sans moi, je m’en irai réaliser d’autres de ces idées.»

Voir aussi:

Afghanistan/Wikileaks

Julian Assange: «Nous devons les arrêter»

Der Spiegel

L’Hebdo

le 28.07.2010

Le fondateur de WikiLeaks, 39 ans, parle de son réseau, sa mission et ses règles.

Vous rendez publique une quantité importante d’éléments secrets sur la guerre en Afghanistan. Quel est votre motivation?

Ces données constituent la description d’une guerre la plus complète qu’on ait jamais eue pendant un conflit armé, soit à un moment où on peut encore influencer positivement le cours des choses. Elles contiennent des enregistrements concernant 90 000 incidents, avec des données géographiques précises. Par son volume, le matériel éclipse tout ce qui a été dit jusqu’à maintenant sur l’Afghanistan. Cela va changer notre manière de voir non seulement cette guerre, mais aussi toutes les guerres modernes.

Pensez-vous que la publication de ces données influencera les décideurs politiques?

Oui. Ces informations mettent en évidence la brutalité quotidienne et la misère de la guerre. Elles vont modifier l’opinion publique et celle des gens qui ont une influence politique ou diplomatique.

Vos attentes ne sont-elles pas trop importantes?

Le sentiment général qui règne est qu’il serait mieux de terminer cette guerre. Ces données à elles seules ne suffiront pas à atteindre cet objectif, mais elles auront une influence sur la volonté politique.

Ce matériel contient des secrets militaires et les noms de certaines sources. Par cette publication, ne mettez-vous pas en danger les troupes internationales – et leurs informateurs afghans?

Les données ne contiennent aucune information sur les mouvements actuels des troupes. De ce point de vue, notre source était soucieuse de limiter les dégâts et elle nous a demandé de contrôler dans cette perspective les informations fournies, de manière à ce qu’aucun danger significatif n’en découle pour des innocents. Nous prenons très au sérieux la protection des sources et pour cette raison, nous comprenons aussi qu’il est important de protéger certaines sources des troupes US ou de l’ISAF.

Quelle forme prend cette «limitation des dégâts»?

Nous avons sélectionné les cas qui pourraient engendrer un danger pour des innocents, et les informations ont été traitées en fonction de cela.

La notion de secret d’Etat légitime existe-t-elle pour vous?

Il existe des secrets justifiés et un droit à les briser. Malheureusement, ceux qui commettent des crimes contre l’humanité ou violent d’autres lois peuvent trop facilement faire une utilisation abusive du droit au secret. Les gens qui ont une conscience ont toujours eu à cœur de révéler au grand jour ce genre de choses. Pour le reste, Wikileaks ne décide pas de la publication ou non d’une information. Nous nous chargeons de veiller à ce que les informateurs soient protégés et le public informé.

Mais en fin de compte, il faut bien que quelqu’un décide de la publication. Qui définit les critères? Wikileaks se pose en pionnier de la liberté d’information, mais n’est lui-même pas transparent en la matière.

C’est ridicule. Nous disons de manière claire et sans ambiguïté ce que nous publions et ce que nous ne publions pas. Il n’y a pas chez nous de décision au coup par coup. Nous publions en principe les sources primaires de nos textes. Citez-moi une autre entreprise de médias qui a de tels standards. Toutes devraient suivre notre exemple.

Le problème est qu’il est difficile de demander des comptes à Wikileaks pour d’éventuelles erreurs commises. Vos serveurs se trouvent dans des pays qui vous offrent une protection étendue. Est-ce que Wikileaks serait au-dessus des lois?

Nous n’évoluons pas dans un espace vide d’air. Toutes les personnes concernées vivent dans des Etats où sont en vigueur les lois les plus diverses. On nous a déjà attaqués dans différents pays, mais jusqu’à maintenant, nous sommes toujours sortis gagnants. Ce sont justement des tribunaux qui rendent les décisions, et pas des entreprises, ni des généraux. Nous avons eu la loi de notre côté, tout comme les tribunaux et même certaines Constitutions.

Vous dites qu’il y aurait un lien entre la transparence pour laquelle vous vous battez et une société plus juste. Que voulez-vous dire?

Il ne peut y avoir de vraies réformes que si l’on démasque les actions injustes. Le mieux est d’intervenir contre les injustices avant qu’elles n’aient été commises, lorsqu’elles n’en sont qu’au stade d’intention – c’est alors qu’on peut les arrêter.

Pendant la guerre du Vietnam, l’administration Nixon a désigné l’informateur qui a transmis les «papiers du Pentagone» à la presse comme l’homme le plus dangereux d’Amérique. Etes-vous aujourd’hui l’homme le plus dangereux – ou plutôt le plus menacé?

Les hommes les plus dangereux sont ceux qui mènent la guerre. Nous devons les arrêter. Si cette conception des choses me rend à leurs yeux dangereux, eh bien c’est ainsi.

Vous auriez pu monter une entreprise à Silicon Valley et habiter une maison avec piscine à Palo Alto – pourquoi vous êtes-vous décidé pour Wikileaks?

On ne vit qu’une seule fois. Il nous faut donc utiliser le temps qui nous est imparti pour réaliser quelque chose qui a du sens et qui est satisfaisant. Pour moi, Wikileaks va dans cette direction- là. J’aime développer de grands systèmes et ça me fait plaisir d’aider les gens vulnérables. Et j’aime mettre les bâtons dans les roues de ceux qui ont le pouvoir. J’ai vraiment du plaisir à faire ce travail.

TRADUCTION ET ADAPTATION: VÉRONIQUE PUHLMANN-MORET

Voir sa conférence donnée à TED: www.ted.com/speakers/julian_assange.html

Voir enfin:

WikiLeaks Julian Assange, monk of the online age who thrives on intellectual battle

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been thrust into the public eye over one of the biggest intelligence leaks of all time

Carole Cadwalladr

The Observer

Sunday 1 August 2010

 How many people had even heard of WikiLeaks a week ago? Or Julian Assange? And yet, seven days after the biggest intelligence leak of all time – the publication of over 75,000 files amounting to an entire history of the Afghanistan war – he is everywhere; in every newspaper, on every news broadcast, in what appears to be every country in the world. It’s been an extraordinary week for WikiLeaks, which has seen the entrance on to the world stage of a remarkable new character: Assange, a man who, even friends and supporters admit, looks « a bit like a Bond villain ».

Could it be the week that changed the war in Afghanistan? It’s possible, if the revelations contained in the files swing popular and then political opinion. At the very least, they’ve triggered a whole new debate about the future course of the conflict. Because what the files revealed was the sheer scale and exhausting mundane detail of the everyday violence suffered by Afghan civilians, caused by coalition forces as well as the Taliban, as well as evidence of what may or not be double-dealing on the part of Pakistan government.

By last Wednesday, President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan had branded Assange « irresponsible ». And by Friday, the US defence secretary, Robert Gates, had accused him of « having blood on his hands ». Their charge was that WikiLeaks has disclosed the names of Afghan collaborators who may now be subject to reprisals; that the information is unchecked; that some of it may be of dubious provenance, and that Assange seems to be accountable to no one.

Perhaps the most surprising and confusing aspect of all this is that Assange didn’t leak the material. He was not the source for these files, he merely published them. Where once, the focus was on the whistleblower, it’s now on the technological conduit by which the whistleblower can reach the world.

By the time I come to talk to Assange, his very last interview of the week, the backlash is in full swing. « Have you seen this? » he says waving a copy of the Times at me. « Have you seen how much bullshit this is? Have you seen page 13? Do you think I should call [the libel law firm] Carter-Ruck?

« It would be a bit silly for me but I’m tempted to. Just look at the headlines and the photo. What’s the imputation? »

There’s a photo of Assange below a headline that reads « ‘Taliban hitlist’ row: WikiLeaks founder says he did right thing ». And next to the photo, another headline reading « Named man is already dead. » The imputation is quite clearly that Assange’s actions have resulted in the man’s death, although in the story itself it makes it clear that he actually died two years ago.

« Is it clear? » says Assange. « Let’s see how much we have to read before we reach that information. It’s not in the first paragraph, second, third, fourth, it’s not in the fifth. It’s not until the sixth paragraph you learn that. »

The Times had splashed on its front page the claims that there are named Afghan sources in the files whose lives are now in danger. It’s pure « self-interest », he says, designed to undermine the Guardian, the Observer’s sister paper and one of three publications to publish stories based on the files, the others being the New York Times and Der Spiegel. « You can see that this is coming down from editorial, not up from journalism. »

Maybe. Although it doesn’t mean that there aren’t hard questions to answer. What about these named sources? Might he have endangered their lives?

« If there are innocent Afghans being revealed, which was our concern, which was why we kept back 15,000 files, then of course we take that seriously. »

But what if it’s too late?

« Well, we will review our procedures. »

Too late for the individuals, I say. Dead.

« Well, anything might happen but nothing has happened. And we are not about to leave the field of doing good simply because harm might happen … In our four-year publishing history no one has ever come to physical harm that we are aware of or that anyone has alleged. On the other hand, we have changed governments and constitutions and had tremendous positive outcomes. »

If Afghan informers are at risk, he says, the fault lies squarely with the US military. « We are appalled that the US military was so lackadaisical with its Afghan sources. Just appalled. We are a source protection organisation that specialises in protecting sources, and have a perfect record from our activities.

« This material was available to every soldier and contractor in Afghanistan …It’s the US military that deserves the blame for not giving due diligence to its informers. »

Not everyone agrees. There’s a school of thought, to which a leading article in the Times gave voice, that he is playing a dangerous game. He says he hasn’t read it, so I quote a chunk: « The sanctimonious piety of the man is sickening. »

« Oh sure, » he says. « Because it would be better to be a ruthless media mogul just in it for the money. That would be then be acceptable. We can’t actually have people doing something for moral reasons. It’s only acceptable if we do it just for the money. »

It is possible that this is part of it. When Julian Assange burst on to the world stage last week, people grappled to make sense of him, of WikiLeaks, of the new hybrid formed by old media – the Guardian, the New York Times, Der Spiegel – co-operating with a radical, activist, very new media, what the New Yorker described as less an organisation, more « a media insurgency ».

It is no coincidence that last week marked WikiLeaks’ most successful operation to date, and also the implementation of what is quite clearly a new media strategy. Not just its new step of co-operating with three international news organisations but also the decision, made over the past few months, for Assange himself to come out of the shadows and take up a public role as the WikiLeaks’ front man.

« We started off like the Economist, » he told a packed audience at the Frontline Club on Tuesday, meaning they retained complete anonymity. « We wanted to make the news, not be the news. But that produced extraordinary curiosity as to who we were … this attempt not to be the news, made us the news. »

This new openness seems designed to counter one of the greatest criticisms of the organisation: its lack of accountability. Because what this week has made clear is that it is no longer governments who can choose what to keep secret, it is WikiLeaks.

It feels like there’s been some sort of revolution, I say to him, but one which the world is still struggling to understand. In reply, he deploys one of his deadly monotones: « We are creating a space behind us that permits a form of journalism which lives up to the name that journalism has always tried to establish for itself. We are creating that space because we are taking on the criticism that comes from robust exposure of powerful groups. »

It is interesting that he phrases it this way because, as well as being a new and radically different model of what is and isn’t possible in the news future, Assange himself is a curious hybrid.

His skills as a cryptographer led him to becoming one of the architects of the WikiLeaks model, but as Gavin MacFadyen, the director of the Centre of Investigative Journalism and a friend of his, points out, there’s something almost old-fashioned about his particular brand of committed idealism.

« We don’t really see people like him any more. In the 60s and 70s, they were around. Those who are totally committed and passionate about what they’re doing. But not after 20 years of Thatcherism. »

There was a video of Assange on the centre’s website, and « our server crashed », says MacFadyen. « There’s no doubt he’s an inspirational figure. » He is also « probably the most intelligent person I’ve ever worked with » and has an « unusual amount of self-confidence ».

When you interview Assange, this seems like an understatement. He is at least five steps ahead. Probably more. But then, as he told the New Yorker, what appealed to him about computers was their austerity: « It is like chess – chess is very austere, in that you don’t have many rules, there is no randomness, and the problem is very hard. »

David Leigh, the Guardian’s investigations editor who oversaw publication of the files, says Assange has the mentality of a hacker, « a distinct psychological genre ». At times, he can seem almost autistic, although « he doesn’t lack charm ».

That is perhaps the most surprising thing about Assange. The first time I meet him, a fortnight before publication of the files, he’s tense and edgy. With good reason, it turns out. The second time, after a speaking engagement at the Frontline Club, the journalists’ club in West London he made his base for the week, he’s like a man transformed: relaxed and clearly enjoying himself. He makes jokes. He even smiles. The third time, he looks simply exhausted. And yet, he’s also still quite clearly up for taking on all-comers.

Vaughan Smith, the director of the Frontline Club, tells me that he’s more or less subsisted on « two hours’ sleep and two sandwiches ». But then, there’s something about Assange that if not superhuman, is almost as if sleep and food are mere technicalities that might concern the rest of us, but that he has found a way of simply dispensing with. Combat, intellectual combat, seems to be his stimulant of choice. It just fuels him.

When I try to question him about the morality of what he’s done, if he worries about unleashing something that he can’t control, that no one can control, he tells me the story of the Kenyan 2007 elections when a WikiLeak document « swung the election ».

The leak exposed massive corruption by Daniel Arap Moi, and the Kenyan people sat up and took notice. In the ensuing elections, in which corruption became a major issue, violence swept the country. « 1,300 people were eventually killed, and 350,000 were displaced. That was a result of our leak, » says Assange. It’s a chilling statistic, but then he states: « On the other hand, the Kenyan people had a right to that information and 40,000 children a year die of malaria in Kenya. And many more die of money being pulled out of Kenya, and as a result of the Kenyan shilling being debased. »

It’s the kind of moral conundrum that would unnerve most people, that made some wonder last week what the potential ramifications of the latest leak might be, but it is a subject on which Assange himself is absolutely clear: « You have to start with the truth. The truth is the only way that we can get anywhere. Because any decision-making that is based upon lies or ignorance can’t lead to a good conclusion. »

The other key thing about WikiLeaks is that it’s internationalist in the true sense. « We do not have national security concerns. We have concerns about human beings, » says Assange. And, with its servers located in different countries, and its headquarters nowhere, it raises intriguing questions about the future of nation states. WikiLeaks seems to be beyond the power of any of them, although Assange jumps on me pretty fast when I suggest as much.

« Of course not. We have had over 100 legal attacks. We have been victorious in almost every single legal attack. As far as nation states are concerned, we operate within the rule of law. »

But it is an organisation that has been brilliantly constructed to get around such assaults, and with each release of information, it seems to evolve and grow stronger.

Even if it’s not yet known, can’t be known, what the long-term impact of this particular leak will be.

David Leigh describes Assange as « a mendicant friar of the electronic age ». Like his organisation, he is global and rootless. And when he does sleep, it’s usually on somebody else’s sofa.

But Leigh also says « it’s actually fairly irrelevant to talk about whether what Julian is doing is a bad thing or a good thing, because if he wasn’t doing it, somebody else would ».

Assange might be an arresting figure and WikiLeaks an extraordinary organisation, but they are manifestations of a phenomenon, he says, not its root cause.

« He’s a function of technological change. It’s because the technology exists to create these enormous databases, and because it exists it can be leaked. And if it can be leaked, it will be leaked. »

EXPOSING ‘CORRUPTION OF GOVERNANCE’

WikiLeaks first appeared on the internet in 2006. The site states that it was founded « by Chinese dissidents, journalists, mathematicians and start-up company technologists, from the US, Taiwan, Europe, Australia and South Africa ».

Its spokesman and founder Julian Assange, an Australian journalist and former hacker, began working with others to create a resource that would make it possible for anonymous contributors to upload confidential information revealing « corruption of governance ».

It is called WikiLeaks because it used the same uploading software as Wikipedia and seeks to emulate the encyclopedia’s success as « a vast and accurate collective [of] intelligence and knowledge ».

WikiLeaks posted its first document in December 2006 entitled a « secret decision ». It revealed a Somali rebel leader’s plans for government officials to be executed by hired criminals. Uncertain of its authenticity, WikiLeaks published the document with a lengthy commentary asking readers to help analyse it. The site is hosted on Swedish internet provider PRQ.se, which is designed to withstand legal interference and hackers and fiercely protects the anonymity of its clients.

It first published information on the US army in 2007, uploading secret military information giving details of procurements in Iraq and Afghanistan.

By January 2010 WikiLeaks was run by 1,200 international volunteers receiving more than 30 submissions a day.

In April this year it released « Collateral Murder », a 38-minute video taken from the cockpit of an Apache helicopter in Iraq in 2007 which showed US soldiers killing at least 18 people including two Reuters journalists. The film was broadcast by news organisations around the world. In the days following its release, WikiLeaks received more than $200,000 in donations.

Richard Rogers 


WikiLeaks: C’est du vandalisme de l’information, imbécile! (In fact, WikiLeaks must be counted among the enemies of open society)

2 décembre, 2010
It is difficult, though by no means impossible, for a journalist to obtain access to original documents.  But these are often a snare and a delusion.  Just because a document is a document, it has a glamour which tempts the reader to give it more weight than it deserves. This document from the United States Embassy in Amman, for example. Is it a first draft, a second draft or the finished memorandum? Was it written by an official of standing, or by some dogsbody with a bright idea? Was it written with serious intent or just to enhance the writer’s reputation? Even if it is unmistakably a direct instruction to the United States Ambassador from the Secretary of State dated last Tuesday, is it still valid today?  In short, documentary intelligence, to be really valuable, must come as a steady stream, embellished with an awful lot of explanatory annotation. An hour’s serious discussion with a trustworthy informant is often more valuable than any number of original documents. (…) Of course, it is best to have both. Kim Philby “(My Silent War”, 1968)
I am the heart and soul of this organization, its founder, philosopher, original coder, organizer, financier and all the rest. If you have a problem with me, piss off. Assange
Assange pointed out that, today, China may be easier to reform than the U.S. Time
D’après ce que j’ai pu lire, les membres du service diplomatique américain n’ont pas grand-chose à se reprocher. Certes, on perçoit çà et là des relents de combines douteuses, notamment dans la conduite de la « guerre contre le terrorisme » pendant les années Bush. Des questions précises devront être posées et l’on devra y répondre. Pour l’essentiel, cependant, on voit les diplomates faire le travail qui est le leur : savoir ce qui se passe dans les endroits où ils sont en poste, oeuvrer à la promotion des intérêts de leur pays et de la politique de leur gouvernement. (…) ce qui ressort de tous ces échanges diplomatiques, c’est à quel point les questions liées à la sécurité et au contre-terrorisme ont imprégné le moindre aspect de la politique étrangère américaine depuis une décennie. On constate aussi à quel point ces menaces sont sérieuses, et à quel point l’Occident a peu de prise sur elles. (…) Reste toutefois une question. Comment mener une activité diplomatique dans ces conditions ? (…) Il y a un intérêt public à savoir comment fonctionne le monde et ce que l’on y fait en notre nom. Il y a aussi un intérêt public à ce que la politique étrangère soit menée de façon confidentielle. Et ces deux intérêts sont contradictoires. Timothy Garton Ash (historien, Oxford)
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… 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. Robert Gates
The disclosures (…) undermine the very worldview that Julian Assange and his colleagues at Wikileaks almost certainly support.  By and large, the hard left in America and around the world would prefer to see the peaceful resolution of disputes rather than the use of military force. World peace, however, is a lot harder to achieve if the U.S. State Department is cut off at the knees. And that is exactly what this mass revelation of documents is going to do. The essential tool of State Department diplomacy is trust between American officials and their foreign counterparts. Unlike the Pentagon, which has military forces, or the Treasury Department, which has financial tools, the State Department functions mainly by winning the trust of foreign officials, sharing information, and persuading. Those discussions have to be confidential to be successful. Destroying confidentiality means destroying diplomacy. James P. Rubin
The irony is that Assange represents a purer form of Obama’s own idealism. According to Assange’s dangerous utopianism, in governance purity must determine means, not just ends. He is convinced that he has revealed the hypocrisy and corruption of U.S. foreign policy, when in reality all he has revealed is that pursuing foreign-policy ideals is messier and more complicated in a world where bad people pursue bad ends. We can hope that Obama has been learning that lesson. Assange, meanwhile, is simply blind to it. Jonah Goldberg
Every year some applications that are popular among advisors don’t make the cut after Knight staff conducts due diligence. WikiLeaks was not recommended by Knight staff to the board. Marc Fest (porte-parole Knight Foundation)
We believe that injustice is answered by good governance and for there to be good governance there must be open governance. New technology and cryptographic ideas permit us to not only encourage document leaking, but to facilitate it directly on a mass scale. We intend to place a new star in the political firmament of man. WikiLeaks
I was beside myself because I thought my entire African market is vanishing. I wrote to WikiLeaks and said, please, you’re going to damage your own cause because if people like me can’t make any money from royalties then publishers are not going to commission people writing about corruption in Africa (…) He was enormously pompous, saying that in the interests of raising public awareness of the issues involved I had a duty to allow it to be pirated. He said: ‘This book may have been your baby, but it is now Kenya’s son.’ That really stuck in my mind because it was so arrogant. On the whole I approve of WikiLeaks but these guys are infuriatingly self-righteous. Michael Wong (auteure de It’s Our Turn To Eat)
WikiLeaks is a fraud. Fuck your cute hustle and disinformation campaign against legitimate dissent. Same old shit, working for the enemy. John Young (Cryptome)
They have acquired and published documents of extraordinary significance. I would say also that WikiLeaks is a response to a genuine problem, namely the over control of information of public policy significance. (…) Their response to indiscriminate secrecy has been to adopt a policy of indiscriminate disclosure. They tend to disregard considerations of personal privacy, intellectual property as well as security. (…) One of the things I find offensive about their operations is their willingness to disclose confidential records of religious and social organisations. If you are a Mormon or a Mason or a college girl who is a member of a sorority with a secret initiation ritual then WikiLeaks is not your friend. They will violate your privacy and your freedom of association without a second thought. That has nothing to do with whistleblowing or accountability. It’s simply disclosure for disclosure’s sake. Steven Aftergood (Secrecy news, Federation of American Scientists)
If Wikileaks were most concerned about whistleblowing, it would focus on revealing corruption.  If it were concerned with historical truth, it would emphasize the discovery of verifiably true facts.  If it were anti-war, it would safeguard, not disrupt, the conduct of diplomatic communications.  But instead, what Wikileaks has done is to publish a vast potpourri of records — dazzling, revelatory, true, questionable, embarrassing, or routine — whose only common feature is that they are classified or otherwise restricted. Steven Aftergood
In fact, WikiLeaks must be counted among the enemies of open society because it does not respect the rule of law nor does it honor the rights of individuals. Last year, for example, WikiLeaks published the “secret ritual” of a college women’s sorority called Alpha Sigma Tau.  Now Alpha Sigma Tau (like several other sororities “exposed” by WikiLeaks) is not known to have engaged in any form of misconduct, and WikiLeaks does not allege that it has.  Rather, WikiLeaks chose to publish the group’s confidential ritual just because it could.  This is not whistleblowing and it is not journalism.  It is a kind of information vandalism. Steven Aftergood
Tôt ou tard, Assange devra faire face au paradoxe de sa création: la chose au monde qu’il semble détester le plus – ce pouvoir qui ne rend pas de comptes – est encodée dans l’ADN du site et deviendra plus prégnante à mesure que WikiLeaks se transformera en véritable institution. Raffi Khatchadourian

Rituels d’initiation de clubs d’étudiantes, rites privés francs-maçons ou mormons, livre sur la corruption au Kenya, mais aussi manuels de sécurité des aéroports américains, spécifications techniques d’un appareil militaire anti-bombes artisanales, numéros de sécurité sociale de soldats, dossiers d’un tueur pédophile

Y a-t-il une limite aux cibles du site prétendument lanceur d’alarmes WikiLeaks?

Et à quel intérêt général peut bien servir la divulgation de tels documents ?

A l’heure où nos médias font leurs choux gras des documents volés par WikiLeaks et où certains y voient même l’avenir du journalisme …

Pendant que les autocrates à la Poutine en profitent pour ironiser sur la première des sociétés ouvertes et que des émules ont déjà flairé le filon …

Retour, avec l’un de ses précurseurs (Secrecy news), sur la face cachée de la « première agence de renseignement du peuple » du pirate de l’information australien.

Qui après s’être mis à dos à la fois Amnesty international et Reporters sans frontières et manqué une subvention de la Fondation Knight

Montre par son mépris pour l’Etat de droit et les droits individuels comme son propre autocratisme et son opacité de fonctionnement, qu’il est très clairement du côté du vandalisme et des ennemis de la société ouverte

Wikileaks Fails “Due Diligence” Review

Steven Aftergood

Secrecy news

June 28th, 2010

In the past week, both the Washington Post and the New York Times have referred to WikiLeaks.org, the web site that publishes confidential records, as a “whistleblower” site.  This conforms to WikiLeaks’ own instructions to journalists that “WikiLeaks should be described, depending on context, as the ‘open government group’, ‘anti-corruption group’, ‘transparency group’ or ‘whistleblower’s site’.”

But calling WikiLeaks a whistleblower site does not accurately reflect the character of the project.  It also does not explain why others who are engaged in open government, anti-corruption and whistleblower protection activities are wary of WikiLeaks or disdainful of it.  And it does not provide any clue why the Knight Foundation, the preeminent foundation funder of innovative First Amendment and free press initiatives, might have rejected WikiLeaks’ request for financial support, as it recently did.

From one perspective, WikiLeaks is a creative response to a real problem afflicting the U.S. and many other countries, namely the over-control of government information to the detriment of public policy.  WikiLeaks has published a considerable number of valuable official records that had been kept unnecessarily secret and were otherwise unavailable, including some that I had attempted and failed to obtain myself.  Its most spectacular disclosure was the formerly classified videotape showing an attack by a U.S. Army helicopter crew in Baghdad in 2007 which led to the deaths of several non-combatants.  Before mostly going dormant late last year, it also published numerous documents that have no particular policy significance or that were already placed in the public domain by others (including a few that were taken from the FAS web site).

WikiLeaks says that it is dedicated to fighting censorship, so a casual observer might assume that it is more or less a conventional liberal enterprise committed to enlightened democratic policies.  But on closer inspection that is not quite the case.  In fact, WikiLeaks must be counted among the enemies of open society because it does not respect the rule of law nor does it honor the rights of individuals.

Last year, for example, WikiLeaks published the “secret ritual” of a college women’s sorority called Alpha Sigma Tau.  Now Alpha Sigma Tau (like several other sororities “exposed” by WikiLeaks) is not known to have engaged in any form of misconduct, and WikiLeaks does not allege that it has.  Rather, WikiLeaks chose to publish the group’s confidential ritual just because it could.  This is not whistleblowing and it is not journalism.  It is a kind of information vandalism.

In fact, WikiLeaks routinely tramples on the privacy of non-governmental, non-corporate groups for no valid public policy reason.  It has published private rites of Masons, Mormons and other groups that cultivate confidential relations among their members.  Most or all of these groups are defenseless against WikiLeaks’ intrusions.  The only weapon they have is public contempt for WikiLeaks’ ruthless violation of their freedom of association, and even that has mostly been swept away in a wave of uncritical and even adulatory reporting about the brave “open government,” “whistleblower” site.

On occasion, WikiLeaks has engaged in overtly unethical behavior.  Last year, without permission, it published the full text of the highly regarded 2009 book about corruption in Kenya called “It’s Our Turn to Eat” by investigative reporter Michela Wrong (as first reported by Chris McGreal in The Guardian on April 9).  By posting a pirated version of the book and making it freely available, WikiLeaks almost certainly disrupted sales of the book and made it harder for Ms. Wrong and other anti-corruption reporters to perform their important work and to get it published. Repeated protests and pleas from the author were required before WikiLeaks (to its credit) finally took the book offline.

“Soon enough,” observed Raffi Khatchadourian in a long profile of WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange in The New Yorker (June 7), “Assange must confront the paradox of his creation: the thing that he seems to detest most–power without accountability–is encoded in the site’s DNA, and will only become more pronounced as WikiLeaks evolves into a real institution.”

Much could be forgiven to WikiLeaks if it were true that its activities were succeeding in transforming government information policy in favor of increased openness and accountability — as opposed to merely generating reams of publicity for itself.  WikiLeaks supporter Glenn Greenwald of Salon.com wrote that when it comes to combating government secrecy, “nobody is doing that as effectively as WikiLeaks.” But he neglected to spell out exactly what effect WikiLeaks has had.  Which U.S. government programs have been cancelled as a result of Wikileaks’ activities?  Which government policies have been revised?  How has public discourse shifted?  (And, by the way, who has been injured by its work?)

A less sympathetic observer might conclude that WikiLeaks has squandered much of the impact that it might have had.

A telling comparison can be made between WikiLeaks’ publication of the Iraq Apache helicopter attack video last April and The New Yorker’s publication of the Abu Ghraib abuse photographs in an article by Seymour Hersh in May 2004.  Both disclosures involved extremely graphic and disturbing images.  Both involved unreleased or classified government records.  And both generated a public sensation.  But there the similarity ends.  The Abu Ghraib photos prompted lawsuits, congressional hearings, courts martial, prison sentences, declassification initiatives, and at least indirectly a revision of U.S. policy on torture and interrogation.  By contrast, the WikiLeaks video tendentiously packaged under the title “Collateral Murder” produced none of that– no investigation (other than a leak investigation), no congressional hearings, no lawsuits, no tightening of the rules of engagement.  Just a mild scolding from the Secretary of Defense, and an avalanche of publicity for WikiLeaks.

Of course, it’s hard for anyone to produce a specific desired outcome from the national security bureaucracy, and maybe WikiLeaks can’t be faulted for failing to have done so.  But with the whole world’s attention at its command for a few days last April, it could have done more to place the focus on the victims of the incident that it had documented, perhaps even establishing a charitable fund to assist their families.  But that’s not what it chose to do.  Instead, the focus remained firmly fixed on WikiLeaks itself and its own ambitious fundraising efforts.

In perhaps the first independent review of the WikiLeaks project, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation considered and rejected an application from WikiLeaks for financial support.  The Knight Foundation was actively looking for grantees who could promote innovative uses of digital technology in support of the future development of journalism.  At the end of the process, more than $2.7 million was awarded to 12 promising recipients.  WikiLeaks was not among them.

“Every year some applications that are popular among advisors don’t make the cut after Knight staff conducts due diligence,” said Knight Foundation spokesman Marc Fest in response to an inquiry from Yahoo news.  “WikiLeaks was not recommended by Knight staff to the board.”

Voir aussi:

WikiLeaks, la pire « agence de renseignement du peuple »

Antonin Grégoire

Rue89

10/27/2010

Vendredi 22 octobre, WikiLeaks [2] révélait 400 000 documents [3] sur la guerre en Irak [4] – « Iraq War Logs » – soit la « plus grande fuite de l’histoire », a titré la presse. Ainsi les scoops seront désormais jugés au poids. C’est du journalisme à la pesée.

Et quels scoops… L’ignoble Pentagone a dissimulé la mort de 15 000 civils [5] sur sept ans de guerre. Cela fait des mois que le site IraqBodyCoun [6]t en affiche 107 000 au vu et au su de tous, mais, à 109 000, grâce à WikiLeaks, cela devient un scoop.

Des tortures dans les prisons, des compagnies militaire privées qui se comportent comme au Far West, des innocents et des civils tués par erreur chaque jour aux checkpoints [7]… WikiLeaks révèle la « vraie » guerre [3]paraît-il… C’est vrai qu’avant, l’Irak, ça évoquait plutôt le parfum des jonquilles et les bisous dans le cou.

WikiLeaks pour « les élus » vs. WikiLeaks pour « le peuple »

Ce sont pourtant ces scoops que révèlent Der Spiegel, Le Monde, The Guardian, The New York Times et Al Jazeera, les « élus » choisis pour la révélation. The New York Times, notamment, a pu faire un article sur les compagnies militaire privées [8] grâce à ces documents consultables en ligne :

* « IED ATTK ON CF CIV IN AR ___ (ZONE ) : ___ CF CIV INJ/DAMAGE » [9]

* « SAF INCIDENT BETWEEN PRIVATE SECURITY CO./___ IVO BAGHDAD (ZONE ___) : NO INJ/___ » [10]

* « (FRIENDLY ACTION) ESCALATION OF FORCE RPT UNITY RESOURCE GROUP : ___ ISF WIA [11] »

Incompréhensible ? Ah oui, mais, en fait, les « élus », ils ont eu accès à ceci [12]. (Voir la capture d’écran du site du New York Times)

Une insulte pour les journalistes, du vol pour les internautes

WikiLeaks brouille le jeu mondial [14] des médias, certes, mais pour en faire quoi ? Comment rebat-il les cartes ? En quoi Le Monde (qui réserve certains de ses articles sur les « War Logs » à ses seuls abonnés) est il plus honorable qu’un autre ? Pourquoi WikiLeaks, enfant chéri, né de la culture internet, a-t-il choisi uniquement des médias papier ou télé pour donner ses documents ?

Owni.fr, le seul média web à avoir participé à l’aventure [15] (de façon exclusivement technique) est le seul à poser la question qui fâche :

« Pourquoi, quand on tape “ Blackwater ” [16], l’une des compagnie de sécurité privée les plus controversée, il s’affiche “ no results found ” ? » (Voir l’application d’Owni.fr sur les « Iraq War Logs »)

Warlogs [17]

Parce qu’il faut protéger les éventuelles victimes d’éventuelles représailles nous dit-on. Et par ce très juste argument, WikiLeaks redécouvre, comme par magie, l’une des vertu du secret en temps de guerre, et s’y soumet docilement.

Oui, mais WikiLeaks, à l’origine, c’était pas le type qui justement brisait les secrets ? Pourquoi se retrouve-t-on avec dans les mains des feuillets plus censurés qu’une lettre de Poilu de 1917 ? On ne comprend plus trop.

Lorsqu’on parcourt les « Iraq War Logs »…

* pour un historien, c’est de la rage devant leur inutilité ;

* pour un journaliste, c’est une insulte ;

* pour un spécialiste du renseignement, c’est révoltant d’amateurisme ;

* pour un internaute, c’est du vol.

Des lanceurs d’alerte qui finissent en prison

L’essence même de WikiLeaks était de publier des documents confidentiels en libre accès en assurant l’anonymat des « whistleblowers » [18], ces lanceurs d’alerte qui envoient des notes à WikiLeaks.

Ce sont eux qui se mettent en danger, qui agissent dans l’ombre, qui ont le courage de dénoncer ce que leur conscience ne peut accepter ; ce sont eux les héros anonymes de l’information libre. Tout le système WikiLeaks repose sur eux.

L’avatar de WikiLeaks sur Twitter.Bradley Manning [19] est le « whistleblower » qui a envoyé à WikiLeaks les 90 000 documents sur la guerre d’Afghanistan [20]. Il est en prison et risque d’y rester 54 ans. On ne trouve, sur WikiLeaks, pas le moindre lien vers le comité de soutien à Manning [21]. A peine un minuscule « Free Bradley » a-t-il été ajouté sur l’icône d’un centimètre carré du compte Twitter de l’organisation [22].

Mais attention, Julian Assange [23] « est menacé », dit-il. Il laisse cela volontairement dans le vague qu’on se nourrisse nous-mêmes des paranoïas faciles, des fantasmes de secrets et des mythes de James Bond que le monde des renseignements évoque dans l’imaginaire populaire.

Car Julien Assange présente « son » site WikiLeaks.org comme « l’agence de renseignement du peuple ».

Ce n’est pas parce que c’est secret que c’est vrai

Mais en matière de renseignement, WikiLeaks succombe aux pires travers des pires agences de renseignement :

* on n’envoie pas n’importe quoi à n’importe qui, mais on sélectionne soigneusement quel renseignement pour quel destinataire ;

* on ne noie pas le destinataire sous une avalanche de documents qu’il sera incapable de lire ;

* on n’utilise pas la culture du secret à des fins d’auto-promotion, mais pour la protection et l’efficacité du renseignement ;

* on ne succombe pas à la paranoïa et on évite de la propager ;

* on évite de violer les règles arbitrairement, sans qu’aucun avantage stratégique ne vienne justifier ce viol ;

* on reste discret et on n’étale pas sa tête à la une de tous les médias du globe ;

* on confronte ce qui est secret et ce qui est en libre accès, car ce n’est pas parce que c’est secret que c’est vrai.

Ces rapports sont rédigés par la base du renseignement de terrain américain, et représentent les faits vus par ceux qui les rédigent, influencés par les thèses de leurs chefs.

Un document, par exemple, dit que l’Iran [24] aide les insurgés d’Al Quaeda. Nn’importe quel expert se demandera pourquoi une puissance qui se réclame de la défense des chiites irait donner des bombes avec lesquelles Al Quaeda -sunnite- va aller faire sauter d’autres chiites. Mais puisque c’est secret, c’est que c’est vrai.

Une agence de renseignement digne de ce nom dispose d’un service de contre-espionnage qui lui permet de résister aux manœuvres d’intoxication.

Ça aurait permis à WikiLeaks, par exemple, de se demander pourquoi il reçoit des documents secrets sur le « climatgate » [25] qui vont alimenter tous les climatosceptiques de la planète la veille du sommet de Copenhague… sur le climat.

Un scoop en or, surtout pour les lobbies pétroliers qui vont aller torpiller le « mythe du réchauffement de la planète », qui s’essouffle [26].

Il est interdit de critiquer WikiLeaks

Ces règles, les agences de renseignement les ont apprises à force de scandales et de morts, en perdant des batailles, en échouant à prévenir des attentats, en tuant des manifestants de Greenpeace ou en mettant des Dreyfus au bagne.

WikiLeaks, d’une initiative citoyenne et sur Internet, qui a gagné de multiples prix, est devenu le joujou d’un James Bond amateur qui se croit dans un film d’espionnage.

Il est interdit de critiquer WikiLeaks. Parce que WikiLeaks, ce n’est pas du journalisme, ce n’est pas du renseignement, ce n’est plus Internet : c’est devenu de l’idéologie. Une idéologie en noir et blanc aux relents conspirationnistes, faite de gentils Assange et de méchante CIA.

Au final, le Grand Combat, c’est un chevalier de l’information libre prétendant lutter contre des terrifiantes puissances de l’ombre incapables de bloquer un pauvre site tenu par trois geeks et deux hackers. Pendant que Bradley Manning croupi en prison.

WikiLeaks voulait être le service secret du peuple, Assange en a fait un fantasme raté de ceux qu’il prétendait combattre.


WikiLeaks: Celui qui pille avec un grand navire s’appelle conquérant (The thing he seems to detest most is encoded in the site‘s DNA)

30 novembre, 2010
https://i0.wp.com/img0.mxstatic.com/wallpapers/2c0015383022669de9aaef8360371290_large.jpegCelui qui pille avec un petit vaisseau se nomme pirate ; celui qui pille avec un grand navire s’appelle conquérant. Proverbe grec
The documents appear to have been acquired illegally and contain all manner of private information and statements that were never intended for the public eye, so they won’t be posted here. The NYT ( nov. 2009)
The Times believes that the documents serve an important public interest, illuminating the goals, successes, compromises and frustrations of American diplomacy in a way that other accounts cannot match. The NYT (nov. 2010)
[Ces révélations ] démontrent qu’Israël n’a pas un double langage et dit en privé ce qu’il dit en public. (…) Il s’avère que tout le Moyen-Orient est terrifié par la perspective d’un Iran nucléaire. Les pays arabes poussent les Etats Unis à une action militaire de manière bien plus effrénée qu’Israël. Haut responsable israélien
Julian Assange is worse than a fraud, he is an abject hypocrite. Unilaterally he establishes supposed moral guidelines that determine the nature of his disclosures, but provides no proof that the enemies of, say, exposed Afghan and Iraqi civilian informants will not seek deadly retribution. And, of course, Assange would not wish to see published the private e-mail, telephone transcripts, and internal discussions of the WikiLeaks board, though these would give us the neccessary “context” to form opinions about the motivations and methodology of such leaks. Much less would Assange like someone to leak the complete confidential judicial proceedings against him by the Swedish government, which has now issued a warrant for his arrest on sexual coercion and molestation charges. In short, once Assange destroys the protocols of confidentiality, there is no such refuge for anyone — himself especially. And why should Assange limit himself largely to Europe and the United States? As he jets about the secure Western world disclosing to free presses the secrets of Western military and diplomatic services, he might ponder whether he would like to move on to a new career working with Iranian, Russian, Chinese, Syrian, and  Hezbollah dissidents who could help him expose the far more lethal and dangerous covert activities of their authoritarian governments. Victor Davis Hanson
The big papers wouldn’t have the material without WikiLeaks. And WikiLeaks wouldn’t get the international exposure — and, perhaps more important, the credibility — that comes from having its material published in the world’s most important newspapers. (…) The collaboration began in June, when Nick Davies, a senior contributor to the Guardian, tracked down Assange in Brussels and suggested that the paper would devote a team to researching stories within WikiLeaks’ cache of documents, Clint Hendler reported in the Columbia Journalism Review. Assange suggested that The New York Times and Der Spiegel be involved as well. Editors from the three papers agreed to a deal in which they’d keep the documents under wraps for a few weeks and publish simultaneously with WikiLeaks. The result was the July 25 story of the Afghanistan war logs. A similar process was used in the release of the Iraq war logs last month and in Sunday’s release of the U.S. Embassy cables, though the list of papers had expanded to include Spain’s El Pais and France’s Le Monde. It might have expanded even further had CNN and The Wall Street Journal agreed to sign the confidentiality agreements that WikiLeaks required in exchange for advance. Politico
I want to set up a new standard: ‘scientific journalism.’ If you publish a paper on DNA, you are required, by all the good biological journals, to submit the data that has informed your research—the idea being that people will replicate it, check it, verify it. So this is something that needs to be done for journalism as well. There is an immediate power imbalance, in that readers are unable to verify what they are being told, and that leads to abuse.
Our primary targets are those highly oppressive regimes in China, Russia and Central Eurasia, but we also expect to be of assistance to those in the West who wish to reveal illegal or immoral behavior in their own governments and corporations
WikiLeaks will not comply with legally abusive requests from Scientology any more than WikiLeaks has complied with similar demands from Swiss banks, Russian offshore stem-cell centers, former African kleptocrats, or the Pentagon. Assange
Assange also wanted to insure that, once the video was posted online, it would be impossible to remove. He told me that WikiLeaks maintains its content on more than twenty servers around the world and on hundreds of domain names. (Expenses are paid by donations, and a few independent well-wishers also run “mirror sites” in support.) Assange calls the site “an uncensorable system for untraceable mass document leaking and public analysis,” and a government or company that wanted to remove content from WikiLeaks would have to practically dismantle the Internet itself. So far, even though the site has received more than a hundred legal threats, almost no one has filed suit.
Assange does not recognize the limits that traditional publishers do. Recently, he posted military documents that included the Social Security numbers of soldiers, and in the Bunker I asked him if WikiLeaks’ mission would have been compromised if he had redacted these small bits. He said that some leaks risked harming innocent people—“collateral damage, if you will”—but that he could not weigh the importance of every detail in every document. Perhaps the Social Security numbers would one day be important to researchers investigating wrongdoing, he said; by releasing the information he would allow judgment to occur in the open.
A year and a half ago, WikiLeaks published the results of an Army test, conducted in 2004, of electromagnetic devices designed to prevent IEDs from being triggered. The document revealed key aspects of how the devices functioned and also showed that they interfered with communication systems used by soldiers—information that an insurgent could exploit. By the time WikiLeaks published the study, the Army had begun to deploy newer technology, but some soldiers were still using the devices. I asked Assange if he would refrain from releasing information that he knew might get someone killed. He said that he had instituted a “harm-minimization policy,” whereby people named in certain documents were contacted before publication, to warn them, but that there were also instances where the members of WikiLeaks might get “blood on our hands.” Julian Assange
The Web site’s strengths – its near-total imperviousness to lawsuits and government harassment – make it an instrument for good in societies where the laws are unjust. But, unlike authoritarian regimes, democratic governments hold secrets largely because citizens agree that they should, in order to protect legitimate policy. In liberal societies, the site’s strengths are its weaknesses. Lawsuits, if they are fair, are a form of deterrence against abuse. Soon enough, Assange must confront the paradox of his creation: the thing that he seems to detest most – power without accountability – is encoded in the site‘s DNA, and will only become more pronounced as WikiLeaks evolves into a real institution. Raffi Khatchadourian

Paranoia du secret, déloyauté et perfidie, insensibilité aux « dommages collatéraux », fonctionnement en organisation criminelle, haine viscérale et piratage des services informatiques des seules sociétés ouvertes …

A l’heure où, craignant d’être à leur tour balayés par l’internet et les nouvelles sources d’information, nos médias se mettent d’eux-mêmes – jusqu’au recel de documents volés – sous la coupe de ces derniers …

Et où les révélations censées dénoncer le bellicisme occidental se trouvent confirmer les pires soupçons contre, de l’Iran au Hezbollah et de la Russie à la Chine, les ennemis des sociétés ouvertes et affirmer d’autant le parler vrai d’un bien seul Israël

Retour, avec le New Yorker et le NYT (qui en payera d’ailleurs apparemment le prix en se voyant refuser la dernière livraison pour avoir – à partir de mels piratés: les mêmes que pour Climategate ! – révélé les dissensions au niveau du groupe), sur le parcours d’un pirate informatique devenu pirate de l’information

Et surtout, dans les efforts mêmes de ce dernier pour se placer au-delà de tout recours juridique ou légal pour assurer l’impunité à sa tentative d’imposition de la transparence totale à tous, l’inquiétante transformation de sa Pirate Bay de l’information sensible et des médias qui la cautionnent en ce précisément qu’il dit combattre

A savoir un véritable petit modèle, à l’iranienne, la russe ou la chinoise, d’opacité et de refus de répondre de ses actes !

No Secrets

Julian Assange’s mission for total transparency.

Raffi Khatchadourian

June 7, 2010

The house on Grettisgata Street, in Reykjavik, is a century old, small and white, situated just a few streets from the North Atlantic. The shifting northerly winds can suddenly bring ice and snow to the city, even in springtime, and when they do a certain kind of silence sets in. This was the case on the morning of March 30th, when a tall Australian man named Julian Paul Assange, with gray eyes and a mop of silver-white hair, arrived to rent the place. Assange was dressed in a gray full-body snowsuit, and he had with him a small entourage. “We are journalists,” he told the owner of the house. Eyjafjallajökull had recently begun erupting, and he said, “We’re here to write about the volcano.” After the owner left, Assange quickly closed the drapes, and he made sure that they stayed closed, day and night. The house, as far as he was concerned, would now serve as a war room; people called it the Bunker. Half a dozen computers were set up in a starkly decorated, white-walled living space. Icelandic activists arrived, and they began to work, more or less at Assange’s direction, around the clock. Their focus was Project B—Assange’s code name for a thirty-eight-minute video taken from the cockpit of an Apache military helicopter in Iraq in 2007. The video depicted American soldiers killing at least eighteen people, including two Reuters journalists; it later became the subject of widespread controversy, but at this early stage it was still a closely guarded military secret.

Assange is an international trafficker, of sorts. He and his colleagues collect documents and imagery that governments and other institutions regard as confidential and publish them on a Web site called WikiLeaks.org. Since it went online, three and a half years ago, the site has published an extensive catalogue of secret material, ranging from the Standard Operating Procedures at Camp Delta, in Guantánamo Bay, and the “Climategate” e-mails from the University of East Anglia, in England, to the contents of Sarah Palin’s private Yahoo account. The catalogue is especially remarkable because WikiLeaks is not quite an organization; it is better described as a media insurgency. It has no paid staff, no copiers, no desks, no office. Assange does not even have a home. He travels from country to country, staying with supporters, or friends of friends—as he once put it to me, “I’m living in airports these days.” He is the operation’s prime mover, and it is fair to say that WikiLeaks exists wherever he does. At the same time, hundreds of volunteers from around the world help maintain the Web site’s complicated infrastructure; many participate in small ways, and between three and five people dedicate themselves to it full time. Key members are known only by initials—M, for instance—even deep within WikiLeaks, where communications are conducted by encrypted online chat services. The secretiveness stems from the belief that a populist intelligence operation with virtually no resources, designed to publicize information that powerful institutions do not want public, will have serious adversaries.

Iceland was a natural place to develop Project B. In the past year, Assange has collaborated with politicians and activists there to draft a free-speech law of unprecedented strength, and a number of these same people had agreed to help him work on the video in total secrecy. The video was a striking artifact—an unmediated representation of the ambiguities and cruelties of modern warfare—and he hoped that its release would touch off a worldwide debate about the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. He was planning to unveil the footage before a group of reporters at the National Press Club, in Washington, on April 5th, the morning after Easter, presumably a slow news day. To accomplish this, he and the other members of the WikiLeaks community would have to analyze the raw video and edit it into a short film, build a stand-alone Web site to display it, launch a media campaign, and prepare documentation for the footage—all in less than a week’s time.

Assange also wanted to insure that, once the video was posted online, it would be impossible to remove. He told me that WikiLeaks maintains its content on more than twenty servers around the world and on hundreds of domain names. (Expenses are paid by donations, and a few independent well-wishers also run “mirror sites” in support.) Assange calls the site “an uncensorable system for untraceable mass document leaking and public analysis,” and a government or company that wanted to remove content from WikiLeaks would have to practically dismantle the Internet itself. So far, even though the site has received more than a hundred legal threats, almost no one has filed suit. Lawyers working for the British bank Northern Rock threatened court action after the site published an embarrassing memo, but they were practically reduced to begging. A Kenyan politician also vowed to sue after Assange published a confidential report alleging that President Daniel arap Moi and his allies had siphoned billions of dollars out of the country. The site’s work in Kenya earned it an award from Amnesty International.

Assange typically tells would-be litigants to go to hell. In 2008, WikiLeaks posted secret Scientology manuals, and lawyers representing the church demanded that they be removed. Assange’s response was to publish more of the Scientologists’ internal material, and to announce, “WikiLeaks will not comply with legally abusive requests from Scientology any more than WikiLeaks has complied with similar demands from Swiss banks, Russian offshore stem-cell centers, former African kleptocrats, or the Pentagon.”

In his writing online, especially on Twitter, Assange is quick to lash out at perceived enemies. By contrast, on television, where he has been appearing more frequently, he acts with uncanny sang-froid. Under the studio lights, he can seem—with his spectral white hair, pallid skin, cool eyes, and expansive forehead—like a rail-thin being who has rocketed to Earth to deliver humanity some hidden truth. This impression is magnified by his rigid demeanor and his baritone voice, which he deploys slowly, at low volume.

In private, however, Assange is often bemused and energetic. He can concentrate intensely, in binges, but he is also the kind of person who will forget to reserve a plane ticket, or reserve a plane ticket and forget to pay for it, or pay for the ticket and forget to go to the airport. People around him seem to want to care for him; they make sure that he is where he needs to be, and that he has not left all his clothes in the dryer before moving on. At such times, he can seem innocent of the considerable influence that he has acquired.

Sitting at a small wooden table in the Bunker, Assange looked exhausted. His lanky frame was arched over two computers—one of them online, and the other disconnected from the Internet, because it was full of classified military documents. (In the tradecraft of espionage, this is known as maintaining an “air gap.”) He has a cyber-security analyst’s concern about computer vulnerability, and habitually takes precautions to frustrate eavesdroppers. A low-grade fever of paranoia runs through the WikiLeaks community. Assange says that he has chased away strangers who have tried to take his picture for surveillance purposes. In March, he published a classified military report, created by the Army Counterintelligence Center in 2008, that argued that the site was a potential threat to the Army and briefly speculated on ways to deter government employees from leaking documents to it. Assange regarded the report as a declaration of war, and posted it with the title “U.S. Intelligence Planned to Destroy WikiLeaks.” During a trip to a conference before he came to the Bunker, he thought he was being followed, and his fear began to infect others. “I went to Sweden and stayed with a girl who is a foreign editor of a newspaper there, and she became so paranoid that the C.I.A. was trying to get me she left the house and abandoned me,” he said.

Assange was sitting opposite Rop Gonggrijp, a Dutch activist, hacker, and businessman. Gonggrijp—thin and balding, with a soft voice—has known Assange well for several years. He had noticed Assange’s panicky communiqués about being watched and decided that his help was needed. “Julian can deal with incredibly little sleep, and a hell of a lot of chaos, but even he has his limits, and I could see that he was stretching himself,” Gonggrijp told me. “I decided to come out and make things sane again.” Gonggrijp became the unofficial manager and treasurer of Project B, advancing about ten thousand euros to WikiLeaks to finance it. He kept everyone on schedule, and made sure that the kitchen was stocked with food and that the Bunker was orderly.

At around three in the afternoon, an Icelandic parliamentarian named Birgitta Jonsdottir walked in. Jonsdottir, who is in her forties, with long brown hair and bangs, was wearing a short black skirt and a black T-shirt with skulls printed on it. She took a WikiLeaks T-shirt from her bag and tossed it at Assange.

“That’s for you,” she said. “You need to change.” He put the T-shirt on a chair next to him, and continued working.

Jonsdottir has been in parliament for about a year, but considers herself a poet, artist, writer, and activist. Her political views are mostly anarchist. “I was actually unemployed before I got this job,” she explained. “When we first got to parliament, the staff was so nervous: here are people who were protesting parliament, who were for revolution, and now we are inside. None of us had aspirations to be politicians. We have a checklist, and, once we’re done, we are out.”

As she unpacked her computer, she asked Assange how he was planning to delegate the work on Project B. More Icelandic activists were due to arrive; half a dozen ultimately contributed time to the video, and about as many WikiLeaks volunteers from other countries were participating. Assange suggested that someone make contact with Google to insure that YouTube would host the footage.

“To make sure it is not taken down under pressure?” she asked.

“They have a rule that mentions gratuitous violence,” Assange said. “The violence is not gratuitous in this case, but nonetheless they have taken things down. It is too important to be interfered with.”

“What can we ask M to do?” Jonsdottir asked. Assange, engrossed in what he was doing, didn’t reply.

His concerns about surveillance had not entirely receded. On March 26th, he had written a blast e-mail, titled “Something Is Rotten in the State of Iceland,” in which he described a teen-age Icelandic WikiLeaks volunteer’s story of being detained by local police for more than twenty hours. The volunteer was arrested for trying to break into the factory where his father worked—“the reasons he was trying to get in are not totally justified,” Assange told me—and said that while in custody he was interrogated about Project B. Assange claimed that the volunteer was “shown covert photos of me outside the Reykjavik restaurant Icelandic Fish & Chips,” where a WikiLeaks production meeting had taken place in a private back room.

The police were denying key parts of the volunteer’s story, and Assange was trying to learn more. He received a call, and after a few minutes hung up. “Our young friend talked to one of the cops,” he said. “I was about to get more details, but my battery died.” He smiled and looked suspiciously at his phone.

“We are all paranoid schizophrenics,” Jonsdottir said. She gestured at Assange, who was still wearing his snowsuit. “Just look at how he dresses.”

Gonggrijp got up, walked to the window, and parted the drapes to peer out.

“Someone?” Jonsdottir asked.

“Just the camera van,” he deadpanned. “The brain-manipulation van.”

At around six in the evening, Assange got up from his spot at the table. He was holding a hard drive containing Project B. The video—excerpts of running footage captured by a camera mounted on the Apache—depicts soldiers conducting an operation in eastern Baghdad, not long after the surge began. Using the Freedom of Information Act, Reuters has sought for three years to obtain the video from the Army, without success. Assange would not identify his source, saying only that the person was unhappy about the attack. The video was digitally encrypted, and it took WikiLeaks three months to crack. Assange, a cryptographer of exceptional skill, told me that unlocking the file was “moderately difficult.”

People gathered in front of a computer to watch. In grainy black-and-white, we join the crew of the Apache, from the Eighth Cavalry Regiment, as it hovers above Baghdad with another helicopter. A wide-angle shot frames a mosque’s dome in crosshairs. We see a jumble of buildings and palm trees and abandoned streets. We hear bursts of static, radio blips, and the clipped banter of tactical communication. Two soldiers are in mid-conversation; the first recorded words are “O.K., I got it.” Assange hit the pause button, and said, “In this video, you will see a number of people killed.” The footage, he explained, had three broad phases. “In the first phase, you will see an attack that is based upon a mistake, but certainly a very careless mistake. In the second part, the attack is clearly murder, according to the definition of the average man. And in the third part you will see the killing of innocent civilians in the course of soldiers going after a legitimate target.”

The first phase was chilling, in part because the banter of the soldiers was so far beyond the boundaries of civilian discourse. “Just fuckin’, once you get on ’em, just open ’em up,” one of them said. The crew members of the Apache came upon about a dozen men ambling down a street, a block or so from American troops, and reported that five or six of the men were armed with AK-47s; as the Apache maneuvered into position to fire at them, the crew saw one of the Reuters journalists, who were mixed in among the other men, and mistook a long-lensed camera for an RPG. The Apaches fired on the men for twenty-five seconds, killing nearly all of them instantly.

Phase two began shortly afterward. As the helicopter hovered over the carnage, the crew noticed a wounded survivor struggling on the ground. The man appeared to be unarmed. “All you gotta do is pick up a weapon,” a soldier in the Apache said. Suddenly, a van drove into view, and three unarmed men rushed to help the wounded person. “We have individuals going to the scene, looks like possibly, uh, picking up bodies and weapons,” the Apache reported, even though the men were helping a survivor, and were not collecting weapons. The Apache fired, killing the men and the person they were trying to save, and wounding two young children in the van’s front seat.

In phase three, the helicopter crew radioed a commander to say that at least six armed men had entered a partially constructed building in a dense urban area. Some of the armed men may have walked over from a skirmish with American troops; it is unclear. The crew asked for permission to attack the structure, which they said appeared abandoned. “We can put a missile in it,” a soldier in the Apache suggested, and the go-ahead was quickly given. Moments later, two unarmed people entered the building. Though the soldiers acknowledged them, the attack proceeded: three Hellfire missiles destroyed the building. Passersby were engulfed by clouds of debris.

Assange saw these events in sharply delineated moral terms, yet the footage did not offer easy legal judgments. In the month before the video was shot, members of the battalion on the ground, from the Sixteenth Infantry Regiment, had suffered more than a hundred and fifty attacks and roadside bombings, nineteen injuries, and four deaths; early that morning, the unit had been attacked by small-arms fire. The soldiers in the Apache were matter-of-fact about killing and spoke callously about their victims, but the first attack could be judged as a tragic misunderstanding. The attack on the van was questionable—the use of force seemed neither thoughtful nor measured—but soldiers are permitted to shoot combatants, even when they are assisting the wounded, and one could argue that the Apache’s crew, in the heat of the moment, reasonably judged the men in the van to be assisting the enemy. Phase three may have been unlawful, perhaps negligent homicide or worse. Firing missiles into a building, in daytime, to kill six people who do not appear to be of strategic importance is an excessive use of force. This attack was conducted with scant deliberation, and it is unclear why the Army did not investigate it.

Assange had obtained internal Army records of the operation, which stated that everyone killed, except for the Reuters journalists, was an insurgent. And the day after the incident an Army spokesperson said, “There is no question that Coalition Forces were clearly engaged in combat operations against a hostile force.” Assange was hoping that Project B would undermine the Army’s official narrative. “This video shows what modern warfare has become, and, I think, after seeing it, whenever people hear about a certain number of casualties that resulted during fighting with close air support, they will understand what is going on,” he said in the Bunker. “The video also makes clear that civilians are listed as insurgents automatically, unless they are children, and that bystanders who are killed are not even mentioned.”

ikiLeaks receives about thirty submissions a day, and typically posts the ones it deems credible in their raw, unedited state, with commentary alongside. Assange told me, “I want to set up a new standard: ‘scientific journalism.’ If you publish a paper on DNA, you are required, by all the good biological journals, to submit the data that has informed your research—the idea being that people will replicate it, check it, verify it. So this is something that needs to be done for journalism as well. There is an immediate power imbalance, in that readers are unable to verify what they are being told, and that leads to abuse.” Because Assange publishes his source material, he believes that WikiLeaks is free to offer its analysis, no matter how speculative. In the case of Project B, Assange wanted to edit the raw footage into a short film as a vehicle for commentary. For a while, he thought about calling the film “Permission to Engage,” but ultimately decided on something more forceful: “Collateral Murder.” He told Gonggrijp, “We want to knock out this ‘collateral damage’ euphemism, and so when anyone uses it they will think ‘collateral murder.’ ”

The video, in its original form, was a puzzle—a fragment of evidence divorced from context. Assange and the others in the Bunker spent much of their time trying to piece together details: the units involved, their command structure, the rules of engagement, the jargon soldiers used on the radio, and, most important, whether and how the Iraqis on the ground were armed.

“One of them has a weapon,” Assange said, peering at blurry footage of the men walking down the street. “See all those people standing out there.”

“And there is a guy with an RPG over his arm,” Gonggrijp said.

“I’m not sure.” Assange said. “It does look a little bit like an RPG.” He played the footage again. “I’ll tell you what is very strange,” he said. “If it is an RPG, then there is just one RPG. Where are all the other weapons? All those guys. It is pretty weird.”

The forensic work was made more difficult because Assange had declined to discuss the matter with military officials. “I thought it would be more harmful than helpful,” he told me. “I have approached them before, and, as soon as they hear it is WikiLeaks, they are not terribly coöperative.” Assange was running Project B as a surprise attack. He had encouraged a rumor that the video was shot in Afghanistan in 2009, in the hope that the Defense Department would be caught unprepared. Assange does not believe that the military acts in good faith with the media. He said to me, “What right does this institution have to know the story before the public?”

This adversarial mind-set permeated the Bunker. Late one night, an activist asked if Assange might be detained upon his arrival in the United States.

“If there is ever a time it was safe for me to go, it is now,” Assange assured him.

“They say that Gitmo is nice this time of year,” Gonggrijp said.

Assange was the sole decision-maker, and it was possible to leave the house at night and come back after sunrise and see him in the same place, working. (“I spent two months in one room in Paris once without leaving,” he said. “People were handing me food.”) He spoke to the team in shorthand—“I need the conversion stuff,” or “Make sure that credit-card donations are acceptable”—all the while resolving flareups with the overworked volunteers. To keep track of who was doing what, Gonggrijp and another activist maintained a workflow chart with yellow Post-Its on the kitchen cabinets. Elsewhere, people were translating the video’s subtitles into various languages, or making sure that servers wouldn’t crash from the traffic that was expected after the video was posted. Assange wanted the families of the Iraqis who had died in the attack to be contacted, to prepare them for the inevitable media attention, and to gather additional information. In conjunction with Iceland’s national broadcasting service, RUV, he sent two Icelandic journalists to Baghdad to find them.

By the end of the week, a frame-by-frame examination of the footage was nearly complete, revealing minute details—evidence of a body on the ground, for instance—that were not visible by casual viewing. (“I am about twelve thousand frames in,” the activist who reviewed it told me. “It’s been a morbid day, going through these people’s last moments.”) Assange had decided to exclude the Hellfire incident from the film; the attack lacked the obvious human dimension of the others, and he thought that viewers might be overloaded with information.

The edited film, which was eighteen minutes long, began with a quote from George Orwell that Assange and M had selected: “Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give the appearance of solidity to pure wind.” It then presented information about the journalists who had been killed, and about the official response to the attack. For the audio of this section, one of the film’s Icelandic editors had layered in fragments of radio banter from the soldiers. As Assange reviewed the cut, an activist named Gudmundur Gudmundsson spoke up to say that the banter allowed viewers to “make an emotional bond” with the soldiers. Assange argued that it was mostly fragmentary and garbled, but Gudmundsson insisted: “It is just used all the time for triggering emotions.”

“At the same time, we are displaying them as monsters,” the editor said.

“But emotions always rule,” Gudmundsson said. “By the way, I worked on the sound recording for a film, ‘Children of Nature,’ that was nominated for an Oscar, so I am speaking from experience.”

“Well, what is your alternative?” Assange asked.

“Basically, bursts of sounds, interrupting the quiet,” he said.

The editor made the change, stripping the voices of the soldiers from the opening, but keeping blips and whirs of radio distortion. Assange gave the edit his final approval.

Late Saturday night, shortly before all the work had to be finished, the journalists who had gone to Baghdad sent Assange an e-mail: they had found the two children in the van. The children had lived a block from the location of the attack, and were being driven to school by their father that morning. “They remember the bombardment, felt great pain, they said, and lost consciousness,” one of the journalists wrote. The journalists also found the owner of the building that had been attacked by the Hellfires, who said that families had been living in the structure, and that seven residents had died. The owner, a retired English teacher, had lost his wife and daughter. An intense discussion arose about what to do with this news: Was it worth using at the National Press Club, or was it a better tactic to hold on to it? If the military justified the Hellfire attacks by claiming that there were no civilian casualties, WikiLeaks could respond by releasing the information, in a kind of ambush. Jonsdottir turned to Gonggrijp, whose eyes had welled up.

“Are you crying?” she asked.

“I am,” he said. “O.K., O.K., it is just the kids. It hurts.” Gonggrijp gathered himself. “Fuck!” he said. Resuming the conversation about ambushing the Army, he said, “Anyway, let them walk into this knife—”

“That is a wonderful thing to do,” one of the activists said.

“Let them walk into this, and they will,” Gonggrijp said. “It is a logical response.”

Jonsdottir was now in tears, too, and wiping her nose.

“Now I want to reëdit the thing,” Assange said. “I want to put in the missile attack. There were three families living in the bottom, so it wasn’t abandoned.” But it was impossible to reëdit the film. The activists were working at capacity, and in several hours it would be Easter.

At half past ten in the morning, Gonggrijp pulled open the drapes, and the Bunker was filled with sunlight. He was wearing a long-sleeved T-shirt and black pants, freshly washed and ironed, and he was struggling to keep everyone on schedule. Last-minute concerns—among them finding a criminal-defense lawyer in the United States—were being addressed. Assange was at a computer, his posture upright as he steadily typed.

“How are we on time?” he asked no one in particular.

“We have three hours,” Gonggrijp said.

Assange wrinkled his brow and turned his attention back to the screen. He was looking at a copy of classified rules of engagement in Iraq from 2006, one of several secret American military documents that he was planning to post with the video. WikiLeaks scrubs such documents to insure that no digital traces embedded in them can identify their source. Assange was purging these traces as fast as he could.

Reykjavik’s streets were empty, and the bells of a cathedral began to toll. “Remember, remember the fifth of November,” Assange said, repeating a line from the English folk poem celebrating Guy Fawkes. He smiled, as Gonggrijp dismantled the workflow chart, removing Post-Its from the cabinets and flushing them down the toilet. Shortly before noon, there was a desperate push to clear away the remaining vestiges of Project B and to get to the airport. Assange was unpacked and unshaven, and his hair was a mess. He was typing up a press release. Jonsdottir came by to help, and he asked her, “Can’t you cut my hair while I’m doing this?”

“No, I am not going to cut your hair while you are working,” she said.

Jonsdottir walked over to the sink and made tea. Assange kept on typing, and after a few minutes she reluctantly began to trim his hair. At one point, she stopped and asked, “If you get arrested, will you get in touch with me?” Assange nodded. Gonggrijp, meanwhile, shoved some of Assange’s things into a bag. He settled the bill with the owner. Dishes were washed. Furniture was put back in place. People piled into a small car, and in an instant the house was empty and still.

The name Assange is thought to derive from Ah Sang, or Mr. Sang, a Chinese émigré who settled on Thursday Island, off the coast of Australia, in the early eighteen-hundreds, and whose descendants later moved to the continent. Assange’s maternal ancestors came to Australia in the mid-nineteenth century, from Scotland and Ireland, in search of farmland, and Assange suspects, only half in jest, that his proclivity for wandering is genetic. His phone numbers and e-mail address are ever-changing, and he can drive the people around him crazy with his elusiveness and his propensity to mask details about his life.

Assange was born in 1971, in the city of Townsville, on Australia’s northeastern coast, but it is probably more accurate to say that he was born into a blur of domestic locomotion. Shortly after his first birthday, his mother—I will call her Claire—married a theatre director, and the two collaborated on small productions. They moved often, living near Byron Bay, a beachfront community in New South Wales, and on Magnetic Island, a tiny pile of rock that Captain Cook believed had magnetic properties that distorted his compass readings. They were tough-minded nonconformists. (At seventeen, Claire had burned her schoolbooks and left home on a motorcycle.) Their house on Magnetic Island burned to the ground, and rifle cartridges that Claire had kept for shooting snakes exploded like fireworks. “Most of this period of my childhood was pretty Tom Sawyer,” Assange told me. “I had my own horse. I built my own raft. I went fishing. I was going down mine shafts and tunnels.”

Assange’s mother believed that formal education would inculcate an unhealthy respect for authority in her children and dampen their will to learn. “I didn’t want their spirits broken,” she told me. In any event, the family had moved thirty-seven times by the time Assange was fourteen, making consistent education impossible. He was homeschooled, sometimes, and he took correspondence classes and studied informally with university professors. But mostly he read on his own, voraciously. He was drawn to science. “I spent a lot of time in libraries going from one thing to another, looking closely at the books I found in citations, and followed that trail,” he recalled. He absorbed a large vocabulary, but only later did he learn how to pronounce all the words that he learned.

When Assange was eight, Claire left her husband and began seeing a musician, with whom she had another child, a boy. The relationship was tempestuous; the musician became abusive, she says, and they separated. A fight ensued over the custody of Assange’s half brother, and Claire felt threatened, fearing that the musician would take away her son. Assange recalled her saying, “Now we need to disappear,” and he lived on the run with her from the age of eleven to sixteen. When I asked him about the experience, he told me that there was evidence that the man belonged to a powerful cult called the Family—its motto was “Unseen, Unknown, and Unheard.” Some members were doctors who persuaded mothers to give up their newborn children to the cult’s leader, Anne Hamilton-Byrne. The cult had moles in government, Assange suspected, who provided the musician with leads on Claire’s whereabouts. In fact, Claire often told friends where she had gone, or hid in places where she had lived before.

While on the run, Claire rented a house across the street from an electronics shop. Assange would go there to write programs on a Commodore 64, until Claire bought it for him, moving to a cheaper place to raise the money. He was soon able to crack into well-known programs, where he found hidden messages left by their creators. “The austerity of one’s interaction with a computer is something that appealed to me,” he said. “It is like chess—chess is very austere, in that you don’t have many rules, there is no randomness, and the problem is very hard.” Assange embraced life as an outsider. He later wrote of himself and a teen-age friend, “We were bright sensitive kids who didn’t fit into the dominant subculture and fiercely castigated those who did as irredeemable boneheads.”

When Assange turned sixteen, he got a modem, and his computer was transformed into a portal. Web sites did not exist yet—this was 1987—but computer networks and telecom systems were sufficiently linked to form a hidden electronic landscape that teen-agers with the requisite technical savvy could traverse. Assange called himself Mendax—from Horace’s splendide mendax, or “nobly untruthful”—and he established a reputation as a sophisticated programmer who could break into the most secure networks. He joined with two hackers to form a group that became known as the International Subversives, and they broke into computer systems in Europe and North America, including networks belonging to the U.S. Department of Defense and to the Los Alamos National Laboratory. In a book called “Underground,” which he collaborated on with a writer named Suelette Dreyfus, he outlined the hacker subculture’s early Golden Rules: “Don’t damage computer systems you break into (including crashing them); don’t change the information in those systems (except for altering logs to cover your tracks); and share information.”

Around this time, Assange fell in love with a sixteen-year-old girl, and he briefly moved out of his mother’s home to stay with her. “A couple of days later, police turned up, and they carted off all my computer stuff,” he recalled. The raid, he said, was carried out by the state police, and “it involved some dodgy character who was alleging that we had stolen five hundred thousand dollars from Citibank.” Assange wasn’t charged, and his equipment was returned. “At that point, I decided that it might be wise to be a bit more discreet,” he said. Assange and the girl joined a squatters’ union in Melbourne, until they learned she was pregnant, and moved to be near Claire. When Assange was eighteen, the two got married in an unofficial ceremony, and soon afterward they had a son.

Hacking remained a constant in his life, and the thrill of digital exploration was amplified by the growing knowledge, among the International Subversives, that the authorities were interested in their activities. The Australian Federal Police had set up an investigation into the group, called Operation Weather, which the hackers strove to monitor.

In September, 1991, when Assange was twenty, he hacked into the master terminal that Nortel, the Canadian telecom company, maintained in Melbourne, and began to poke around. The International Subversives had been visiting the master terminal frequently. Normally, Assange hacked into computer systems at night, when they were semi-dormant, but this time a Nortel administrator was signed on. Sensing that he might be caught, Assange approached him with humor. “I have taken control,” he wrote, without giving his name. “For years, I have been struggling in this grayness. But now I have finally seen the light.” The administrator did not reply, and Assange sent another message: “It’s been nice playing with your system. We didn’t do any damage and we even improved a few things. Please don’t call the Australian Federal Police.”

The International Subversives’ incursions into Nortel turned out to be a critical development for Operation Weather. Federal investigators tapped phone lines to see which ones the hackers were using. “Julian was the most knowledgeable and the most secretive of the lot,” Ken Day, the lead investigator, told me. “He had some altruistic motive. I think he acted on the belief that everyone should have access to everything.”

“Underground” describes Assange’s growing fear of arrest: “Mendax dreamed of police raids all the time. He dreamed of footsteps crunching on the driveway gravel, of shadows in the pre-dawn darkness, of a gun-toting police squad bursting through his backdoor at 5 am.” Assange could relax only when he hid his disks in an apiary that he kept. By October, he was in a terrible state. His wife had left him, taking with her their infant son. His home was a mess. He barely ate or slept. On the night the police came, the twenty-ninth, he wired his phone through his stereo and listened to the busy signal until eleven-thirty, when Ken Day knocked on his door, and told him, “I think you’ve been expecting me.”

Assange was charged with thirty-one counts of hacking and related crimes. While awaiting trial, he fell into a depression, and briefly checked himself into a hospital. He tried to stay with his mother, but after a few days he took to sleeping in nearby parks. He lived and hiked among dense eucalyptus forests in the Dandenong Ranges National Park, which were thick with mosquitoes whose bites scarred his face. “Your inner voice quiets down,” he told me. “Internal dialogue is stimulated by a preparatory desire to speak, but it is not actually useful if there are no other people around.” He added, “I don’t want to sound too Buddhist. But your vision of yourself disappears.”

It took more than three years for the authorities to bring the case against Assange and the other International Subversives to court. Day told me, “We had just formed the computer-crimes team, and the government said, ‘Your charter is to establish a deterrent.’ Well, to get a deterrent you have to prosecute people, and we achieved that with Julian and his group.” A computer-security team working for Nortel in Canada drafted an incident report alleging that the hacking had caused damage that would cost more than a hundred thousand dollars to repair. The chief prosecutor, describing Assange’s near-limitless access, told the court, “It was God Almighty walking around doing what you like.”

Assange, facing a potential sentence of ten years in prison, found the state’s reaction confounding. He bought Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s “The First Circle,” a novel about scientists and technicians forced into the Gulag, and read it three times. (“How close the parallels to my own adventures!” he later wrote.) He was convinced that “look/see” hacking was a victimless crime, and intended to fight the charges. But the other members of the group decided to coöperate. “When a judge says, ‘The prisoner shall now rise,’ and no one else in the room stands—that is a test of character,” he told me. Ultimately, he pleaded guilty to twenty-five charges and six were dropped. But at his final sentencing the judge said, “There is just no evidence that there was anything other than sort of intelligent inquisitiveness and the pleasure of being able to—what’s the expression—surf through these various computers.” Assange’s only penalty was to pay the Australian state a small sum in damages.

As the criminal case was unfolding, Assange and his mother were also waging a campaign to gain full custody of Assange’s son—a legal fight that was, in many ways, far more wrenching than his criminal defense. They were convinced that the boy’s mother and her new boyfriend posed a danger to the child, and they sought to restrict her rights. The state’s child-protection agency, Health and Community Services, disagreed. The specifics of the allegations are unclear; family-court records in Australia are kept anonymous. But in 1995 a parliamentary committee found that the agency maintained an “underlying philosophy of deflecting as many cases away from itself as possible.” When the agency decided that a child was living in a safe household, there was no way to immediately appeal its decision.

The custody battle evolved into a bitter fight with the state. “What we saw was a great bureaucracy that was squashing people,” Claire told me. She and Assange, along with another activist, formed an organization called Parent Inquiry Into Child Protection. “We used full-on activist methods,” Claire recalled. In meetings with Health and Community Services, “we would go in and tape-record them secretly.” The organization used the Australian Freedom of Information Act to obtain documents from Health and Community Services, and they distributed flyers to child-protection workers, encouraging them to come forward with inside information, for a “central databank” that they were creating. “You may remain anonymous if you wish,” one flyer stated. One protection worker leaked to the group an important internal manual. Assange told me, “We had moles who were inside dissidents.”

In 1999, after nearly three dozen legal hearings and appeals, Assange worked out a custody agreement with his wife. Claire told me, “We had experienced very high levels of adrenaline, and I think that after it all finished I ended up with P.T.S.D. It was like coming back from a war. You just can’t interact with normal people to the same degree, and I am sure that Jules has some P.T.S.D. that is untreated.” Not long after the court cases, she said, Assange’s hair, which had been dark brown, became drained of all color.

Assange was burned out. He motorcycled across Vietnam. He held various jobs, and even earned money as a computer-security consultant, supporting his son to the extent that he was able. He studied physics at the University of Melbourne. He thought that trying to decrypt the secret laws governing the universe would provide the intellectual stimulation and rush of hacking. It did not. In 2006, on a blog he had started, he wrote about a conference organized by the Australian Institute of Physics, “with 900 career physicists, the body of which were sniveling fearful conformists of woefully, woefully inferior character.”

He had come to understand the defining human struggle not as left versus right, or faith versus reason, but as individual versus institution. As a student of Kafka, Koestler, and Solzhenitsyn, he believed that truth, creativity, love, and compassion are corrupted by institutional hierarchies, and by “patronage networks”—one of his favorite expressions—that contort the human spirit. He sketched out a manifesto of sorts, titled “Conspiracy as Governance,” which sought to apply graph theory to politics. Assange wrote that illegitimate governance was by definition conspiratorial—the product of functionaries in “collaborative secrecy, working to the detriment of a population.” He argued that, when a regime’s lines of internal communication are disrupted, the information flow among conspirators must dwindle, and that, as the flow approaches zero, the conspiracy dissolves. Leaks were an instrument of information warfare.

These ideas soon evolved into WikiLeaks. In 2006, Assange barricaded himself in a house near the university and began to work. In fits of creativity, he would write out flow diagrams for the system on the walls and doors, so as not to forget them. There was a bed in the kitchen, and he invited backpackers passing through campus to stay with him, in exchange for help building the site. “He wouldn’t sleep at all,” a person who was living in the house told me. “He wouldn’t eat.”

As it now functions, the Web site is primarily hosted on a Swedish Internet service provider called PRQ.se, which was created to withstand both legal pressure and cyber attacks, and which fiercely preserves the anonymity of its clients. Submissions are routed first through PRQ, then to a WikiLeaks server in Belgium, and then on to “another country that has some beneficial laws,” Assange told me, where they are removed at “end-point machines” and stored elsewhere. These machines are maintained by exceptionally secretive engineers, the high priesthood of WikiLeaks. One of them, who would speak only by encrypted chat, told me that Assange and the other public members of WikiLeaks “do not have access to certain parts of the system as a measure to protect them and us.” The entire pipeline, along with the submissions moving through it, is encrypted, and the traffic is kept anonymous by means of a modified version of the Tor network, which sends Internet traffic through “virtual tunnels” that are extremely private. Moreover, at any given time WikiLeaks computers are feeding hundreds of thousands of fake submissions through these tunnels, obscuring the real documents. Assange told me that there are still vulnerabilities, but “this is vastly more secure than any banking network.”

Before launching the site, Assange needed to show potential contributors that it was viable. One of the WikiLeaks activists owned a server that was being used as a node for the Tor network. Millions of secret transmissions passed through it. The activist noticed that hackers from China were using the network to gather foreign governments’ information, and began to record this traffic. Only a small fraction has ever been posted on WikiLeaks, but the initial tranche served as the site’s foundation, and Assange was able to say, “We have received over one million documents from thirteen countries.”

In December, 2006, WikiLeaks posted its first document: a “secret decision,” signed by Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, a Somali rebel leader for the Islamic Courts Union, that had been culled from traffic passing through the Tor network to China. The document called for the execution of government officials by hiring “criminals” as hit men. Assange and the others were uncertain of its authenticity, but they thought that readers, using Wikipedia-like features of the site, would help analyze it. They published the decision with a lengthy commentary, which asked, “Is it a bold manifesto by a flamboyant Islamic militant with links to Bin Laden? Or is it a clever smear by US intelligence, designed to discredit the Union, fracture Somali alliances and manipulate China?”

The document’s authenticity was never determined, and news about WikiLeaks quickly superseded the leak itself. Several weeks later, Assange flew to Kenya for the World Social Forum, an anti-capitalist convention, to make a presentation about the Web site. “He packed in the funniest way I have ever seen,” the person who had been living in the house recalled. “Someone came to pick him up, and he was asked, ‘Where is your luggage?’ And he ran back into the house. He had a sailor’s sack, and he grabbed a whole bunch of stuff and threw it in there, mostly socks.”

Assange ended up staying in Kenya for several months. He would check in with friends by phone and through the Internet from time to time, but was never precise about his movements. One friend told me, “It would always be, ‘Where is Julian?’ It was always difficult to know where he was. It was almost like he was trying to hide.”

It took about an hour on Easter morning to get from the house on Grettisgata Street to Iceland’s international airport, which is situated on a lava field by the sea. Assange, in the terminal, carried a threadbare blue backpack that contained hard drives, phone cards, and multiple cell phones. Gonggrijp had agreed to go to Washington to help with the press conference. He checked in, and the ticketing agent turned to Assange.

“I am sorry,” she said to him. “I cannot find your name.”

“Interesting,” Assange said to Gonggrijp. “Have fun at the press conference.”

“No,” Gonggrijp told the attendant. “We have a booking I.D. number.”

“It’s been confirmed,” Assange insisted.

The attendant looked perplexed. “I know,” she said. “But my booking information has it ‘cancelled.’ ”

The two men exchanged a look: was a government agency tampering with their plans? Assange waited anxiously, but it turned out that he had bought the ticket and neglected to confirm the purchase. He quickly bought another ticket, and the two men flew to New York and then rushed to catch the Acela to Washington. It was nearly two in the morning when they arrived. They got into a taxi, and Assange, who didn’t want to reveal the location of his hotel, told the driver to go to a nearby cross street.

“Here we are in the lion’s den,” Gonggrijp said as the taxi raced down Massachusetts Avenue, passing rows of nondescript office buildings. Assange said, “Not looking too lionish.”

A few hours after sunrise, Assange was standing at a lectern inside the National Press Club, ready to present “Collateral Murder” to the forty or so journalists who had come. He was dressed in a brown blazer, a black shirt, and a red tie. He played the film for the audience, pausing it to discuss various details. After the film ended, he ran footage of the Hellfire attack—a woman in the audience gasped as the first missile hit the building—and read from the e-mail sent by the Icelandic journalists who had gone to Iraq. The leak, he told the reporters, “sends a message that some people within the military don’t like what is going on.”

The video, in both raw and edited forms, was released on the site that WikiLeaks had built for it, and also on YouTube and a number of other Web sites. Within minutes after the press conference, Assange was invited to Al Jazeera’s Washington headquarters, where he spent half the day giving interviews, and that evening MSNBC ran a long segment about the footage. The video was covered in the Times, in multiple stories, and in every other major paper. On YouTube alone, more than seven million viewers have watched “Collateral Murder.”

Defense Secretary Robert Gates was asked about the footage, and said, clearly irritated, “These people can put anything out they want and are never held accountable for it.” The video was like looking at war “through a soda straw,” he said. “There is no before and there is no after.” Army spokespeople insisted that there was no violation of the rules of engagement. At first, the media’s response hewed to Assange’s interpretation, but, in the ensuing days, as more commentators weighed in and the military offered its view, Assange grew frustrated. Much of the coverage focussed not on the Hellfire attack or the van but on the killing of the journalists and on how a soldier might reasonably mistake a camera for an RPG. On Twitter, Assange accused Gates of being “a liar,” and beseeched members of the media to “stop spinning.”

In some respects, Assange appeared to be most annoyed by the journalistic process itself—“a craven sucking up to official sources to imbue the eventual story with some kind of official basis,” as he once put it. WikiLeaks has long maintained a complicated relationship with conventional journalism. When, in 2008, the site was sued after publishing confidential documents from a Swiss bank, the Los Angeles Times, the Associated Press, and ten other news organizations filed amicus briefs in support. (The bank later withdrew its suit.) But, in the Bunker one evening, Gonggrijp told me, “We are not the press.” He considers WikiLeaks an advocacy group for sources; within the framework of the Web site, he said, “the source is no longer dependent on finding a journalist who may or may not do something good with his document.”

Assange, despite his claims to scientific journalism, emphasized to me that his mission is to expose injustice, not to provide an even-handed record of events. In an invitation to potential collaborators in 2006, he wrote, “Our primary targets are those highly oppressive regimes in China, Russia and Central Eurasia, but we also expect to be of assistance to those in the West who wish to reveal illegal or immoral behavior in their own governments and corporations.” He has argued that a “social movement” to expose secrets could “bring down many administrations that rely on concealing reality—including the US administration.”

Assange does not recognize the limits that traditional publishers do. Recently, he posted military documents that included the Social Security numbers of soldiers, and in the Bunker I asked him if WikiLeaks’ mission would have been compromised if he had redacted these small bits. He said that some leaks risked harming innocent people—“collateral damage, if you will”—but that he could not weigh the importance of every detail in every document. Perhaps the Social Security numbers would one day be important to researchers investigating wrongdoing, he said; by releasing the information he would allow judgment to occur in the open.

A year and a half ago, WikiLeaks published the results of an Army test, conducted in 2004, of electromagnetic devices designed to prevent IEDs from being triggered. The document revealed key aspects of how the devices functioned and also showed that they interfered with communication systems used by soldiers—information that an insurgent could exploit. By the time WikiLeaks published the study, the Army had begun to deploy newer technology, but some soldiers were still using the devices. I asked Assange if he would refrain from releasing information that he knew might get someone killed. He said that he had instituted a “harm-minimization policy,” whereby people named in certain documents were contacted before publication, to warn them, but that there were also instances where the members of WikiLeaks might get “blood on our hands.”

One member told me that Assange’s editorial policy initially made her uncomfortable, but that she has come around to his position, because she believes that no one has been unjustly harmed. Of course, such harm is not always easy to measure. When Assange was looking for board members, he contacted Steven Aftergood, who runs an e-mail newsletter for the Federation of American Scientists, and who publishes sensitive documents. Aftergood declined to participate. “When a technical record is both sensitive and remote from a current subject of controversy, my editorial inclination is to err on the side of caution,” he said. “I miss that kind of questioning on their part.”

At the same time, Aftergood told me, the overclassification of information is a problem of increasing scale—one that harms not only citizens, who should be able to have access to government records, but the system of classification itself. When too many secrets are kept, it becomes difficult to know which ones are important. Had the military released the video from the Apache to Reuters under FOIA, it would probably not have become a film titled “Collateral Murder,” and a public-relations nightmare.

Lieutenant Colonel Lee Packnett, the spokesperson for intelligence matters for the Army, was deeply agitated when I called him. “We’re not going to give validity to WikiLeaks,” he said. “You’re not doing anything for the Army by putting us in a conversation about WikiLeaks. You can talk to someone else. It’s not an Army issue.” As he saw it, once “Collateral Murder” had passed through the news cycle, the broader counter-intelligence problem that WikiLeaks poses to the military had disappeared as well. “It went away,” he said.

With the release of “Collateral Murder,” WikiLeaks received more than two hundred thousand dollars in donations, and on April 7th Assange wrote on Twitter, “New funding model for journalism: try doing it for a change.” Just this winter, he had put the site into a state of semi-dormancy because there was not enough money to run it, and because its technical engineering needed adjusting. Assange has far more material than he can process, and he is seeking specialists who can sift through the chaotic WikiLeaks library and assign documents to volunteers for analysis. The donations meant that WikiLeaks would now be able to pay some volunteers, and in late May its full archive went back online. Still, the site remains a project in early development. Assange has been searching for the right way not only to manage it but also to get readers interested in the more arcane material there.

In 2007, he published thousands of pages of secret military information detailing a vast number of Army procurements in Iraq and Afghanistan. He and a volunteer spent weeks building a searchable database, studying the Army’s purchasing codes, and adding up the cost of the procurements—billions of dollars in all. The database catalogued matériel that every unit had ordered: machine guns, Humvees, cash-counting machines, satellite phones. Assange hoped that journalists would pore through it, but barely any did. “I am so angry,” he said. “This was such a fucking fantastic leak: the Army’s force structure of Afghanistan and Iraq, down to the last chair, and nothing.”

WikiLeaks is a finalist for a Knight Foundation grant of more than half a million dollars. The intended project would set up a way for sources to pass documents to newspaper reporters securely; WikiLeaks would serve as a kind of numbered Swiss bank account, where information could be anonymously exchanged. (The system would allow the source to impose a deadline on the reporter, after which the document would automatically appear on WikiLeaks.) Assange has been experimenting with other ideas, too. On the principle that people won’t regard something as valuable unless they pay for it, he has tried selling documents at auction to news organizations; in 2008, he attempted this with seven thousand internal e-mails from the account of a former speechwriter for Hugo Chávez. The auction failed. He is thinking about setting up a subscription service, where high-paying members would have early access to leaks.

But experimenting with the site’s presentation and its technical operations will not answer a deeper question that WikiLeaks must address: What is it about? The Web site’s strengths—its near-total imperviousness to lawsuits and government harassment—make it an instrument for good in societies where the laws are unjust. But, unlike authoritarian regimes, democratic governments hold secrets largely because citizens agree that they should, in order to protect legitimate policy. In liberal societies, the site’s strengths are its weaknesses. Lawsuits, if they are fair, are a form of deterrence against abuse. Soon enough, Assange must confront the paradox of his creation: the thing that he seems to detest most—power without accountability—is encoded in the site’s DNA, and will only become more pronounced as WikiLeaks evolves into a real institution.

After the press conference in Washington, I met Assange in New York, in Bryant Park. He had brought his luggage with him, because he was moving between the apartments of friends of friends. We sat near the fountain, and drank coffee. That week, Assange was scheduled to fly to Berkeley, and then to Italy, but back in Iceland the volcano was erupting again, and his flight to Europe was likely to change. He looked a bit shell-shocked. “It was surprising to me that we were seen as such an impartial arbiter of the truth, which may speak well to what we have done,” he told me. But he also said, “To be completely impartial is to be an idiot. This would mean that we would have to treat the dust in the street the same as the lives of people who have been killed.”

A number of commentators had wondered whether the video’s title was manipulative. “In hindsight, should we have called it ‘Permission to Engage’ rather than ‘Collateral Murder’?” he said. “I’m still not sure.” He was annoyed by Gates’s comment on the film: “He says, ‘There is no before and no after.’ Well, at least there is now a middle, which is a vast improvement.” Then Assange leaned forward and, in a whisper, began to talk about a leak, code-named Project G, that he is developing in another secret location. He promised that it would be news, and I saw in him the same mixture of seriousness and amusement, devilishness and intensity that he had displayed in the Bunker. “If it feels a little bit like we’re amateurs, it is because we are,” he said. “Everyone is an amateur in this business.” And then, his coffee finished, he made his way out of the park and into Times Square, disappearing among the masses of people moving this way and that.

Voir enfin:

WikiLeaks a media game changer

Keach Hagey

November 29, 2010

After the New York Times published stories based on the WikiLeaks’ Iraq war logs in October next to a tough profile of the organization’s founder, the paper’s public editor concluded that the paper had taken a “reputational risk in doing business with WikiLeaks, though it has inoculated itself somewhat by reporting independently on the organization.”

But that independent reporting got the paper left out of getting advance access to the latest round of leaked cables, despite being originally told that it would get them, New York Times Editor Bill Keller told POLITICO.

“Back when we got the original archive — the Afghanistan and Iraq war reports — the understanding was that the same group, Guardian, NYT and Der Spiegel, would eventually get the cables,” Keller said. “Why [WikiLeaks founder Julian] Assange chose to cut us out, he never explicitly said. He has a rather lengthy bill of grievances against the Times, which he has voiced in public, to journalists at the European papers and to me by phone.”

Assange thought the Times’ profile of Bradley Manning, who is suspected of providing the documents to WikiLeaks, “paid insufficient attention to Manning’s political motivation,” Keller said, and “strongly disliked John Burns’s piece on the internal strains within WikiLeaks.” Keller added, “I think he was unhappy with something the editorial page said about him.”

So, in one of the back story’s strangest twists, the Times had to get the leaked cables through something akin to a second leak — obtaining them from the Guardian of London. Guardian investigative editor David Leigh told Yahoo’s Michael Calderone that the British paper handed over the source material because British law « might have stopped us through injunctions [gag orders] if we were on our own. » Keller told readers in a Q & A Monday that the Guardian “considered it a continuation of our collaboration on earlier WikiLeaks disclosures.”

Either way, such international collaboration on a major story is unprecedented in the history of journalism and points to the new role that elite news organizations play in the Internet age — in this case, as conduits of material originally obtained not by their own investigative journalists but by others, such as WikiLeaks.

The big papers wouldn’t have the material without WikiLeaks. And WikiLeaks wouldn’t get the international exposure — and, perhaps more important, the credibility — that comes from having its material published in the world’s most important newspapers.

But the Times has come under some criticism from readers for the arrangement. One reader called it “disgusting” that the Times would act as a “media partner” to WikiLeaks, which Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.) wants to have designated as a “foreign terrorist organization.” Others wondered what the Times gave up by agreeing to work with WikiLeaks, after other news organizations declined early access because they did not want to abide by confidentiality agreements.

Keller defended the paper’s decision, saying that “WikiLeaks is not a ‘media partner’ of the Times” and that the paper “signed no agreement of any kind, with WikiLeaks or anyone else.” While WikiLeaks did not get a look at the Times’ stories in advance, the Times did try to influence what WikiLeaks plans to put up on its site over the course of this week.

Keller acknowledged the Times has “no control over what WikiLeaks will do” but said the paper told WikiLeaks and the other papers in possession of the cables about the State Department’s concerns, as well as the Times’ plans to edit out sensitive material. “The other news organizations supported these redactions,” Keller said. “WikiLeaks has indicated that it intends to do likewise — and as a matter of news interest, we will watch their website to see what they do.”

Such collaboration by major media organizations across international borders — both in agreeing to work together in publishing the material  and in agreeing what material should be kept out — is new for journalism.

“I know of no international efforts like this, a global kind of collaboration,” said Mark Feldstein, a professor at George Washington University’s School of Media and Public Affairs and author of “Poisoning the Press: Richard Nixon, Jack Anderson and the Rise of Washington’s Scandal Culture.”

“It’s unprecedented and to be commended. The volume of the material that WikiLeaks obtained is unprecedented, so to tackle a subject this complicated is going to take more resources. And just as everything else has gone global — crime and multinational corporations — so we are starting to see the beginning of a more global investigative journalism, » he said.

The collaboration began in June, when Nick Davies, a senior contributor to the Guardian, tracked down Assange in Brussels and suggested that the paper would devote a team to researching stories within WikiLeaks’ cache of documents, Clint Hendler reported in the Columbia Journalism Review. Assange suggested that The New York Times and Der Spiegel be involved as well. Editors from the three papers agreed to a deal in which they’d keep the documents under wraps for a few weeks and publish simultaneously with WikiLeaks.

The result was the July 25 story of the Afghanistan war logs. A similar process was used in the release of the Iraq war logs last month and in Sunday’s release of the U.S. Embassy cables, though the list of papers had expanded to include Spain’s El Pais and France’s Le Monde.

It might have expanded even further had CNN and The Wall Street Journal agreed to sign the confidentiality agreements that WikiLeaks required in exchange for advance access.

CNN reported that it “declined a last-minute offer to discuss advance access to some of the documents because of a confidentiality agreement requested by WikiLeaks that CNN considered unacceptable.” A spokesperson for CNN would not go into specifics on the unacceptable terms of the requested agreement.

The Wall Street Journal also declined an offer of access made about a week ago, Russell Adams and Jessica E. Vascellaro reported. “We didn’t want to agree to a set of pre-conditions related to the disclosure of the WikiLeaks documents without even being given a broad understanding of what these documents contained, » a spokeswoman for the paper said.

The five newspapers that did get advance access had been looking at the cables for some time. The Guardian has had access to them since August, while the Times has been reviewing them for “several weeks.”

Part of that review process, in both papers’ cases, included a process of redaction in consultation with U.S. officials.

“We have edited out any information that could identify confidential sources — including informants, dissidents, academics and human rights activists — or otherwise compromise national security,” Keller wrote in response to readers’ questions. “We did this in consultation with the State Department, and while they strongly disapprove of the publication of classified material at any time, and while we did not agree with all of their requests for omission, we took their views very seriously indeed.”

Both papers shared their redactions with each other, and with WikiLeaks, in hopes that the organization would make similar choices. WikiLeaks could not be reached for comment.

This kind of negotiation with U.S. officials has not always been part of the history of large leaks. The New York Times’ release of the Pentagon Papers in 1971, the most frequently cited precedent for the WikiLeaks revelations, had no input at all from the government, according to David Rudenstine, a professor of law at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and author of “The Day the Presses Stopped: A History of the Pentagon Papers Case.”

“In the Pentagon Papers case, The New York Times kept the fact that it had the Pentagon Papers secret from everybody, including the government,” he said. “The fear at the Times, in April, May and June of 1971, was that the government would find out that it had these documents and seek through the FBI to perhaps recover them. And so perhaps as a result, the Times took extraordinary steps to keep the stories confidential.”

He added that the Times “thought that they had more than adequate capacity to make these judgments without going to the government,” as did The Washington Post in its Pentagon Papers stories.

At the time, the Times was generally lauded for its courage in exposing a bad war.

More recent history does have the Times holding stories containing major revelations over government concerns, as was the case when the paper held the NSA warrantless surveillance story from 2004 until 2005, a move that provoked criticism because the story could have had an effect on the 2004 presidential elections.

But the deals the papers strike with WikiLeaks makes such holding impossible. The scope of action available to the papers is limited: They can provide context and verification, but they can’t stall or kill the story.

After the leak of the Afghan war documents, New York University professor Jay Rosen noted that this arrangement alters the role the press has traditionally played.

“Notice how effective this combination is,” he said. “The information is released in two forms: vetted and narrated to gain old-media cred and released online in full text, Internet style, which corrects for any timidity or blind spot the editors at Der Spiegel, the Times or the Guardian may show.”

Pointing to a request from the Times to WikiLeaks, urging the site to withhold harmful material from its website, Rosen wrote: “There’s the new balance of power, right there. In the revised picture we find the state, which holds the secrets but is powerless to prevent their release; the stateless news organization, deciding how to release them; and the national newspaper in the middle, negotiating the terms of legitimacy between these two actors.”

Voir aussi:

WikiLeaks Founder on the Run, Trailed by Turmoil/Notoriety

John F. Burns and Ravi Somaiya

The NYT

October 23, 2010

LONDON — Julian Assange moves like a hunted man. In a noisy Ethiopian restaurant in London’s rundown Paddington district, he pitches his voice barely above a whisper to foil the Western intelligence agencies he fears.

He demands that his dwindling number of loyalists use expensive encrypted cellphones and swaps his own the way other men change shirts. He checks into hotels under false names, dyes his hair, sleeps on sofas and floors, and uses cash instead of credit cards, often borrowed from friends.

“By being determined to be on this path, and not to compromise, I’ve wound up in an extraordinary situation,” Mr. Assange said over lunch last Sunday, when he arrived sporting a woolen beanie and a wispy stubble and trailing a youthful entourage that included a filmmaker assigned to document any unpleasant surprises.

In his remarkable journey to notoriety, Mr. Assange, founder of the WikiLeaks whistle-blowers’ Web site, sees the next few weeks as his most hazardous. Now he is making his most brazen disclosure yet: 391,832 secret documents on the Iraqi war. He held a news conference in London on Saturday, saying that the release “constituted the most comprehensive and detailed account of any war ever to have entered the public record.”

Twelve weeks ago, he posted on his organization’s Web site some 77,000 classified Pentagon documents on the Afghan conflict.

Much has changed since 2006, when Mr. Assange, a 39-year-old Australian, used years of computer hacking and what friends call a near genius I.Q. to establish WikiLeaks, redefining whistle-blowing by gathering secrets in bulk, storing them beyond the reach of governments and others determined to retrieve them, then releasing them instantly, and globally.

Now it is not just governments that denounce him: some of his own comrades are abandoning him for what they see as erratic and imperious behavior, and a nearly delusional grandeur unmatched by an awareness that the digital secrets he reveals can have a price in flesh and blood.

Several WikiLeaks colleagues say he alone decided to release the Afghan documents without removing the names of Afghan intelligence sources for NATO troops. “We were very, very upset with that, and with the way he spoke about it afterwards,” said Birgitta Jonsdottir, a core WikiLeaks volunteer and a member of Iceland’s Parliament. “If he could just focus on the important things he does, it would be better.”

He is also being investigated in connection with accusations of rape and molestation involving two Swedish women. Mr. Assange has denied the allegations, saying the relations were consensual. But prosecutors in Sweden have yet to formally approve charges or dismiss the case eight weeks after the complaints against Mr. Assange were filed, damaging his quest for a secure base for himself and WikiLeaks. Though he characterizes the claims as “a smear campaign,” the scandal has compounded the pressures of his cloaked life.

“When it comes to the point where you occasionally look forward to being in prison on the basis that you might be able to spend a day reading a book, the realization dawns that perhaps the situation has become a little more stressful than you would like,” he said over the London lunch.

Exposing Secrets

Mr. Assange has come a long way from an unsettled childhood in Australia as a self-acknowledged social misfit who narrowly avoided prison after being convicted on 25 charges of computer hacking in 1995. History is punctuated by spies, defectors and others who revealed the most inflammatory secrets of their age. Mr. Assange has become that figure for the Internet era, with as yet unreckoned consequences for himself and for the keepers of the world’s secrets.

“I’ve been waiting 40 years for someone to disclose information on a scale that might really make a difference,” said Daniel Ellsberg, who exposed a 1,000-page secret study of the Vietnam War in 1971 that became known as the Pentagon Papers.

Mr. Ellsberg said he saw kindred spirits in Mr. Assange and Pfc. Bradley Manning, the 22-year-old former Army intelligence operative under detention in Quantico, Va., suspected of leaking the Iraq and Afghan documents.

“They were willing to go to prison for life, or be executed, to put out this information,” Mr. Ellsberg said.

Underlying Mr. Assange’s anxieties is deep uncertainty about what the United States and its allies may do next. Pentagon and Justice department officials have said they are weighing his actions under the 1917 Espionage Act. They have demanded that Mr. Assange “return” all government documents in his possession, undertake not to publish any new ones and not “solicit” further American materials.

Mr. Assange has responded by going on the run, but has found no refuge. Amid the Afghan documents controversy, he flew to Sweden, seeking a residence permit and protection under that country’s broad press freedoms. His initial welcome was euphoric.

“They called me the James Bond of journalism,” he recalled wryly. “It got me a lot of fans, and some of them ended up causing me a bit of trouble.”

Within days, his liaisons with two Swedish women led to an arrest warrant on charges of rape and molestation. Karin Rosander, a spokesperson for the prosecutor, said last week that the police were continuing to investigate.

In late September, he left Stockholm for Berlin. A bag he checked on the almost empty flight disappeared, with three encrypted laptops. It has not resurfaced; Mr. Assange suspects it was intercepted. From Germany, he traveled to London, wary at being detained on arrival. Under British law, his Australian passport entitles him to remain for six months. Iceland, another country with generous press freedoms and a strong WikiLeaks following, has also lost its appeal, with Mr. Assange concluding that its government, like Britain’s, is too easily influenced by Washington. In his native Australia, ministers have signaled their willingness to cooperate with the United States if it opens a prosecution. Mr. Assange said a senior Australian official told him, “You play outside the rules, and you will be dealt with outside the rules.”

He faces attack from within, too.

After the Sweden scandal, strains within WikiLeaks reached a breaking point, with some of Mr. Assange’s closest collaborators publicly defecting. The New York Times spoke with dozens of people who have worked with and supported him in Iceland, Sweden, Germany, Britain and the United States. What emerged was a picture of the founder of WikiLeaks as its prime innovator and charismatic force but as someone whose growing celebrity has been matched by an increasingly dictatorial, eccentric and capricious style.

Internal Turmoil

Effectively, as Mr. Assange pursues his fugitive’s life, his leadership is enforced over the Internet. Even remotely, his style is imperious. In an online exchange with one volunteer, a transcript of which was obtained by The Times, he warned that WikiLeaks would disintegrate without him. “We’ve been in a Unity or Death situation for a few months now,” he said.

When Herbert Snorrason, a 25-year-old political activist in Iceland, questioned Mr. Assange’s judgment over a number of issues in an online exchange last month, Mr. Assange was uncompromising. “I don’t like your tone,” he said, according to a transcript. “If it continues, you’re out.”

Mr. Assange cast himself as indispensable. “I am the heart and soul of this organization, its founder, philosopher, spokesperson, original coder, organizer, financier, and all the rest,” he said. “If you have a problem with me,” he told Mr. Snorrason, using an expletive, he should quit.

In an interview about the exchange, Mr. Snorrason’s conclusion was stark. “He is not in his right mind,” he said. In London, Mr. Assange was dismissive of all those who have criticized him. “These are not consequential people,” he said.

“About a dozen” disillusioned volunteers have left recently, said Smari McCarthy, an Icelandic volunteer who has distanced himself in the recent turmoil. In late summer, Mr. Assange suspended Daniel Domscheit-Berg, a German who had been the WikiLeaks spokesman under the pseudonym Daniel Schmitt, accusing him of unspecified “bad behavior.” Many more activists, Mr. McCarthy said, are likely to follow.

Mr. Assange denied that any important volunteers had quit, apart from Mr. Domscheit-Berg. But further defections could paralyze an organization that Mr. Assange says has 40 core volunteers and about 800 mostly unpaid followers to maintain a diffuse web of computer servers and to secure the system against attack — to guard against the kind of infiltration that WikiLeaks itself has used to generate its revelations.

Mr. Assange’s detractors also accuse him of pursuing a vendetta against the United States. In London, Mr. Assange said America was an increasingly militarized society and a threat to democracy. Moreover, he said, “we have been attacked by the United States, so we are forced into a position where we must defend ourselves.”

Even among those challenging Mr. Assange’s leadership style, there is recognition that the intricate computer and financial architecture WikiLeaks uses to shield it against its enemies has depended on its founder. “He’s very unique and extremely capable,” said Ms. Jonsdottir, the Icelandic lawmaker.

A Rash of Scoops

Before posting the documents on Afghanistan and Iraq, WikiLeaks enjoyed a string of coups.

Supporters were thrilled when the organization posted documents on the Guantánamo Bay detention operation, the contents of Sarah Palin’s personal Yahoo email account, reports of extrajudicial killings in Kenya and East Timor, the membership rolls of the neo-Nazi British National Party and a combat video showing American Apache helicopters in Baghdad in 2007 gunning down at least 12 people, including two Reuters journalists.

But now, WikiLeaks has been met with new doubts. Amnesty International and Reporters Without Borders have joined the Pentagon in criticizing the organization for risking people’s lives by publishing war logs identifying Afghans working for the Americans or acting as informers.

A Taliban spokesman in Afghanistan using the pseudonym Zabiullah Mujahid said in a telephone interview that the Taliban had formed a nine-member “commission” after the Afghan documents were posted “to find about people who are spying.” He said the Taliban had a “wanted” list of 1,800 Afghans and was comparing that with names WikiLeaks provided.

“After the process is completed, our Taliban court will decide about such people,” he said.

Mr. Assange defended posting unredacted documents, saying he balanced his decision “with the knowledge of the tremendous good and prevention of harm that is caused” by putting the information into the public domain. “There are no easy choices on the table for this organization,” he said.

But if Mr. Assange is sustained by his sense of mission, faith is fading among his fellow conspirators. His mood was caught vividly in an exchange on Sept. 20 with another senior WikiLeaks figure. In an encrypted online chat, a transcript of which was passed to The Times, Mr. Assange was dismissive of his colleagues. He described them as “a confederacy of fools,” and asked his interlocutor, “Am I dealing with a complete retard?”

In London, Mr. Assange was angered when asked about the rifts. He responded testily to questions about WikiLeaks’s opaque finances, Private Manning’s fate and WikiLeaks’s apparent lack of accountability to anybody but himself, calling the questions “cretinous,” “facile” and reminiscent of “kindergarten.”

Mr. Assange has been equivocal about Private Manning, talking in late summer as though the soldier was unavoidable collateral damage, much like the Afghans named as informers in the secret Pentagon documents.

But in London, he took a more sympathetic view, describing Private Manning as a “political prisoner” facing a jail term of up to 52 years, without confirming that he was the source of the disclosed war logs. “We have a duty to assist Mr. Manning and other people who are facing legal and other consequences,” he said.

Mr. Assange’s own fate seems as imperiled as Private Manning’s. Last Monday, the Swedish Migration Board said Mr. Assange’s bid for a residence permit had been rejected. His British visa will expire early next year. When he left the London restaurant at twilight, heading into the shadows, he declined to say where he was going. The man who has put some of the world’s most powerful institutions on his watch list was, once more, on the move.

Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington, and Dexter Filkins from Kabul, Afghanistan.


WikiLeaks: Attention, des coups tordus peuvent en cacher d’autres (How WikiLeaks got away with murder)

22 août, 2010
WikiLeaks's IEDOn nous avait dit de nous attendre à des coups tordus. Nous venons de recevoir le premier. WikiLeaks
J’adore botter le cul des salauds. Julian Assange
Après tout, c’est leur faute: on fait pas la guerre avec des mômes. Soldat américain
From being in the perspective of the Apache helicopter crew, I can see where a group of men gathering, when there’s a firefight just a few blocks away, which I was involved in, and they’re carrying weapons, one of which is an RPG. … Their overall mission that day was to protect us, to provide support for us, so I can see where the initial attack on the group of men was warranted. However, personally I don’t feel that the attack on the van was warranted. I think that the people could have been deterred from doing what they were doing in the van by simply firing a few warning shots versus completely obliterating the van and its occupants. Ethan McCord
When I did come up on the scene, there was an RPG as well as AK-47s there…. You just don’t walk around with an RPG in Iraq, especially three blocks away from a firefight…. Personally, I believe the first attack on the group standing by the wall was appropriate, was warranted by the rules of engagement. They did have weapons there. However, I don’t feel that the attack on the [rescue] van was necessary. Now, as far as rules of engagement, [Iraqis] are not supposed to pick up the wounded. But they could have been easily deterred from doing what they were doing by just firing simply a few warning shots in the direction…. Instead, the Apaches decided to completely obliterate everybody in the van. That’s the hard part to swallow. (…) There were plenty of times in the past where other insurgents would come by and pick up the bodies, and then we’d have no evidence or anything to what happened, so in looking at it from the Apache’s point of view, they were thinking that [someone was] picking up the weapons and bodies; when, in hindsight, clearly they were picking up the wounded man. But you’re not supposed to do that in Iraq. (…) When it was first released I don’t think it was done in the best manner that it could have been. They were stating that these people had no weapons whatsoever, that they were just carrying cameras. In the video, you can clearly see that they did have weapons … to the trained eye. You can make out in the video [someone] carrying an AK-47, swinging it down by his legs…. And as far as the way that the soldiers are speaking in the video, which is pretty callous and joking about what’s happened … that’s a coping mechanism. I’m guilty of it, too, myself. You joke about the situations and what’s happened to push away your true feelings of the matter. (…) I don’t say that Wikileaks did a bad thing, because they didn’t…. I think it is good that they’re putting this stuff out there. I don’t think that people really want to see this, though, because this is war…. It’s very disturbing.  McCord
The army described this as a group that gave resistance at the time, that doesn’t seem to be happening. But there are armed men in the group, they did find a rocket propelled grenade among the group, the Reuters photographers who were regrettably killed, were not identified…You have edited this tape, and you have given it a title called ‘collateral murder.’ That’s not leaking, that’s a pure editorial. (…) I admire that you have properly manipulated the audience into an emotional state you want before something goes on the air. Stephen Colbert
It gives you a limited perspective. The video only tells you a  portion of the activity that was happening that day. Just from watching that  video, people cannot understand the complex battles that occurred. You are  seeing only a very narrow picture of the events. (…) Our forces were engaged in combat all that day with  individuals that fit the description of the men in that video. Their age, their  weapons, and the fact that they were within the distance of the forces that had  been engaged made it apparent these guys were potentially a threat. Capt. Jack Hanzlik (spokesman for U.S. Central Command)
It is precisely the presence of weapons, including RPGs, that goes a long distance toward explaining why cameramen for Reuters—pointing television cameras around corners in a battle zone—were readily mistaken by our gunships for insurgents. The video makes plain that in this incident, as in almost all military encounters in both Iraq and Afghanistan, our soldiers are up against forces that do not wear uniforms—a violation of international law precisely because it places innocent civilians in jeopardy. Responsibility for civilian deaths in such encounters rests with those who violate the rules of war. The Wikileaks videos also do not reveal the hundreds upon hundreds of cases in which American forces refrain from attacking targets precisely because civilians are in harm’s way. Gabriel Schoenfeld (Hudson Institute)
Jusqu’ici, WikiLeaks s’était fait connaître en publiant des révélations refusées parfois par des titres, disons, institutionnels. Dans le cas des Warlogs, c’est l’inverse: WikiLeaks est le fournisseur. La logique est inversée, le journalisme bientôt bouleversé. David Dufresne
Ces images troublantes ne doivent pas être visualisées ou jugées indépendamment du contexte, de ce qui se passait alors aux environs. Amnesty international
Reporters sans frontières, organisation internationale de défense de la liberté de la presse, regrette l’incroyable irresponsabilité dont vous avez fait preuve lors de la publication de votre article intitulé “Journal d’Afghanistan, 2004 – 2010”, le 25 juillet 2010 sur le site Wikileaks. Vous avez, à cette occasion, diffusé sur votre site quelque 92 000 documents mentionnant les noms de collaborateurs afghans de la coalition militaire internationale présente en Afghanistan depuis 2001. (…) En revanche, divulguer l’identité de centaines de collaborateurs de la coalition en Afghanistan est lourd de danger. Les Talibans et d’autres groupes armés peuvent établir sans difficulté, à partir de ces documents, une liste noire de personnes à abattre et mener des vengeances meurtrières. Pour vous justifier, vous avez déclaré qu’il s’agissait de “mettre fin à la guerre en Afghanistan” ou encore écrit que “des fuites ont changé le cours de l’Histoire ; qu’elles peuvent le changer au jour le jour et qu’elles peuvent nous conduire à un avenir meilleur”.(…) D’autre part, publier sans discernement quelque 92 000 documents classifiés pose un réel problème de méthodologie, et donc de crédibilité. Un travail journalistique implique une sélection de l’information. L’argument par lequel vous vous défendez, selon lequel l’équipe de Wikileaks n’est pas composée de journalistes, n’est pas convaincant. Wikileaks est un média et, à ce titre, soumis aux règles de responsabilité de publication, comme tous les autres. (…) Cependant, vous ne pouvez revendiquer le bénéfice de la protection des sources et renier au même moment votre qualité de média par opportunisme. Le précédent que vous avez créé expose encore davantage à des représailles tous ceux qui, à travers le monde, risquent leur liberté et parfois leur vie pour l’information sur Internet. Une telle imprudence met en danger vos propres sources et au-delà, l’avenir d’Internet en tant que support d’information. Jean-François Julliard (Secrétaire général de Reporters sans frontières)

Attention: des coups tordus peuvent en cacher d’autres!

A l’heure où le cofondateur et porte-parole du site internet WikiLeaks spécialisé dans la publication de documents confidentiels et notamment de dizaines de milliers de documents sensibles sur la guerre en Afghanistan, Julian Assange, semble recevoir la monnaie de sa pièce en Suède même où il s’est apparemment réfugié …

Après, on s’en souvient, avoir réussi le tour de force de s’être mis à dos tant Amnesty international que Reporters sans frontières (qui l’avaient pourtant dans un premier temps soutenu) pour son peu de cas pour la sécurité non seulement des soldats de la coalition occidentale en Afghanistan mais pour peut-être les centaines ou milliers d’Afghans (identifiés par leur nom ou leur village) qui travaillent avec elle …

Retour sur le premier fait d’arme qui, après les révélations (Scientologie, corruption au Kenya, mels de Sarah Palin, liste des adhérents du parti d’extrême-droite britannique BNP, messages texte envoyés aux Etats-Unis le 11/9, armée allemande, crise financière islandaise) avait vraiment lancé la carrière du site et aussi déjà confirmé le remarquable talent de l’ancien pirate informatique pour la publicité la plus tapageuse et l’autopromotion.

Mais surtout, comme le rappelle John Rosenthal, révélé la vraie nature de l’entreprise (mélangeant habilement  les genres et les rôles de « source, relais et co-diffuseur ») , c’est-à-dire, avec très significativement l’aide des Bilderbergers attitrés de la Trilatérale de l’antiaméricanisme (pardon: de l’anti-impérialisme), les dûment de gauche Spiegel-Guardian-NYT, et soutenu comme par hasard par le champion toutes catégories de l’intox lui-même Michael Moore,  une véritable campagne de propagande où à peu près tous les coups sont permis (« changer le cours de l’Histoire » et « un avenir meilleur », on vous dit!) contre la seule Amérique et ses alliés

A savoir la publication en avril dernier d’une vidéo de l’armée américaine de juillet 2007 (lourdement éditorialisée sous ses apparences de document brut par des intertitres et un sobrissime titre : « meurtre collatéral »).

Qui oubliant commodément le contexte plus large d’une opération en cours dans une rue de toute évidence déserte où les troupes américaines essuyaient des tirs d’insurgés comme le fait que ces derniers étaient armés de lance-grenades et d’AK47, que les deux journalistes ne portaient aucune indication de leur fonction mais en revanche des zooms ressemblant étrangement à des armes et que la camionnette qui venait chercher les blessés et les armes n’avait ni croissant rouge ni aucun signe distinctif de secours d’urgence sans compter l’invisibilité de l’extérieur de la présence d’enfants  …

Ne montrait en fait, vu du petit  écran de l’hélicoptère et dans le feu de l’action, qu’une attaque héliportée de l’armée américaine contre un groupe d’insurgés armés d’AK47 et d’un lance-grenades, ainsi que contre une camionnette anonyme tentant d’évacuer les blessés et les armes dans un faubourg de Bagdad …

Situation probablement typique de ce qui pouvait se passer alors dans l’enfer des rues de Bagdad  comme dans celles d’ailleurs des villes palestiniennes ou libanaises où, avec les louanges de tous quand il ne s’agissait que de déligitimer l’Armée israélienne, ce genre de méthodes de guérilla sale avait d’abord été mis au point …

‘Collateral Murder’ in Baghdad Anything But

Bill Roggio

April 5, 2010

Wikileaks, the website devoted to publishing classified documents on the Internet, made a splash today with a video claiming to show that the U.S. military « murdered » a Reuters cameraman and other Iraqi « civilians » in Baghdad on July 12, 2007. But a careful watching of the video shows that the U.S. helicopter gun crews that attacked a group of armed men in the then Mahdi Army stronghold of New Baghdad was anything but « Collateral Murder, » as Wikileaks describes the incident. There are a couple of things to note in the video. First, Wikileaks characterizes the attack as the U.S. military casually gunning down Iraqis who were innocently gathering on the streets of New Baghdad. But the video begins somewhat abruptly, with a UAV starting to track a group of Iraqi males gathering on the streets. The voice of a U.S. officer is captured in mid-sentence. It would be nice to know what happened before Wikileaks decided to begin the video. The U.S. military claimed the Iraqis were killed after a gun battle with U.S. and Iraqi security forces. It is unclear if any of that was captured on the strike footage. Here is what the U.S. military had to say about the engagement in a July 2007 press release: Soldiers of 1st Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment, and the 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment, both operating in eastern Baghdad under the 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, along with their Iraqi counterparts from the 1st Battalion, 4th Brigade, 1st Division National Police, were conducting a coordinated raid as part of a planned operation when they were attacked by small arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades. Coalition Forces returned fire and called in attack aviation reinforcement. There is nothing in that video that is inconsistent with the military’s report. What you see is the air weapons team engaging armed men. Second, note how empty the streets are in the video. The only people visible on the streets are the armed men and the accompanying Reuters cameramen. This is a very good indicator that there was a battle going on in the vicinity. Civilians smartly clear the streets during a gunfight. Third, several of the men are clearly armed with assault rifles; one appears to have an RPG. Wikileaks purposely chooses not to identify them, but instead focuses on the Reuters cameraman. Why? Fourth, there is no indication that the U.S. military weapons crew that fired on this group of armed men violated the military’s Rules of Engagement. Ironically, Wikileaks published the military’s Rules of Engagement from 2007, which you can read here. What you do see in the video is troops working to identify targets and confirm they were armed before engaging. Once the engagement began, the U.S. troops ruthlessly hunted their prey. Fifth, critics will undoubtedly be up in arms over the attack on that black van you see that moves in to evacuate the wounded; but it is not a marked ambulance, nor is such a vehicle on the « Protected Collateral Objects » listed in the Rules of Engagement. The van, which was coming to the aid of the fighters, was fair game, even if the men who exited the van weren’t armed. Sixth, Wikileaks’ claim that the U.S. military’s decision to pass the two children inside the van to the Iraqi police for treatment at an Iraqi hospital threatened their lives is unsubstantiated. We do not know the medical assessment of the two Iraqi children wounded in the airstrike. We don’t even know if the children were killed in the attack, although you can be sure that if they were Wikileaks would have touted this. (And who drives their kids into the middle of a war zone anyway?) Having been at attacks where Iraqis have been killed and wounded, I can say I understand a little about the process that is used to determine if wounded Iraqis are transported to a U.S. hospital. The person has to be considered to have a life-threatening situation or in danger of losing a vital function (eyesight, etc.). Yet, even though the threshold to transfer Iraqis to U.S. military hospitals is high, I have repeatedly seen U.S. personnel err on the side of caution and transport wounded who probably should not have been sent to a U.S. hospital. Baghdad in July 2007 was a very violent place, and the neighborhoods of Sadr City and New Baghdad were breeding grounds for the Mahdi Army and associated Iranian-backed Shia terror groups. The city was a war zone. To describe the attack you see in the video as « murder » is a sensationalist gimmick that succeeded in driving tons of media attention and traffic to Wikileaks’ website.

Voir aussi:

Video: Collateral murder, or the risks of war zones?

Ed Morrissey

Hot air

April 5, 2010

Wikileaks released a video today of an engagement in Baghdad in 2007 that resulted in the deaths of two journalists from Reuters in an effort to accuse the US of covering up a war crime. Calling the incident “collateral murder,” Wikileaks says that it wants to promote the safety of journalists in war zones with the release of the DoD video, but the video itself shows why the US forces fired on the group — and on the vehicle that came to their aid. Note that the video itself contains NSFW language and graphic images of death (via John Holowach at TrueHigh): In the video, starting at the 3:50 mark, one member of this group starts preparing what clearly looks like an RPG launcher, as well as some individuals with AK-47s. The launcher then reappears at the 4:06 mark as the man wielding it sets up a shot for down the street. In 2007 Baghdad, this would be a clear threat to US and Iraqi Army ground forces; in fact, it’s difficult to imagine any other purpose for an RPG launcher at that time and place. That’s exactly the kind of threat that US airborne forces were tasked to detect and destroy, which is why the gunships targeted and shot all of the members of the group. Another accusation is that US forces fired on and killed rescue workers attempting to carry one of the journalists out of the area. However, the video clearly shows that the vehicle in question bore no markings of a rescue vehicle at all, and the men who ran out of the van to grab the wounded man wore no uniforms identifying themselves as such. Under any rules of engagement, and especially in a terrorist hot zone like Baghdad in 2007, that vehicle would properly be seen as support for the terrorists that had just been engaged and a legitimate target for US forces.  While they didn’t grab weapons before getting shot, the truth is that the gunships didn’t give them the chance to try, either — which is exactly what they’re trained to do.  They don’t need to wait until someone gets hold of the RPG launcher and fires it at the gunship or at the reinforcements that had already begun to approach the scene.  The gunships acted to protect the approaching patrol, which is again the very reason we had them in the air over Baghdad. War correspondents take huge risks to bring news of a war to readers far away.  What this shows is just how risky it is to embed with terrorists, especially when their enemy controls the air.  War is not the same thing as law enforcement; the US forces had no responsibility for identifying each member of the group and determining their mens rea.  Legitimate rescue operations would have included markings on the vehicle and on uniforms to let hostile forces know to hold fire, and in the absence of that, the hostile forces have every reason to consider the second support group as a legitimate target as well.   It’s heartbreaking for the families of these journalists, but this isn’t “collateral murder” — it’s war.

 Voir également:

Warfare Through ‘a Soda Straw’

Wall Street Journal

June 23, 2010

Gabriel Schoenfeld

Reports are circulating that Wikileaks.org is poised to publish a classified U.S. military video of a May 2009 U.S. air strike on the Afghan village of Granai in which as many as 140 civilians, including many women and children, may have perished. In April, the website—an online repository of leaked information—posted a U.S. military video of a 2007 Baghdad firefight in which two Reuters cameramen and as many as 10 others were killed. It has already been watched by several million viewers.

Both videos were evidently leaked by a 22-year-old disaffected Army intelligence analyst, Bradley Manning, who was detained by the military in May after having admitted in a private online conversation to providing them, along with a massive trove of 260,000 diplomatic cables, to Wikileaks.

Such videos bring wide attention to horrendous incidents of war. Did Wikileaks perform a public service by releasing them?

The benefits of maximum openness are indisputable. Our democracy rests on informed consent, with emphasis on the word informed. The electorate relies upon the free flow of information to make considered choices about policies and the men and women who conduct them. In decisions about war and peace, the public’s interest in information is at its zenith. The video of the Iraq firefight brings horrifically before our eyes the reality of war in ways that make us confront the basic questions of why and how we fight.

But there is another side to the coin. The display of videotapes in which our forces make mistakes, or do even worse, has costs that should not be denied. For one thing, the leaked Iraq video, as Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has remarked, provides the public a view of warfare « as seen through a soda straw. » Wikileaks, itself a highly secretive operation run by Australian journalist/activist Julian Assange, actually posted two videos: a full-length version of the firefight, and a shorter version edited into nothing less than a propaganda film with the caption « collateral murder. »

Neither drew attention to what U.S. ground forces found when they came upon the grisly scene following the helicopter gunfire: namely, AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenade launchers (RPGs). Wikileaks’s caption noted that « some of the men appeared to have been armed » but also added, insouciantly, that « the behavior of everyone appeared to be relaxed. »

But it is precisely the presence of weapons, including RPGs, that goes a long distance toward explaining why cameramen for Reuters—pointing television cameras around corners in a battle zone—were readily mistaken by our gunships for insurgents. The video makes plain that in this incident, as in almost all military encounters in both Iraq and Afghanistan, our soldiers are up against forces that do not wear uniforms—a violation of international law precisely because it places innocent civilians in jeopardy.

Responsibility for civilian deaths in such encounters rests with those who violate the rules of war.

The Wikileaks videos also do not reveal the hundreds upon hundreds of cases in which American forces refrain from attacking targets precisely because civilians are in harm’s way. That is today an iron rule in Afghanistan, and one for which our soldiers are themselves paying a price in increased casualties. Yet even with the greatest care, armed conflict cannot be sanitized. In almost every war America has ever fought, things on occasion go badly awry. In World War II, instances in which Allied forces massacred captured enemy soldiers were not unheard of. While such cases were a blemish on our military honor, broadcasting the facts to the world and thereby stiffening enemy morale would have been unthinkable in the midst of the great global conflagration.

Although our current struggle does not compare to World War II, there can be no doubt that the dissemination of military videos—far more potent in their impact than written dispatches—can have a profound affect upon our soldiers, inflaming opinion against them in the battlefield and placing their lives at risk. Such videos also undermine the larger counterinsurgency mission of winning hearts and minds. That is why the military keeps them classified. And that is why our laws allow for the punishment of those who violate their oaths and leak secret information, as Spc. Manning is alleged to have done.

Our country depends upon openness for its vitality. But it also often depends upon secrecy for its security. The two imperatives are always in tension. Wikileaks has brought the tension to the fore.

Gabriel Schoenfeld is a Senior Fellow on leave at Hudson Institute.

 Voir par ailleurs:

 Video Shows Reuters Camerman With Insurgents Being Killed [BUMPED/UPDATED: Vidcaps Show Weapons]

The Jawa report

April 05, 2010

UPDATE 4/06/2010

I’ve uploaded a moving image created by Ryno which clearly shows weapons being carried by the so-called « civilians » who were killed along with the news that we have photos of rifles and grenades at the scene.

UPDATE 4/06/2010

We’ve added important info to the new post linked above, including the fact that an RPG was found at the scene. Click here for more recent updates. ——————-

Contrary to all of the « context » given by Wiki Leak which try to lead the viewer into thinking the US Military « murdered » several Iraqis including two who worked for Reuters, the video clearly runs contrary to the narrative. I’ve embedded the Wiki Leak video below. Just ignore all the propaganda they write before and after the video and watch it. A crowd of men surround at least two armed insurgents. The voices indicate that a Bradley and some Humvees are headed in the direction and that a recent engagement has taken place. So, the helicopter pilot and ground controllers see armed men with a convoy approaching and taking fire and …. Wiki Leak has the nerve to call this murder? They’ve even embedded it on a site they call « Collateral Murder. » These people are beyond stupid, they’re evil. Worst case scenario this is a few innocents being accidentally killed in the fog of war. But the video doesn’t even appear to be worst case scenario. It appears, in fact, that the video shows armed insurgents engaging or about to engage US troops. The Reuters camera men had embedded themselves with the insurgents. This makes them enemy combatants themselves and should have been shot. Reuters has a long history of its local stringers embedding themselves with terrorist forces. Perhaps they do this because they are sympathetic, perhaps they do this to get « the story », but it matters little to those engaging insurgents. When you embed yourselves with terrorists you know the risk. You are producing propaganda for them. You have become one of them. Anything less than this understanding is purposeful naivite about « objective journalism ». In war there can be no objective journalism. You’re either with us or the enemy. If you want to stay neutral stay out of the war zone. As for those who went in to pick up the bodies? Perhaps they were innocents. I’ve no idea. But you drive your van into an active military engagement? What the hell were you thinking You are stupid. Innocent, but stupid. You’re asking to be killed. And if you brought children into the midsts of an ongoing military engagement that makes you more than stupid: it makes you criminally negligent. « It’s their fault for bringing their kids to a battle, » says one of the Americans on the video. Indeed it is. People, this is war. This happens in war. It can’t be avoided. If you want to end civilian casualties then end war. Start by asking armed Islamists to put down their weapons. But you won’t do that because your real objection isn’t war, it’s America. Which is why anti-war activists around the globe never protest al-Qaeda, only America. They’re not anti-war, they’re anti-American. Again, watch it. It’s tragic, yes. War is trag

UPDATE: Ed has some more thoughts.

UPDATE II: I made some screenshots for the naysayers. Beginning at 3:36 you can clearly see two men holding weapons. This guy at 3:43 has an AK-47. You can see it more clearly as he swings it but here’s a screenshot that shows it This screenshot is at 3:35. This guy is definitely carrying a weapon. In motion it looks like it might be a rifle, but from the profile angle snapped below it looks like an RPG. A few seconds later at 3:50 he puts the weapon down. The weapon is long enough that it’s comes up well beyond his waist and it certainly has the width of an RPG. Or at least from this angle it looks that way. The person than goes behind a building, out of view. A few seconds later someone is down on the ground behind the same building. At 4:06 he starts to pick up whatever he has laid down on the ground. The one above is a bit fuzzy, but the next vidcap from 4:07 is a little clearer although the person in it has ducked behind the building. I’ll remind you that a convoy was approaching the group of individuals and this would appear to the helicopter pilots like he was scoping out the oncoming US soldiers. Remember, about 15 seconds ago the pilot saw a guy with what looks like an RPG. He ducks behind this building. Then a few seconds later he sees someone down on the ground with something that looks like it could be an RPG. Which is exactly the conclusion the pilot makes. Could that be the Reuters photojournalist with a long lens? Maybe. But from what the pilot is seeing the man seems like a threat. In war you eliminate threats. The pilot then notifies others that he sees an individual about to fire an RPG and asks fire control for authority to eliminate the threat. Which he does. Let me also sneak in a couple of other links grabbed from Hot Air (I still miss our trackbacks function). Cassey Fiano has this good point: I’ve long held the view that journalists shouldn’t even be embedded with our troops in a war zone. It endangers the journalists, and it endangers our troops Let alone embed with the enemy. Whatever happened to the good old fashioned military pool reporter? Alas, gone out with the era of the dinosaurs and when « supporting the troops » actually meant, you know, supporting the troops. Over at Political Byline: I humbly submit, that these so-called Journalists got just was coming to them Perhaps. This wouldn’t be the first time Reuters had sent off it’s « crack team » of locals to give the terrorists’ « point of view ». The American Pundit: The video demonstrates the danger of traveling to a war zone. Which is why war correspondents tend to be respected and rare. Wikileaks, hosted in Sweden, decides instead to paint the situation as a clear and straight-forward murder case. Which is both sad and pathetic. Sad, pathetic, and evil. And Free Market Military notes on the seemingly callous words used by the soldiers on the video: Frankly, I’d never hold it against anyone in taking enjoyment out of their job. You might find that callous as well. Tough. If your living this 24/7 I doubt you would spend a year without laughing and having a good time. Amen brotha! Why is it wrong for our men and women to celebrate a perceived victory over their enemies? In their minds they just saved the lives of their fellow soldiers. Celebrations seem perfectly in order

UPDATE III: You’ll have to scroll down even further for the video since I found a couple of good posts from Blackfive. First from Lauging Wolf (thanks man) and then from Uber Pig: The point is, for me to respect Wikileaks, they’ll have to stop picking sides and doing agitprop. I have zero respect for the people running Wikileaks, their sanctimonious preaching, and anyone who donates money to their organization.

Voir de même:

The WikiLeaks Hoax, Part I

On closer inspection, the famous “whistleblower organization” appears in fact to be little more than a front organization. For whom or what is the question…

John Rosenthal

August 12, 2010

WikiLeaks has done it again. For the second time in less than four months, the shadowy outfit has succeeded in publishing a leak that has completely dominated the news cycle. Even news outlets and commentators that are critical of its posting of tens of thousands of U.S. military reports on the war in Afghanistan are prepared to confer upon WikiLeaks the honorific of a “whistleblower organization.” But is that what it is? In April, WikiLeaks published its first mega-scoop of 2010: the so-called “Collateral Murder” video showing a 2007 U.S. Apache helicopter attack in which two Iraqi Reuters employees were killed in Baghdad. At the time, I pointed to glaring differences between WikiLeaks’s handling of the video and the modus operandi that had characterized the “old” WikiLeaks. (See my “The Strange Career of WikiLeaks” at weeklystandard.com.) The original WikiLeaks website in fact went offline in December 2009, allegedly to make way for a funding drive. It was, as I put it, an “equal opportunity” publisher of classified materials of all sorts from a wide variety of sources. The site, as such, had no clear political orientation and it would indeed have been contrary to the nature of the project to have had any. Like its namesake Wikipedia, the “old” WikiLeaks was, in effect, merely a platform. It was not the team that maintained the platform that provided the site with its essential content, but rather the sources who uploaded material to it. The “new” WikiLeaks, by contrast, had all the trappings of a propaganda vehicle. Or, more precisely, just a propaganda stunt. When WikiLeaks published the “Collateral Murder” video, the site might indeed have been more appropriately called “WikiLeak” in the singular. For it contained barely any other leaks and none of any consequence. A site that proudly boasted about having published some 1.2 million leaked documents — namely, in its previous incarnation — had managed to post all of twelve in its new incarnation in 2010. Most of them were about Iceland. In the meanwhile, the “old” WikiLeaks archives have been restored to the new site, thus creating a greater semblance of continuity. But the remarkable penury of leaks has continued. Now, WikiLeaks has managed to chalk up exactly one more leak, and the publication of the files that the site has dubbed “The Afghan War Diary” confirms that the vocation of the “new” WikiLeaks is not unfiltered information, but rather targeted propaganda: highly targeted, since — Iceland aside — the real focus of the new site is obviously just the USA. In light of the evolution of the site in the last four months — or, more precisely, the striking lack thereof — there is reason to doubt that there even really is any WikiLeaks “organization” as such that stands behind it. It would appear rather that the WikiLeaks brand itself — complete with ubiquitous spokesperson Julian Assange and his distinctive shock of white hair — is part of the desired propaganda effect. After all, if the world’s most famous and courageous “whistleblower organization” only ever blows its whistle about American “abuses,” then what does that say about America? It is not so much the content of the leaked Afghan war reports that confirms the propagandistic vocation of the new WikiLeaks, but rather the circumstances of their publication. Given the sheer quantity of the reports and their often highly technical character, it will take months if not years for serious analysts to sift through the data sufficiently so as to come to any robust conclusions about the course of the Afghan war. This, notwithstanding the fact that WikiLeaks helpfully pre-spins the material for its readers, noting, for example, in its introduction to the reports that The material shows that cover-ups start on the ground. When reporting their own activities US Units are inclined to classify civilian kills as insurgent kills, downplay the number of people killed or otherwise make excuses for themselves. But what truly gives away the game is the fact that three selected news organizations were given a substantial head start in viewing the files. This permitted the three organizations to enjoy the prestige of breaking the story and to set the terms of the debate even before the raw material had been posted online by WikiLeaks. And what, above all, gives the game away is just which three news organizations have thus been granted the privilege of being WikiLeaks “media partners,” as the site refers to them. In the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks and over the course of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, there has developed a well-nigh metaphysical, so to say, dismal view of America and of the logic of American military interventions and counterterror operations. No three international print media organizations have done more to propagate this dismal view than precisely Germany’s Der Spiegel, Britain’s The Guardian, and America’s own New York Times. It was, after all, none other than Der Spiegel that in January 2003, before the Iraq War had even started, published a spectacular cover story on the impending American invasion under the apodictic title “Blood for Oil.” The phrase was the Spiegel editors’ clever riff on the slogan of the German street protests opposing the first Iraq War twelve years earlier: “No Blood for Oil.” The editors did not even feel the need to add a question mark. The knowing subtitle read: “What [the intervention in] Iraq is really about.” The ostensible reasons, of course, simply could not be true. (For numerous further examples of Der Spiegel’s propagation of the dismal view, see the Der Spiegel archive of the regrettably now largely inactive German media watch blog Medienkritik.) Even independently of WikiLeaks, Der Spiegel and the Times have occasionally dabbled in content-sharing in recent years. But what the publications share, above all, is not content, but spin — typically, spin that is detrimental to America’s image and American security interests. (For just one among many examples, see my “The CIA Rendition Controversy: Is Khaled Al-Masri Lying?” in World Politics Review.) WikiLeaks may have itself decided to provide the chosen three media organizations the leaked files in advance, as the standard news accounts suggest. Or it could well be that the original source provided them to both WikiLeaks and the chosen three, thus giving some of the world’s most thoroughly establishment “old” media a unique chance to partake of the fight-the-power hipness of the new media “whistleblower organization.” But one thing, in any case, appears certain: WikiLeaks did not obtain the files via its famous online “secure submission” form. Once upon a time, the secure submission form was the centerpiece of the WikiLeaks project. It was here that anonymous sources were supposed to upload their sensitive material and to enjoy the assurance that in so doing their anonymity would be preserved. But as the blog Wikileak.org has documented, the site’s secure submission technology has been compromised for many months now. Wikileak.org is a techie blog devoted to critical examination of the WikiLeaks project. It is not affiliated with the project. On June 12, WikiLeaks demonstrated beyond a shadow of a doubt just how uninterested it was in preserving the security of the site. On that day — as was predicted would happen by Wikileak.org — WikiLeaks failed to renew its SSL certificate: a basic form of web security certification that can be purchased for as little as $30 per year. Already at the time of the April release of its “Collateral Murder” video, WikiLeaks claimed to have raised some $370,000 in its funding drive. Attempting to access a site with an invalid SSL certificate will typically generate a warning that secure connection to the site is not possible. Attempt, for instance, to connect to the original WikiLeaks “secure submissions” page here in either IE or Firefox and you will currently receive such a warning. It was only after Wired.com called attention to the lapsing of the WikiLeaks SSL certificate that WikiLeaks finally restored its ostensibly secure submissions form, though at a different address than previously. The Swedish newspaper Sydsvenskan [English link] has, moreover, pointed to a further discrepancy between the carefully cultivated public image of WikiLeaks and the reality of the site. If the “secure submission” system was supposed to provide technical assurances of anonymity to potential leakers, it was the location of the WikiLeaks servers in Sweden that was supposed to provide them legal assurance: thanks, namely, to the robust source protection provisions in the Swedish Press Freedom Act. The current WikiLeaks submission page still promises that submissions are “protected under Swedish and Belgium [sic] press secrecy laws. But the law in question only applies to media that have been issued a “publishing license” by Swedish authorities. Sydsvenskan reports that WikiLeaks has no such license. Asked by Sydsvenskan what he thought of WikiLeaks’s promise of protection for sources under Swedish law, Anders R. Olsson, a Swedish journalist specializing in free speech issues, replied, “I think it is a bit strange that Wikileaks doesn’t seem to know the rules.” Thus, we have a “whistleblower organization” that is not in a position to provide the legal protections to sources that it promises with great fanfare and that makes no effort to maintain the secure submission environment that was supposed to be its very raison d’être. It is small wonder, then, that apart from the two blockbusters WikiLeaks has hardly published any leaks at all since its supposed re-launch. The whole edifice of the “new” WikiLeaks appears in fact to be nothing but a facade. Who or what lies behind the WikiLeaks facade? For some clues, make sure to catch part II of “The WikiLeaks Hoax,” forthcoming on Pajamas Media. John Rosenthal writes regularly on European politics for such publications as The Weekly Standard, Policy Review and The Daily Caller. More of his work can be found at www.trans-int.com.

Voir enfin:

The WikiLeaks Hoax, Part II

John Rosenthal

Pajamas media

August 16, 201

In part I [1] of “The WikiLeaks Hoax,” I adduced a number of reasons for concluding that the much vaunted “whistleblower organization” WikiLeaks is, in fact, just a facade. This was not always the case. The original WikiLeaks website was, as I have put it, an “equal opportunity” platform for leaks of all sorts. It did not share the current site’s single-minded focus on alleged American misdeeds. The original site went offline in December 2009. Despite the new site’s common logo and “branding,” in substance, the old site has never returned. Just who or what stands behind the WikiLeaks facade is not clear. But what is clear is that WikiLeaks has a special relationship with Germany, a country that spearheaded the opposition to the Iraq war [2] and that — despite the avowed Atlanticism of its current chancellor — has continued to take a generally dismal view of America’s war on terror. Indeed, Germany has done much not only to malign, but even to obstruct the war on terror. (For related links, see here. [3]) In a recent documentary [4] on The Hunt for Bin Laden, Germany’s ZDF public television went so far as to insinuate that American authorities purposely allowed Osama bin Laden to escape from his mountain hideout of Tora Bora in December 2001. The special relationship of WikiLeaks with Germany is manifest in the inclusion of the German weekly Der Spiegel among the new site’s chosen three “media partners.” It is also manifest in the site’s maintenance of a special account for donations at the Berlin-based Wau-Holland Foundation. (The WikiLeaks donations pages note that [5] “this may be the best choice for German residents” and, furthermore [6], that donations to the Wau Holland account are even tax-deductible for the latter!) And it is manifest, finally, in the sketchy details that are available about the “structure” of the supposed WikiLeaks “organization.” For if the reportedly Australian-born Julian Assange is the WikiLeaks spokesperson for the rest of the world, WikiLeaks also has a special dedicated spokesperson for Germany — or “that region,” as Assange put it [7] in a testy comment on a September 2009 Wired exposé about the site. The German spokesperson is named Daniel Schmitt. But “Schmitt” has admitted — to Wired [7], as well as several German publications — that his last name is a pseudonym. In an interview [8] with the German daily Die Welt, Schmitt was asked who has decision-making power in WikiLeaks and how many people were at his “level in the organization.” Schmitt’s head-spinning response was as follows: Five people, I’m one of them. Though I am left out of all technical decisions. You can’t get hold of me to find out something. I don’t know anything. We are doers. None of [us] has a lot of time to discuss and to over-democratize everything. The only way to build up a reputation and trust within the organization is to collaborate: to show that one is competent. Around the inner circle, there are about 1000 experts with whom we work and whom, of course, we test in advance. Schmitt’s logorrhoea hardly inspires confidence in the reliability of his account of the “organization.” In any case, one may be permitted to wonder what exactly “1000 experts” contribute to a site that, despite its association with two publicity-generating coups, has essentially been inactive. One thousand “experts”… and WikiLeaks could not manage to renew a SSL certificate. As discussed in my “The Strange Career of WikiLeaks [9],” the “old” WikiLeaks had a somewhat conflictual relationship with Germany and, in particular, with the German foreign intelligence agency, the BND. Perhaps ironically, arguably the biggest genuine scoop produced by the old site involved blowing the agency’s online cover. In November 2008, the site published a list of IP address ranges that had been assigned to the BND under a disguised domain name by the German telecommunications firm Deutsche Telekom. At the time, the WikiLeaks submissions form was still functional, and it is presumably via the form that the document was uploaded to the WikiLeaks servers. The story became even bigger when it was discovered that the outed BND-linked IP addresses had been used to edit Wikipedia entries. In the most astonishing of the known edits, a presumptive BND employee added advice on how to build a “dirty bomb” to a German-language Wikipedia entry on “Nuclear Weapons Technology.” The same IP address was used to edit the German-language Wikipedia entry on the BND itself, editing out a reference to the “open secret” that the agency uses branches of the Goethe Institute in foreign countries as its “unofficial headquarters. Oddly enough, the WikiLeaks editors somewhat downplayed the significance of their scoop. The WikiLeaks “summary” [10] on the matter suggests that the BND contributor to the “Nuclear Weapons” entry “apparently had second thoughts” and quickly deleted the advice on “dirty bombs.” Simple consultation of the relevant Wikipedia user logs [11] shows, however, that this is false: the contributor had added the same passage twice and merely eliminated the redundancy. Otherwise, the WikiLeaks “summary” page tells us that the BND personnel made “a lot of standard edits.” This may well be true. But contrast this treatment to the treatment that WikiLeaks reserved for a story one year earlier on internet activity, including Wikipedia edits, traceable to U.S. military computers at the Guantánamo Bay detention center. Note that the story involved no leak whatsoever. The activity in question was traceable because — unlike the BND’s online activity — it had never in fact been hidden. The domain name associated with the IP address of the computers was jtfgtmo.southcom.mil: namely, for the “Joint Task Force Guantánamo” of the U.S. military’s Southern Command. Nonetheless, the headline on the WikiLeaks article crows, “Wikileaks busts Gitmo propaganda team [12].” The author of the piece happens to have been none other than Julian Assange, the future “WikiLeaks founder” who at the time was identified merely as a WikiLeaks “investigative editor.” In accusing the U.S. military of propaganda, it is clear that Assange had already discovered his own propagandistic calling. Thus, in a classic example of the incestuous self-referential nature of disinformation, the piece cites a blog post [13] from NY Daily News correspondent James Gordon Meek as confirmation that the “job” of one JTF member was “posting positive comments on the Internet about Gitmo.” Assange even puts the phrase in bold, as if it had some special importance. But in fact the phrase is nothing more than Meek’s notably chummy clin d’œil toward the allegations in the original WikiLeaks article. The full list of the Wikipedia edits made from the “busted” Gitmo IP address is available here [14]. Note that the U.S. Southern Command was so rattled by being “busted” by Assange that it has continued to use the IP address. This behavior also contrasts with that of the BND, which — with the help of Deutsche Telekom — rapidly ditched its outed IP addresses after they were published on WikiLeaks Readers may judge for themselves whether the edits bear the hallmarks of a propaganda operation. Unsurprisingly, many have to do with military topics; some directly concern Guantánamo; and others are on totally unrelated subjects like South Park and Pokémon. A Wikipedia entry such as that on Michael Winterbottom’s anti-Gitmo film The Road to Guantanamo would seem to be ripe for editing by a Gitmo-based “propaganda team.” And, lo and behold, we discover that on October 29, 2007 — only weeks before being “busted” by Julian Assange — the Gitmo IP address was indeed used to edit the entry [15] — namely, in order to change the word “organisations” to the American-English spelling “organizations.” Perhaps the last major leak to turn up on the old WikiLeaks site was a classified German report on a German-ordered airstrike in Kunduz, Afghanistan, in which numerous civilians were killed. About two weeks later, the site went down. The new site has yet to rediscover the old site’s taste for classified German material. The pleas of financial duress notwithstanding, the fact is we do not know why the site went down. Nor do we know why it returned in such a radically altered form, with the very heart of the old WikiLeaks project, the “secure submissions” form, essentially cut out of it. In fact, we know virtually nothing about the WikiLeaks organization or even if there really is such an organization. What the world needs now are some useful leaks about WikiLeaks. Disaffected participants in the old project undoubtedly would have some tales to tell. As the current site’s motto puts it, “Courage is courageous.”

URL to article: http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/the-wikileaks-hoax-part-ii/ URLs in this post:

[1] part I: http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/the-wikileaks-hoax-part-i/

[2] spearheaded the opposition to the Iraq war: http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/articles/793/jacques-chirac-didnt-lead-iraq-war-opposition-he-followed

[3] here.: http://www.trans-int.com/wordpress/?tag=germany-the-war-on-terror

[4] a recent documentary: http://dokumentation.zdf.de/ZDFde/inhalt/16/0,1872,8023856,00.html

[5] note that: http://www.wikileaks.org/wiki/Special:Support

[6] furthermore: http://www.wikileaks.org/wiki/Special:Support#go_wh

[7] as Assange put it: http://www.wired.co.uk/wired-magazine/archive/2009/10/start/exposed-wikileaks%27-secrets?page=all

[8] an interview: http://www.welt.de/wirtschaft/webwelt/article7214769/Wikileaks-will-sein-eigenes-Geheimnis-lueften.html

[9] The Strange Career of WikiLeaks: http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/strange-career-wikileaks

[10] The WikiLeaks “summary”: http://mirror.wikileaks.info/wiki/German_Secret_Intelligence_Service_%28BND%29_T-Systems_network_assignments%2C_13_Nov_2008/

[11] the relevant Wikipedia user logs: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spezial:Beitr%C3%A4ge/195.243.248.226

[12] Wikileaks busts Gitmo propaganda team: http://www.wikileaks.org/wiki/Wikileaks_busts_Gitmo_propaganda_team

13] a blog post: http://www.nydailynews.com/blogs/dc/2007/12/military-denies-gitmo-hacked-w.html

[14] here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/130.22.190.5

[15] used to edit the entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Road_to_Guantanamo&diff=prev&oldid=16784272


Vœux 2010: Vous avez dit serendipité? (Happy serendipitous trails!)

1 janvier, 2010
SerendipityToutes choses concourent au bien de ceux qui aiment Dieu. Paul (Lettre aux Romains 8: 28)
Console-toi, tu ne me chercherais pas si tu ne m’avais trouvé. Phrase attribuée à Jésus par Pascal
Toutes les choses sont des accidents sans importance ou des fruits du hasard à moins que votre regard émerveillé qui les sonde, les connecte et les ordonne, ne les rende divins… Wilhelm Willms
Toutes choses sont prêtes si l’esprit est prêt. Shakespeare (Henry V)
Dans le champ de l’observation, le hasard ne favorise que les esprits préparés. Louis Pasteur
Ne demande pas ton chemin à quelqu’un qui le connaît, tu risquerais de ne pas te perdre. Rabbi Nachman de Breslau
La sérendipité est une découverte majeure qu’une personne ne recherchait pas, qui modifie sa propre interprétation de ce qu’il était en train de faire, et qui se révèle évidente au découvreur. Daniel B. Klein
Il est certains mots étrangers qui s’imposent à notre mémoire par leur seule vêture sonore, mais dont la signification continue de nous rester opaque, soit que nous ne parvenions pas à la fixer en nous, soit que nous n’entreprenions rien pour la rechercher. Ainsi en fut-il longtemps pour moi du mot anglais serendipity qui sonnait comme un composé bizarre de sérénité et de compassion. Des années durant, je conservai serendipity dans ma tête, me refusant d’en aller consulter le sens dans le dictionnaire, sans doute par crainte d’être déçu par une définition qui, en un brusque retour au principe de réalité, ruinerait tout le charme des syllabes étrangères. Mais il y a peu de temps, retrouvant ce mot dans un texte et ne pouvant parvenir à en deviner le sens, malgré le contexte et peut-être à cause d’un obscurcissement de l’esprit dû à ce charme même, j’ai dû me résoudre à recourir au dictionnaire. Quelle n’a pas été alors ma surprise de découvrir qu’il n’existe pas de terme français correspondant à serendipity et qu’il convient de le rendre selon le contexte par au moins deux périphrases : « découverte heureuse ou inattendue »; « don de faire des trouvailles ». Ce mot désigne donc aussi bien l’objet trouvé si cher aux surréalistes, que la faculté, par eux développée au plus haut point, de découvrir ces objets. Et la révélation de cette double signification sonna en moi comme une trouvaille qui en redoubla le charme phonétique et, déjouant mes craintes, échoua à l’effacer. Joël Gayraud (La Peau de l’ombre, 2004)
Hasard heureux, découverte heureuse ou inattendue, don de faire des trouvailles, curiosité constructive, sagacité accidentelle, découverte par hasard, prophétie rétrospective, approche abductive, découverte sérendipiteuse ou sérendipienne, découverte fortuite, découverte non anticipée et infinie, imagination constructive, providence, main heureuse …
Cherchant, en cette première journée du Nouvel An et d’échanges rituels de vœux, une idée de billet …

Ne nous voilà-t-il pas tombé sur un article concernant justement la notion, difficilement traduisible en français, de « serendipidity »

Ce néologisme créé en 1784 par l’écrivain anglais Horace Walpole en référence à une histoire de trois princes de Ceylan (Serebdip en sanscrit) qui n’arrêtaient de faire des découvertes aussi heureuses qu’inattendues et qui fut déclaré il y a quelques années par un groupe de traducteurs l’une des expressions anglaises les plus difficiles à traduire dans d’autres langues.

Et que souhaiter de mieux en effet à nos amis blogueurs ou lecteurs de blogs à défaut d’une baignoire d’Archimède, Amérique de Colomb ou pomme de Newton, que cette étrange faculté ou espèce de main heureuse, qui, démultipliée aujourd’hui avec les nouvelles technologies informatiques et l’internet (avec son propre site intitulé stumbleupon), peut favoriser les plus heureuses rencontres ou découvertes?

Tous nos vœux donc de sérendipité pour 2010!

Comment intégrer la sérendipité
Pisani
03 août 2009

Un des dangers des réseaux sociaux est qu’ils nous poussent à penser comme les autres, ce que les Américains appellent “group think”. Une quantité croissante d’informations nous parvient par leur intermédiaire. Les pistes peuvent être riches, mais nous avons tendance à nous y connecter avec des gens qui pensent plutôt comme nous.

Dans un article publié par le New York Times du 1er août, Damon Darling regrette, d’une façon plus générale, que les TIC tendent à réduire les hasards heureux, ce qu’en anglais on appelle “serendipity” (et que d’aucuns voudraient traduire par “zadigacité “… allez donc voir Wikipedia en français pour en trouver la raison).

J’ai tendance à croire que la navigation sur le web, pour peu qu’on s’y livre avec un minimum de curiosité est au contraire une fabuleuse source de sérendipité (le néologisme qui permet de traduire ce mot qui n’existe pas en français). Mais je dois reconnaître que les réseaux sociaux (et les systèmes de référence et de votes qui les accompagnent) poussent sinon à la pensée unique du moins à une pensée à géométrie très peu variable.

C’est pourquoi j’ai tendance à promouvoir, lors de mes cours par exemple, la “embedded serendipity” ou la sérendipité embarquée, intégrée aux processus de collecte d’information.

Je le fais de deux façons au moins:

En intégrant des flux RSS qui ne m’intéressent que marginalement dans ceux que je consulte régulièrement. La possibilité des hasards heureux augmente.

En essayant régulièrement de pratiquer le ricochet virtuel: quand je clique sur un lien qui me conduit à une page surprenante je m’efforce de répéter l’opération au moins deux fois en cliquant sur les liens que je trouve à chaque étape. Au bout du compte, je me retrouve souvent en territoire inconnu (et rien n’empêche de continuer à sauter…).

Je suis sûr que vous avez d’autres recettes et je vous invite à les partager.

Voir aussi:

« Serendipity »
Anne Diatkine
Libération
05/08/2009

Le mot n’existe pas en français, il est pourtant très utile. C’est la capacité de faire une trouvaille qu’on n’attendait pas ou qu’on ne cherchait pas. Tomber amoureux, c’est une serendipity. Tomber sur un billet de cinquante euros en marchant dans la rue ne l’est pas, c’est uniquement de la chance. L’invention de la tarte Tatin par les sœurs du même nom qui avaient oublié leur plat au four est une serendipity culinaire.

Sur Internet, on aime beaucoup la serendipity, car tout notre passé proche, et presque tout notre passé lointain, est contenu dans Google, ce qui est beaucoup trop. Un des principes qui guide l’internaute est donc d’agir par serendipity successive, de liens intéressants en liens intéressants. En français, on substituera à serendipity le mot «providence» ou l’expression «main heureuse», qui ont le défaut d’introduire Dieu alors qu’on ne lui demande rien.

De fait, la serendipity est l’alliance du hasard et de l’intuition. C’est un mot architransdisciplinaire. On est tous attiré par la serendipity comme les fourmis par le sucre.


Polémique Sarkozy/Berlin: Retrouverons jamais notre pleine confiance en l’Internet? (Information Age dealt another stunning blow after new factual error discovered on the Internet)

13 novembre, 2009
Sarko was there, too

 

Heureusement que Nicolas Sarkozyl n’a pas prétendu être là le jour de la prise de la Bastille, parce que je ne sais pas comment il s’en serait sorti! Ségolène Royal
Retrouverons jamais notre pleine confiance en l’Internet? Il est bien possible que nous assistions à l’aube d’une nouvelle ère de scepticisme dans laquelle nous ne prendrons plus pour argent comptant tout que nous lisons en ligne. Mais indépendamment de ce que l’avenir nous réserve, une chose est claire: le statut de l’Internet comme dépôt mondial ultime des faits incontestables a été compromis. Paul Boutin (rédacteur en chef de Wired)

Retrouverons jamais notre pleine confiance en l’Internet?

Alors que le monde assistait aux cérémonies du 20e anniversaire de la chute du mur de Berlin et prélude à la fin du communisme en Europe …

En l’absence du président censé être le chef de fil du Monde libre et représentant du principal pays à l’origine de l’événement …

Mais en présence du représentant d’un pays dont l’actuel premier ministre et ancien président (et accessoirement ex-kagébiste) qualifiait il y a quelques années l’événement de « plus grande catastrophe géopolitique du XXe siècle » et qui avouait tout récemment sa nostalgie pour la RDA …

Pendant que résistait héroïquement encore la dernière rue Lénine de nos banlieues sur fond de signature d’accords entre le parti de notre grand Timonier et son parti frère de Pékin …

Et que notre presse hexagonale s’écharpait, avant l’affaire Marie Diaye, sur la présence ou non du jeune Nicolas Sarkozy dès le premier jour, comme il le prétendait sur sa page Facebook, audit événement …

Et que les sites internet du Post et de Libération nous gratifiaient d’une réjouissante série de photos bidonnées où, à la « Zelig », notre Timonier national se retrouvait participant ou témoin, du 11/9 à l’assassinat de Kennedy à Yalta et de la crucifixion à la Création du monde, des plus grands moments de l’histoire mondiale …

Retour, comme le rappelle le blog du NYT, sur l’un des grands moments de l’histoire du Net.

A savoir, ce jour fatidique de 2002 où le journal en ligne américain The Onion révélait à un monde atterré la première erreur factuelle confirmée de l’Internet, susceptible de miner à jamais la confiance de chacun de nous en ce merveilleux outil de l’Age de l’Information:

Un site de fans de la sitcom culte du Brady Bunch show avait incorrectement avancé la date de création de la série de (tenez-vous bien!)… une année entière!

Factual Error Found On Internet
The Onion
May 22, 2002

LONGMONT, CO—The Information Age was dealt a stunning blow Monday, when a factual error was discovered on the Internet. The error was found on TedsUltimateBradyBunch.com, a Brady Bunch fan site that incorrectly listed the show’s debut year as 1968, not 1969.

The shocking error.

Caryn Wisniewski, a Pueblo, CO, legal secretary and diehard Brady Bunch fan, came across the mistake while searching for information about the show’s first-season cast.

« When I first saw 1968 on the web page, I thought, ‘Wow, apparently, all those Brady Bunch books I’ve read listing 1969 as the show’s first year were wrong,' » Wisniewski told reporters at a press conference. « But even though I obviously trusted the Internet, I was still kind of puzzled. So I checked other Brady Bunch fan sites, and all of them said 1969. After a while, it slowly began to sink in that the World Wide Web might be tainted with unreliable information. »

Following up on her suspicion, Wisniewski phoned her public library, the ABC television network, and the office of Brady Bunch producer Sherwood Schwartz—all of whom confirmed that « Ted’s Ultimate Brady Bunch Site » was in error.

Attempts to contact the webmaster of « Ted’s Ultimate Brady Bunch Site, » identified as Ted Crewes of Naugatuck, CT, were unsuccessful. The page has been taken offline by its host, Cheaphost.net, which released a statement Tuesday.

« We at Cheaphost were deeply saddened and disturbed to learn that one of the millions of pages we host contained a factual discrepancy, » the web-posted statement read. « Please be assured that we are doing everything within our power to ensure that nothing of the sort happens again. We will not rest until the Internet’s once-sterling reputation as the world’s leading source for 100 percent reliable information is restored. »

Paul Boutin, senior editor of Wired, said the error is likely to have a profound effect on how the Internet is perceived.

« Will we ever fully trust the Web again? » Boutin asked. « We may well be witnessing the dawn of a new era of skepticism in which we no longer accept everything we read online at face value. But regardless of what the future holds, one thing is clear: The Internet’s status as the world’s definitive repository of incontrovertible fact has been jeopardized. »

Peter Luyck, 30, a Dallas-area graphic designer and frequent Internet user, was crestfallen.

« If it happens once, it can happen again, » Luyck said. « I shudder to think that, one dark day in the future, misinformation could again make its way online. In fact, it may already have. How do we know that trusted sites like the Drudge Report and Fucked Company are as accurate as we instinctively trust them to be? Can we blindly trust that SpideyRulez.com is correct in its reportage that the upcoming Spider-Man sequel will feature Christopher Walken as Dr. Octopus? Pandora is out of the box. »

Though the Brady Bunch error is the first confirmed instance of false information on the Internet, scares have occurred in the past. In 1998, an e-mail sent to a woman in Warner Robins, GA, made an unverifiable claim that she could earn thousands of dollars from an initial $5 investment. The claim was never conclusively proven false, and no charges were filed.


Iran: Attention, une censure peut en cacher une autre (Behind Iran’s Twitter Revolution: Big Brother can twitter too)

17 juin, 2009
Musavi-Khatami crowdLui au moins, il connaît le monde des affaires, c’est un libéral, son père était un bazari. (…) Depuis plus d’un an avec Ahmadinejad, les banques étrangères ne nous accordent plus de lettres de crédit pour financer nos importations.Ali (homme d’affaires iranien pro-Moussavi)
La foule des Iraniens qui ne portaient pas hier la couleur verte islamique de Moussavi a fait vaciller le régime des mollahs. Inquiet par l’appel à une nouvelle manifestation et à une grève générale aux intonations anti-régimes, le soi-disant modéré a soudainement fait marche arrière en appelant « ses partisans » à ne plus descendre dans la rue et le régime a promis de recompter les voix : mais le peuple était hier en grand nombre dans les rues de Téhéran. C’est tout ce que l’on sait car il y a un black-out total dans les médias iraniens : aucune image de cette foule n’a été diffusée en Iran. (…) Le régime et ses sbires (Sfeir, Coville, Hourcade, Satrapi) veulent sonner la fin de la récréation, mais nous attendons que nos compatriotes continuent pour arracher Angela, Barack, Nicolas, Silvio et les autres à leur silence coupable. Iran-Resist

Attention: une censure peut en cacher une autre!

Annulation par Moussavi lui-même de sa propre manifestation, censure totale des images de la principale manifestation sur le plan national, choix imposé des images à diffuser par les médias occidentaux (manif paisible pro-Moussavi), blocage de l’accès aux chaînes satellitaires occidentales, menaces d’expulsion des journalistes étrangers, fausses rumeurs d’affrontement dans les rues entre les partisans de Moussavi et d’Ahmadinejad pour dissuader les Iraniens de se joindre à la marche anti-régime, fourni aux médias étrangers des images d’une marche paisible pro-Moussavi c’est-à-dire pro-régime, coupé l’accès aux chaînes étrangères, portraits de Moussavi, rubans verts, affichettes pro-Moussavi en anglais (mais aucune affichette dénonçant les morts et les dizaines de blessés d’hier), arrêt des émissions de chaînes soi-disant d’opposition basées aux Etats-Unis sous le prétexte d’une panne technique, opérations troyennes de collecte d’infos sur les activistes pour repérer les meneurs (y compris par Zahra Rahnavard, l’épouse soi-disant féministe de Moussavi), minimisation du nombre de victimes de la répression par balles ou par armes blanches par des groupes autonomes de miliciens déguisés en manifestants (7 alors qu’il y a eu 58 morts et plus de 300 blessés, notamment à Ispahan où les affrontements font rage), annonces d’arrestation de soi-disant réformateurs (membres des services secrets se faisant passer pour des victimes pour faire diversion) …

Alors que, sans jamais se poser sérieusement la question de la manipulation de ces nouveaux modes de communication par le régime lui-même, nos médias comme leurs maitres politiques se félicitent de la manière dont les partisans du faux modéré et pion dudit régime Moussavi (pardon: du “candidat réformateur”!) parviennent à « contourner la censure grâce à Twitter » (la populaire plate-forme de micro-blogs ou fils de dépêche)…

Retour, avec nos amis d’Iran-Resist, sur l’autre censure sur laquelle sont bien discrets puisqu’ils y contribuent largement nos médias pressés ou aux ordres comme la petite armée de faux dissidents et experts à la solde du régime qui squattent nos pages de journaux et nos plateaux télé (les Sfeir, Coville, Hourcade, Satrapi, Fariba, Makinsky, Hastroudi & co).

A savoir la censure de la seule véritable information des évènements inédits que vit actuellement l’Iran et qui est le fait qu’une masse d’Iraniens anonymes, à l’instigation de vrais patriotes tels que le prince Reza et derrière le prétexte de la contestation d’une élection-piège à cons de trop et loin des faux modérés à la Moussavi ainsi que leurs couleurs vert islam et leurs Allah Akbars, a enfin osé sortir dans la rue au péril de sa vie pour exiger les véritables réformes et libertés dont elle est privée depuis 30 ans.

Et que, contrairement aux bazaris, les hommes d’affaires iraniens qui comptaient sur une victoire de leur candidat prétendument réformateur, c’est elle qui constitue la véritable menace pour le pouvoir en place car elle ne se contentera pas d’une simple levée des sanctions internationales pour retourner au « business as usual », programme nucléaire compris …

Iran : Des nouvelles du derrière le black-out
Iran-Resist
17.06.2009La foule des Iraniens qui ne portaient pas hier la couleur verte islamique de Moussavi a fait vaciller le régime des mollahs. Inquiet par l’appel à une nouvelle manifestation et à une grève générale aux intonations anti-régimes, le soi-disant modéré a soudainement fait marche arrière en appelant « ses partisans » à ne plus descendre dans la rue et le régime a promis de recompter les voix : mais le peuple était hier en grand nombre dans les rues de Téhéran. C’est tout ce que l’on sait car il y a un black-out total dans les médias iraniens : aucune image de cette foule n’a été diffusée en Iran.Cette seconde manifestation contre la demande de Moussavi est une première victoire pour l’opposition en exil qui contrairement à ce pion du régime avait demandé aux Iraniens de ne pas quitter le terrain. Les Iraniens ont répondu positivement à cette demande.

Il en a résulté une censure totale de l’image de cette manifestation sur le plan national. Selon un correspondant joint par téléphone hier soir à Téhéran, aucun Iranien n’a vu aucune image de cet événement à la télévision iranienne, alors que les médias occidentaux ont diffusé des images qui leur avaient été transmises par le régime.

Notre correspondant a également affirmé que l’accès aux chaînes satellitaires occidentales avait été coupé. Les Iraniens n’ont donc pas vu les images transmises par le régime.

Il s’est en fait passé une drôle de manip en Iran. Les journalistes étrangers affirment qu’ils ont été convoqués un par un pour être informés qu’ils seraient expulsés s’ils couvraient la manifestation ou même s’ils s’en approchaient. Ils devaient selon le régime couvrir les évènements depuis leurs bureaux c’est-à-dire en laissant au régime le soin de leur donner les images tournées par la chaîne iranienne Press TV. Sur ces images destinées à l’opinion internationale, on voit une manif paisible pro-Moussavi.

Ces images ne correspondent pas à la version de notre correspondant à Téhéran. Il nous fait état de rumeurs répandues par le régime qui prétendaient que les partisans de Moussavi et d’Ahmadinejad étaient en train de se battre dans les rues et qu’il fallait éviter de sortir. Notre correspondant a été surpris d’apprendre que ces rumeurs d’affrontement étaient fausses !

Cette conversation a éclairé la situation : Téhéran a diffusé des rumeurs dissuasives d’affrontements urbains pour empêcher les Iraniens de se joindre à la marche anti-régime. Parallèlement il a fourni aux médias étrangers des images d’une marche paisible pro-Moussavi c’est-à-dire pro-régime. Et enfin pour résoudre le problème de la contradiction, il a coupé l’accès aux chaînes étrangères (VOA, BBC, CNN) qui allaient diffuser les images allant à l’encontre de ses rumeurs afin de désamorcer un mouvement que de nombreux Iraniens estiment être le début de la fin du régime.

Il n’y a donc aucune preuve d’authenticité des images paisibles diffusées par Press TV où l’on voit sans cesse des portraits de Moussavi, des rubans verts, des affichettes pro-Moussavi écrites en anglais… mais aucune affichette dénonçant les 7 morts et les dizaines de blessés d’hier. Cette petite foule n’est pas la bonne.

C’est le black-out sur la vraie manif. Rien ne passe. Deux chaînes soi-disant d’opposition basées aux Etats-Unis (Pars TV et Rang-a-rang qui sont très regardées par les Iraniens) et qui ont été très actives quand il s’agissait de diffuser les nouvelles de la fausse contestation des deux premiers jours, ont cessé d’émettre sous le prétexte d’une panne technique ! Cette annonce confirme les rumeurs sur leurs comptes.

Parallèlement à cette prise en main de l’information, le régime a aussi décidé de frapper à la racine en repérant les meneurs de cette fronde. Zahra Rahnavard, l’épouse soi-disant féministe de Moussavi a réuni lundi certains étudiants pour les brieffer quant aux programmes pour cette indésirable manif de mardi. Il existe une vidéo de l’entrevue où on l’entend pendant 7 minutes tout essayer pour encourager ces jeunes à remettre leurs noms, adresses et numéros de téléphones fixe et portable à des messieurs chargés d’organiser cette manif que son mari allait quelques heures après faire annuler.

Depuis hier soir, nos amis diffusent en boucle un avertissement pour mettre en garde les patriotes contre ce genre d’opérations troyennes de collecte d’infos sur les activistes.
© WWW.IRAN-RESIST.ORG

IMG/flv/16_juin_Zahra_Rahnavard.flv

© WWW.IRAN-RESIST.ORG
Parallèlement à cette opération, le régime a aussi entrepris de minimiser le nombre des tués : ils diffusent sur leurs sites le nombre de 7 alors qu’il y a eu 58 morts et plus de 300 blessés. Une grande partie des morts provient d’Ispahan où les affrontements font rage. Pour faire oublier ces morts, dans un réflexe pavlovien, le régime a annoncé l’arrestation de deux soi-disant réformateurs. L’un est le mollah Abtahi, l’homme de liaison avec le Hezbollah qui vit normalement toute l’année à Beyrouth, et l’autre est Saïd Hajjarian, l’un des deux fondateurs des services secrets du régime, cet organisme qui est à l’origine de tous les meurtres d’opposants en Iran et en exil. C’est la technique habituelle du régime que de faire passer pour des victimes ses pions pour faire dévier l’attention de l’opinion.

Ne vous laissez pas abuser par ces fausses nouvelles amplifiées par des journalistes étrangers proches des mollahs qui dissimulent le passé immonde de ces pions du régime. Si vous aidiez ces faux prisonniers, vous aideriez le régime à légitimer ces fidèles pions des services secrets comme étant l’opposition qui doit défendre les Iraniens et les droits de l’homme.

Il faut vous concentrer sur les victimes : non pas les 7 admis par le régime, mais les 58 morts et quelques 300 blessés dans l’ensemble de l’Iran par balles ou par armes blanches par des groupes autonomes de 50 miliciens déguisés en manifestant. Décidément, le régime aime bien les procédés troyens.

Mais nos compatriotes ne sont pas non plus des bras cassés : voici une image qui a enthousiasmé les Iraniens. Suite au coup de force des groupes autonomes et à la fusillade de lundi qui a ôté la vie à trois hommes ainsi qu’une mère et sa fillette, des jeunes ont attaqué une planque de la milice bassidj aux cris de « MARG BAR BASSIDJI (Mort aux bassidjis)…

Un autre slogan était aussi entendu : « N’ayez pas peur, n’ayez pas peur, nous sommes tous ensemble ». Slogan prémonitoire qui annonçait la volonté de continuer le mouvement le mardi contre l’avis de Moussavi, ce pion du régime.

Comme nous le disions hier, cette marche majestueuse allait permettre aux Iraniens de comprendre qui sont leurs amis ou ennemis au sein du régime et en dehors des frontières de l’Iran. Il a fallu moins de 24 heures pour recevoir les premiers indices. Le régime a reculé d’un point pour annoncer un recomptage, sur la base de cette mesure bidon, Moussavi a demandé à la foule de débrayer ! Sa femme a été missionnée pour moucharder les jeunes afin de repérer les meneurs !

Et enfin, le régime a pris en main la gestion de l’info par des restrictions imposées aux journalistes étrangers et comme on pouvait s’y attendre, aucun des soi-disant modérés ou défenseurs iraniens des droits de l’homme n’a parlé. Tous s’agitent pour pleurer les faux prisonniers du régime au lieu de pleurer les victimes par balles ou par armes blanches.

Pour calmer cette foule inattendue, le régime parle même de reculer à propos de ses élections bidons boycottées par ceux qui sont dans la rue. Dans le même esprit d’apaisement, le mollah soi-disant dissident, le sanguinaire Montazeri a lancé un appel au calme et promis trois jours de deuil pour les victimes ! Et enfin, les lobbyistes du régime en France (Sfeir, Coville, Hourcade, Satrapi) défilent dans la presse et sur les plateaux Télé pour défendre Moussavi alors que l’on a jamais entendu leur voix pour condamner les lapidations, les pendaisons publiques, les amputations et les licenciements en chaîne qui sont à l’origine de ce NON !

Le régime et ses sbires (Sfeir, Coville, Hourcade, Satrapi) veulent sonner la fin de la récréation, mais nous attendons que nos compatriotes continuent pour arracher Angela, Barack, Nicolas, Silvio et les autres à leur silence coupable.

Voir aussi :

http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2009/06/16/01003-20090616ARTFIG00399-les-pro-moussavi-contournent-la-censure-grace-a-twitter-.php

Les pro-Moussavi contournent la censure grâce à Twitter
Benjamin Ferran
Le Figaro
16/06/2009

En Iran, les partisans du candidat réformateur défient la censure des médias grâce aux réseaux sociaux. Journaux, TV et radios étrangères y puisent aussi de nouvelles sources d’information.

Lundi soir, une lourde opération de maintenance aurait dû interrompre l’accès à Twitter durant une heure, en pleine manifestation des partisans de Mir Hossein Moussavi. Elle a été décalée d’une journée pour ne pas interrompre le flot des messages qui relaient la montée de la contestation en Iran. «Notre prestataire technique a reconnu le rôle d’important moyen de communication que Twitter joue actuellement en Iran», justifiait mardi matin le co-fondateur du site, Biz Stone.

Avec Facebook, YouTube et les blogs, Twitter a gagné en quelques jours une place de choix dans le suivi des événements iraniens. Les partisans du candidat réformateur ont rapidement saisi l’influence que pouvaient avoir ces outils pour communiquer dans le pays et à l’étranger, multipliant les créations de profils et d’appels virtuels aux soutiens de Mir Hossein Moussavi. Percevant le danger de ces communications qui échappent à tout contrôle, la police iranienne a décidé, fin mai, de couper l’accès à une grande partie de ces sites.

La censure n’y a rien fait. Depuis vendredi, les internautes peuvent suivre, à la source, les combats de plusieurs opposants de Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Situés au cœur des événements, ces Iraniens sont parvenus à contourner les blocages en passant par des serveurs relais (proxy) situés hors du pays. Grâce à leurs téléphones, ils partagent photos, vidéos et comptes-rendus des manifestations. «Nous sommes attaqués dans les rues par des hommes sur des motos armés de matraques», lançait lundi un certain «Persiankiwi» sur Twitter.

CNN doit s’expliquer

Ces interventions abondent alors que les journalistes étrangers sont dans le même temps soumis à une pression grandissante des autorités, qui ont interdit leur présence aux manifestations «illégales» de mardi. «Chaque personne doit devenir un diffuseur d’information», invite le compte «mousavi1388». Quelque 23 millions d’Iraniens, sur une population totale de 70 millions, ont accès à internet. L’an dernier, 400.000 disposaient de leur blog, et 150.000 sont inscrits sur Facebook.

Si cet activisme numérique n’est pas encore à l’origine de la mobilisation, il influe sur la couverture des événements à l’étranger. Durant le week-end, CNN a été contraint de s’expliquer sur son traitement des élections iraniennes, jugé insuffisant par les internautes. La propagation des messages de proche en proche élargit aussi le cercle des personnes sensibilisées à la situation en Iran. Mardi midi, l’élection iranienne figurait en tête des sujets les plus discutés sur Twitter.


Désinformation: L’Internet, ça sert aussi à faire la guerre (Have flickr will travel)

22 février, 2009
Lebanese cover girl (Filkka Israel)Palestine map (Filkka Israel)Boycott call (Filkka israel)Anti-israel cartoon (Filkka israel)
Voici les avantages d’un Compte Flickr Pro (24,95 USD par an):
– Transferts de vidéos illimités (90 secondes max)
– Espace de stockage illimité
– Bande passante illimitée
– Albums photos illimités
– Archivage des images originales en haute résolution
– Possibilité de remplacer une photo
– Publiez vos photos ou vos vidéos dans un grand nombre de pools de groupe (jusqu’à 60)
– Navigation et partage sans publicité
– Statistiques sur le décompte des affichages et les références Shamir Ramj
A midi, nous avons appris que nos sites web étaient bloqués. … La fermeture de nos sites signifie que les durs du régime ne vont pas tolérer le défi Khatami contre Ahmadinejad. Behrouz Shojaei
Nous sommes un blog pacifiste, anti-crimes israéliens contre les enfants palestiniens, comme nous sommes contre les crimes commis par des groupes terroristes comme le Hamas et le Hezbollah etc. Nous croyons que l’existence de l’Etat de l’Israël est une erreur historique, aussi bien que les appels à sa destruction. La solution que nous recherchons pour la confrontation entre les Arabes et les Juifs est basée sur ce qui suit : la conservation du droit au retour sur la base de la résolution 194 \ 1947 de l’ONU pour tous les réfugiés des deux côtés. Une solution éternelle doit être basée sur un état séculaire démocratique en Palestine pour les Palestiniens et les juifs nés en Israël avant 1990 et pour leurs parents. Le pardon entre les Arabes et les juifs basé sur une vraie croyance dans un futur pacifique de cette terre. La destruction pacifique du royaume de Jordanie et le retour de sa terre à sa situation normale comme partie de la grande Palestine. Le nouvel Etat devra préserver les mêmes droits pour tous les citoyens sans aucune discrimination religieuse ou ethnique Oui, ….c’est ce que sommes nous. Profession de foi du site Filkka israel

Chaque fois que le ministère [des Affaire étrangères] repère une tendance anti-israélienne sur un blog en langue étrangère, un site d’information ou tout autre site Internet, il envoie immédiatement un message aux volontaires pour organiser la riposte en inondant le site d’opinions pro-israéliennes.
Itamar Eichner (Yediot Aharonot)
L’intox consiste à diffuser de fausses informations censées provenir d’un camp, alors qu’en fait elles proviennent du camp opposé. De tels procédés ne sont pas nés avec les médias électroniques ; ils sont apparus pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, et même avant. Mais, tandis qu’autrefois la diffusion de l’intox exigeait un matériel relativement compliqué et coûteux, comme des émetteurs radio à haut voltage, aujourd’hui une telle opération est devenue très simple à mettre en œuvre. Il suffit de disposer d’un serveur, d’enregistrer un nom de domaine, d’installer un logiciel de blog et de commencer à publier de fausses informations. Très vite, les rumeurs enflent et font le tour de la Toile. Yediot Aharonot

L’internet, ça sert aussi à faire la guerre!

Après les journalistes-combattants et les idiots utiles, Pallywood et ses enderlinades et autres Photoshoperies,… voici les clones de Flickr!

Photos accrocheuses de stars américaines ou de filles d’à côté plus ou moins dénudées, cartes de Palestine ou dessins dénonçant la rapacité d’un peuple tueur d’enfants, appels et mode d’emploi de boycotts des produits juifs, pseudo et titre ronflant à consonance juive, profession de foi pacifiste appelant au droit du retour et à la création d’un Etat binational revenant à la destruction de fait de tout Etat juif …

Quelle meilleure ou plus inoffensive couverture, pour un service de renseignement avisé soucieux de diffuser son intox au moindre coût en ces temps de guerre des images et de l’info, qu’un site web de partage de photos et de vidéos gratuit?

Si l’on en croit le quotidien israélien Yediot Aharonot (sur la base de l’enquête d’un journaliste libanais) et comme l’a enfin compris le gouvernement israélien …

C’est ainsi une véritable campagne d’intox que, via le site libanais Filkka Israel (version apparemment arabisée de Flickr Israel comme le pseudonyme dûment enjuivé de son fondateur Khodr Awarkeh alias Dr Eli Bnie Symon), s’offrent ainsi pour trois fois rien sur la Toile globale (plus besoin d’émetteurs radio à haut voltage compliqués, coûteux et facilement repérables!) les services de renseignements syriens.

A l’image d’ailleurs (surprise!) de la pratique iranienne, rarement évoquée ici en Occident, de création (et, pour renforcer la crédibilité, occasionnelle fermeture!) de sites de faux opposants « afin de semer la confusion parmi l’opposition dans le pays » ou entériner la fiction de la division du régime entre factions « dures » et « réformistes » ….

MONDE ARABE – L’intox comme fonds de commerce
Nir Boms et Niv Lillian
Yediot Aharonot
Traduit par Courrier international
19 févr. 2009

Diffuser de fausses informations en les attribuant à des sources israéliennes, telle est la spécialité du site Internet Filkka. Ses articles erronés sont repris par les médias, semant le trouble dans la région.

Le chef du Mossad, Meir Dagan, a été tué”, titraient il y a quelques mois un certain nombre de journaux arabes. Selon de fausses informations, il avait été tué dans un mystérieux accident de voiture, lors d’une visite en Jordanie. Le blog à l’origine de cette rumeur, qui a fait les gros titres dans plusieurs pays arabes, s’appelle Filkka Israel et serait dirigé par le Dr Elia Bnay Simon.

Le Dr Bnay Simon, de l’Université hébraïque de Jérusalem, serait un universitaire réputé, doublé d’un analyste politique aux sources fiables, en particulier sur des questions sensibles liées à l’espionnage, sur les initiatives diplomatiques secrètes et sur les faits dissimulés par les autorités et dont les grands médias ne se font pas l’écho. Un rapide coup d’œil à son blog nous apprend, par exemple, que le nombre de soldats israéliens tués pendant l’opération militaire à Gaza s’élèverait à plusieurs centaines, contrairement aux chiffres officiels. Les commentaires de Bnay Simon sont régulièrement publiés et cités par les chaînes de télévision arabes. En juin 2008, son site a publié un scoop sur les projets de John McCain concernant la paix au Moyen-Orient. A en croire Filkka Israel, le candidat républicain à la Maison-Blanche proposait notamment de créer un Etat palestinien en Jordanie, sur le conseil du Pr Robert Magen, l’un des directeurs du Carnegie Institute of Science. Cet article n’a pas tardé à être repris dans tout le monde arabe, et le journal Al-Rai, financé par l’Etat jordanien, a même publié un éditorial virulent contre la proposition américaine.

Très vite, les rumeurs enflent et font le tour de la Toile

Comment se fait-il que vous n’ayez jamais entendu parler de ce célèbre professeur ? Sans doute parce qu’il n’existe pas comme membre de l’Institut Carnegie. De même, l’Université hébraïque de Jérusalem n’a personne de ce nom parmi ses professeurs. Robert Magen a lui aussi été étonné lorsqu’on lui a demandé de commenter son “initiative diplomatique”, qui à l’évidence n’a jamais existé, et il a nié avoir la moindre part dans les idées qu’elle était censée proposer.

Toutefois, au Liban, il y a un docteur qui est bien connu et qui porte le nom de Bnay Simon. Apparemment, c’est un pseudonyme de Khodr Awarkeh, qui contribue régulièrement aux sites d’information syriens Aksalser et Champress. Des sources libanaises l’ont déjà associé au Parti social nationaliste syrien [parti nationaliste prosyrien]. Le journaliste libanais Hussein Abdul-Hussein affirme que le blog Filkka Israel s’inscrit dans une vaste opération d’intox orchestrée par les réseaux de renseignements libano-syriens. Les idées d’Awarkeh sont aussi relayées en ligne par son ami koweïtien l’administrateur du site Aldiwan, Abdul-Hamid Abbas Dashti, un chiite koweïtien qui a des liens familiaux avec un officier des renseignements syrien.

L’intox consiste à diffuser de fausses informations censées provenir d’un camp, alors qu’en fait elles proviennent du camp opposé. De tels procédés ne sont pas nés avec les médias électroniques ; ils sont apparus pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, et même avant. Mais, tandis qu’autrefois la diffusion de l’intox exigeait un matériel relativement compliqué et coûteux, comme des émetteurs radio à haut voltage, aujourd’hui une telle opération est devenue très simple à mettre en œuvre. Il suffit de disposer d’un serveur, d’enregistrer un nom de domaine, d’installer un logiciel de blog et de commencer à publier de fausses informations. Très vite, les rumeurs enflent et font le tour de la Toile.

Cette technique a déjà été adoptée par des Etats et des organisations qui ont compris tout le parti qu’ils pouvaient tirer des médias électroniques. L’Iran, tout en censurant des milliers de sites Internet, a réussi à créer ses propres sites, censément dirigés par des opposants, afin de semer la confusion parmi l’opposition dans le pays.


Voir aussi:

Filkka Israel

Vous voulez vous documenter et trouver des infos ou bien sur la Turquie, l’Egypte et l’Irak, et vous tournez en rond sans réussir à trouver ce que vous recherchez ? ?

Filkka Israel

Cet état violent et terroriste recourt inconditionnelement à l’usage d’armes interdites et s’en sert contre des populations civiles générant ainsi des critiques très fortes et un ras-le-bol grandissant de la part d’ONG telles qu’Amnesty International..

Les pro-israéliens hystériques ne peuvent pas supporter les observations objectives en direction de la politique impérialiste et coloniale de l’état d’Israël accusant ainsi le reste du monde, et tous ceux qui osent s’exprimer de dangereux antisémites pro-Hamas..

La recherche et développement en Israël et l’implantation massive d’entreprises dans ce pays sont des options tâchées de sang car l’économie israélienne est basée sur l’expulsion des palestiniens ainsi que le vol de leur maison, c’est pourquoi les avions en direction d’Israel commencent à se vider. Le Boycott de l’économie israélienne commence a porter ses fruits..

Vous aussi vous voulez faire quelque chose, pourtant vous avez cherché et vous ne savez pas comment agir ni quel type d’opérations il vaut mieux mener ? ?
Filkka Israel

Participez vous aussi au boycott mondial d’Israel et cessez immédiatement toute consommation de biens, produits ou fruits en provenance d’Israel, car le boycott est l’action qui va avoir le plus de conséquences au niveau de l’opinion et au niveau économique. Pour savoir quels sont les produits concernés, il suffit de regarder le code barre (qui commence par 729)..
Filkka Israel

La croissance israélienne est fondamentalement dépendante de ses exportations de produits agricoles et des investissements des firmes étrangères, ainsi que de la manne touristique (hotels, boites de nuits, clubs de vacances)..

Informez aussi un maximum de personnes, transférez-leur l’adresse de ce site et de cette page et si vous avez un site ou un blog, faîtes un lien vers cette page (ou dans votre signature sur les forums)..

L’ironie du sort, c’est qu’avec cette logique sécuritaire d’enfermement Israël est en train de creuser sa propre tombe sans aucun doute sur le long terme, l’histoire des colonisations nous l’a appris..

Renseignez-vous à propos de Filkka Israel.


Médias: Bienvenue au pays où l’investigation se paie décidément très cher (Another French case of what sex was to the Victorians)

29 novembre, 2008
Mort du minitel: Retour sur ces millionnaires d'un autre millénaireA l’origine du capitalisme, il y a parfois des forbans. Première génération : des forbans, voire des négriers; la deuxième génération se veut respectable; la troisième fait des études et crée des fondations culturelles. Les individus peuvent être égoïstes, antipathiques et sans intelligence, mais l’ensemble construit une société qui fonctionne. Guy Sorman (Info matin, le 11 mai 1994)
C’est un pays dans lequel la police peut débarquer chez le journaliste d’un quotidien, l’humilier devant ses enfants, l’insulter, le menotter, le déshabiller complètement au dépôt… A cause de quelques mots écrits dans ce journal qu’il a dirigé pendant quelques mois. Ce pays, c’est la France de 2008. Pascal Riché
Après des débuts dans la télématique et le minitel rose, puis quelques investissements dans des “peep-shows » (un à Paris et deux à Strasbourg) qui ont servi de couverture à des activités de prostitution, il est devenu vice-président et directeur de la stratégie d’Iliad, groupe de télécommunications français, maison mère du fournisseur d’accès internet Free. Wikipedia

Après le bon vieux temps tontonesque du harcèlement de nos Jean-Edern Hallier et de nos docteur Gubler comme de la mise sur écoutes de la moitié de Paris …

La énième confirmation, le mois dernier, de la très victorienne pudeur des médias français pour les pantalonnades de leurs responsables politiques …

Et celle, la semaine dernière, du caractère « très enchainé » du canard-feuille à ragots qui nous tient lieu de presse d’investigation …

Bienvenue au pays où la vie privée est reine et où l’investigation se paie décidément très cher!

Au lendemain de l’interpellation apparemment mouvementée de l’ex-directeur de la publication de Libération pour non-présentation à une convocation et possible “prise de haut” des policiers suite à l’hébergement sur son site du commentaire d’un internaute jugé diffamatoire …

Retour sur cette vie dite “privée” que le plaignant de l’affaire, qui a d’ailleurs perdu tous ses procès en diffamation mais surtout bien plus en valorisation boursière, semble tant tenir à préserver.

Co-fondateur du fournisseur d’accès internet Free et tout récent et célébré membre du club relativement fermé des 25 plus grandes fortunes de France (plus de 2,7 milliards d’euros pour ses 2/3 des parts du groupe Iliad, regroupant aussi l’annuaire téléphonique inversé Annu et la banque de données Société. com), Xavier Niel avait certes été l’objet de nombre d’articles de Libération pour une partie de sa biographie un peu plus sombre.

Comme le rappellent allusivement sa notice Wikipedia mais d’une manière très détaillée les articles de Libération, celui qui a tant fait pour la démocratisation de l’accès à l’internet en France avait en effet été condamné (avec sursis plus 250.000 euros d’amende), il y a deux ans pour abus de biens sociaux.

En clair, une fâcheuse habitude, apparemment héritée de ses jours dans l’industrie du sexe dans les années 90 (peep shows, téléphone rose) et qui lui avait déjà valu un méga redressement fiscal en 2000, des paiements au noir et en espèces …

Le X, versant obscur du patron de Free
Renaud Lecadre
Libération
Le 14 septembre 2006

Outre les nouvelles technologies, Xavier Niel exploite des peep-shows. Il comparaît pour abus de biens sociaux.

Xavier Niel, 39 ans, fondateur du groupe Iliad, qui comprend le fournisseur d’accès à l’Internet Free, l’annuaire téléphonique inversé Annu et la banque de données Société. com, est le petit prince des nouvelles technologies. Mais il n’y a pas que l’ADSL dans la vie. Depuis une vingtaine d’années, il cultive en parallèle un jardin secret : exploitation de peep- shows et sex-shops, sites pornos, vente par correspondance de sex-toys… Cela lui vaut de comparaître aujourd’hui en correctionnelle pour abus de biens sociaux, après avoir échappé aux poursuites pour proxénétisme. Lui qui revendiquait le droit au respect de sa «vie économique» privée, va devoir assumer publiquement. Il semble désormais prêt à le faire.

Main à la main

Aux enquêteurs, Xavier Niel a exposé sa vision de l’industrie du sexe, carburant au black : «Retour sur investissement intéressant et non fiscalisé», «argent facile». Sans fausse pudeur, il leur a confessé : «Ces espèces utilisables instantanément ne donnent pas la même sensation de gain que l’argent que je gagne de façon orthodoxe comme opérateur de télécommunications.» D’autant que Xavier Niel a de gros besoins en liquide. En 2001, son partenaire historique dans Iliad, Fernand Develter, lui avait vendu une partie de ses actions. Le prix de cession étant discutable, ils auraient convenu d’un complément de la main à la main : 9 100 euros mensuels, sur une durée de… trente ans.

Niel et Develter se sont rencontrés au milieu des années 80 au café le Petit ramoneur, QG des employés de sex-shops de la rue Saint-Denis, à Paris. Le second, ancien fondé de pouvoir à la Société générale, prend sous son aile le jeune premier tout juste sorti de maths sup, «brillant mais désargenté». Ensemble, ils prospèrent dans le Minitel rose, puis investissent 500 000 euros dans une dizaine de peep- shows parisiens. L’un de ces établissements, le New Sex Paradise, leur vaut une sueur froide en 2001 : deux de leurs associés, gérants effectifs de cet Eros center, sont poursuivis pour proxénétisme (ils seront condamnés en 2003 à deux ans de prison avec sursis, Xavier Niel étant entendu comme simple témoin), il faut les éloigner au plus vite. Leur chèque de sortie du capital, 7 300 modestes euros, est complété par un dessous de table de 200 000. Xavier Niel admet s’être remboursé à la bonne franquette, en prélevant 15 000 euros par mois sur les recettes non déclarées du New Sex Paradise.

A Strasbourg, l’alerte est encore plus chaude puisque l’enquête pour proxénétisme vise nommément Niel et Develter. Leur établissement alsacien, sous l’enseigne Sex-Shop X Live Peep-Show, emploie une quinzaine de jeunes femmes comme «artistes visuelles». Mais en cabine, on ne touche pas qu’avec les yeux. Le juge d’instruction Renaud Van Ruymbeke, spécialiste des affaires financières, détaille dans son ordonnance de renvoi la «variété des contacts physiques» avec le même détachement que pour les transactions off-shore : «Caresses par le client sur les seins et les fesses des danseuses, intromission de godemichés ou de vibromasseurs dans le sexe et/ou l’anus des danseuses par le client, intromission par les danseuses de ces mêmes ustensiles dans l’anus de certains clients.» Les gestionnaires locaux sont renvoyés en correctionnelle pour proxénétisme, après avoir admis la réalité de ces prestations excédant le simple show. Xavier Niel et Fernand Develter, qui avaient investi 200 000 euros sans se mêler de la gestion, étaient-ils au courant ? Le juge Van Ruymbeke accorde au premier un non-lieu «au bénéfice du doute», Niel ne s’étant jamais rendu sur place. Le second est renvoyé pour proxénétisme car, lors d’une tournée d’inspection anonyme, Develter avait demandé à une des artistes de lui faire une fellation : pour s’assurer du respect des bonnes pratiques, jure-t-il aux enquêteurs, «grandement satisfait» que son employée ait refusé ; parce que «ces pratiques devaient être habituelles pour lui», interprète au contraire l’intéressée.

Lettre anonyme

Xavier Niel ne se voit plus reprocher que des paiements en espèces portant sur plusieurs milliers d’euros. La montagne a accouché d’une souris. : en 2002, une lettre anonyme dénonçait excusez du peu un vaste blanchiment, Ilyad étant accusée de recycler l’argent du proxénétisme et de la pédophilie. Tracfin (l’organisme anti-blanchiment) y allait aussi de sa dénonciation officielle au parquet. A l’arrivée, une minable affaire d’enveloppes. Niel reconnaît les faits, admet les «risques» inhérents à l’industrie du sexe, mais dit ne pas pouvoir tout contrôler. Ce n’est que le «résidu de ce qu’il faisait il y a une quinzaine d’années», plaide son avocate, Me Catherine Toby. A la fin des années 90, Xavier Niel envisageait en effet de se retirer du sexe : candidat à la reprise du Palace (une boite de nuit parisienne), son pedigree de «roi du porno» avait été brandi pour lui barrer la route. Mauvais genre, car au même moment, la banque d’affaires Goldman Sachs envisageait d’entrer au capital d’Iliad. Depuis, sa soeur Véronique porte parfois des parts en son nom. L’accusation la qualifie de «faux nez». En 2004, Xavier lui offre un Land Cruiser Toyota tout neuf. «Contrepartie de sa passivité arrangeante», estime le juge Van Ruymbeke. Comme si un milliardaire n’avait pas le droit d’offrir un cadeau de 45 000 euros à sa soeur.

Voir aussi:

Deux ans avec sursis pour le patron de Free

Xavier Niel écope aussi de 250.000 euros d’amende • Ce pionnier de l’internet en France, était poursuivi pour recel d’abus de biens sociau

Renaud LECADRE
Libération
27 oct. 2006

Xavier Niel a été condamné hier à deux ans de prison avec sursis et 250.000 euros d’amende. C’est ce qu’avait réclamé le parquet lors du procès correctionnel qui s’était tenu du 14 au 22 septembre.

Le patron de Free, pionnier de l’internet en France, était poursuivi pour recel d’abus de biens sociaux: gestionnaire de peep shows dans les années 90, les recettes comme les bénéfices ne se monnayaient qu’en liquide, «la caisse noire tenant lieu de politique», selon l’accusation.

A la barre du tribunal, Xavier Niel avait sagement admis les faits et plaidé l’erreur de jeunesse. «Probable ivresse de la transgression, avait tenté d’expliquer son avocate, Me Caroline Toby. Quand il a lancé Free, Xavier Niel a trainé comme un boulet cette image de maitre du porno»

Il est également resté prisonnier de sa culture du black. Niel devra en outre verser 188.000 euros de dommages et intérêts aux parties civiles. Par contre, pour avoir passé un mois en détention provisoire, il pourra réclamer un dédommagement, puisqu’il n’est finalement condamné qu’à une peine avec sursis.

Son ancien partenaire dans le sexe puis dans Free, Fernand Develter, a été condamné pour sa part à deux ans de prison dont neuf mois ferme (couvrant l’essentiel de sa détention provisoire), et relaxé de l’accusation de proxénétisme, Niel ayant obtenu sur ce point un non-lieu en cours d’instruction. Vendredi après-midi, les avocats hésitaient à faire appel mais devraient en rester là.

Voir enfin:

Le fondateur de Free accro à la caisse noire.

Deux ans avec sursis requis contre Xavier Niel, accusé d’abus de biens sociaux par le biais de sex-shops.
Renaud LECADRE
Libération
22 sept. 2006

Le procès de Xavier Niel s’est achevé hier sur un mystère. Le fondateur de Free a sagement reconnu les faits : 368 000 euros de recel d’abus de biens sociaux. Le parquet a requis contre lui deux ans de prison avec sursis, 375 000 euros d’amende et la confiscation de ses biens à hauteur des détournements, pour «purger le passé sans obérer l’avenir». Mais la question reste entière, malgré une expertise psychologique, rarissime dans une affaire financière : pourquoi ?

Niel, vedette des nouvelles technologies, a mené une vie parallèle dans l’exploitation de sex-shops. Le tribunal n’était pas là pour lui faire la morale, même si le procureur Stéphane Hardouin s’est laissé aller à des considérations hors sujet sur les «pratiques sexuellement marginales». C’est tout bêtement une affaire de black : les clients paient en liquide, les actionnaires se rémunèrent en enveloppes. Des «dividendes sauvages», résume parfaitement le proc : «Le prélèvement en espèces est au coeur du projet, la caisse noire est une politique de groupe.» Son avocate, Me Caroline Toby, globalement «d’accord avec l’analyse du parquet», tente une explication : «Probablement ivresse de la transgression. Quand il a lancé Free, Xavier Niel a traîné comme un boulet cette image de « maître du porno », titre d’un article du Canard Enchaîné. Au lieu de rompre, il est resté prisonnier de ce système. La justice lui a permis de mettre fin à tout cela.» L’accusation ironise sur ce «soudain élan de vertu», les paiements en espèces n’ayant cessé qu’en 2001, après descente de police, puis repris comme si de rien n’était en 2003.

Xavier Niel affirme avoir «soldé le passé», payé ses redressements fiscaux (il avait également omis de déclarer sa plus-value lors de la vente de Worldnet, pionnier français de l’accès au web), cédé ses parts dans l’industrie du sexe à son partenaire historique, Fernand Develter. Ce dernier, contre lequel le parquet a requis deux ans de prison ferme car il est également poursuivi pour proxénétisme, entend lui gâcher sa repentance. En marge de leurs petites affaires de peep-shows, ils étaient co actionnaires d’Iliad (maison mère de Free, désormais cotée en Bourse). En 2002, Niel rachète les parts de Develter. Le second se dit aujourd’hui victime d’une «véritable escroquerie», le premier s’étant attribué un dividende exceptionnel et rétroactif sitôt la vente conclue. Sauf qu’à l’époque, les deux partenaires s’étaient mis d’accord sur un complément de prix occulte, de la main à la main : 9 100 euros par mois pendant… trente ans. Niel proclame avoir tout «soldé par trois chèques de banque» ; Develter assure avoir été «payé en espèces pendant 31 mois», grâce à des primes versées fictivement à des cadres d’Iliad, assurant tenir cela d’un «informateur» interne… Me Toby s’insurge contre cette «réécriture de l’histoire», dans le «seul souci d’entraîner Xavier Niel dans sa chute». Le tribunal a préféré couper court à ces «règlements de comptes postérieurs à l’affaire». Jugement le 27 octobre.

Voir finalement:

Governance case against Xavier Niel, chairman of Iliad, for financing a prostitution racket
Telecom Asia
July 1, 2004

GOVERNANCE: It’s always been taken as read that sex was going to be one of the killer apps of broadband. In the case of Iliad, France’s second biggest broadband service provider, sex is proving to be something of a liability–at least on its stock price.

Iliad’s share value dropped over 10% last month after its chairman founder and lead shareholder Xavier Niel was arrested for allegedly financing a prostitution racket. According to the French prosecutor’s office which has been conducting a money laundering investigation over the past year, Niel financed three peep shows suspected of housing illegal prostitution operation, reports Boardwatch. (Insert you own « triple play » joke here, although Iliad says that Niel’s arrest has nothing to do with the company’s business or activities.)


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