Sunday, December 5, 2010

State Department cables subject of recent WikiLeaks release

WikiLeaks unveiled a bundle of secret State Department paperwork Sunday. This time WikiLeaks’ bombshell is State Department connections that provide candid information on international diplomacy and how the U.S. applies pressure to its allies overseas. The new WikiLeaks expose attracted the typical condemnations from the typical suspects, and a hacker managed to delay Sunday’s launch of the documents. Post resource – WikiLeaks reveals confidential State Department diplomatic cables by Money Blog Newz.

State department connections leaked onto WikiLeaks

The State Department cables was released by WikiLeaks showing the world what international diplomacy looks like in the U.S. The way the United States arranged economic sanctions against Iran also as how the western and middle eastern governments plan on dealing with Iran's nuclear program were leaked in the State Department paperwork. Other insights include how North Korea has been aiding Iran’s nuclear program and an apparent order from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for diplomats to spy on foreign governments.

Cables display all of the gossip going on

An attack by the U.S. on Iran's nuclear facilities is exactly what King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia suggests the United States do, according to the WikiLeaks. Also, because of the organized crime associated with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, he was called an "alpha-dog" in the report. Compared to Adolf Hitler within the report is Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Also, Afghan President Karzai is "driven by paranoia" supposedly. Evidently a "voluptuous blonde" Ukranian nurse never leaves Libyan leader muammar Gaddafi's side when he's traveling. Apparently the leak makes it dangerous for diplomats, intelligence operatives and informants which is why government throughout the whole world condemned the last WikiLeaks launch.

Trying to end WikiLeaks

You will find 251,288 connections that WikiLeaks says to have from the State Department. Between 1966 and 2010 they were released. It was only a few hrs after WikiLeaks released documents before it was hit with a "mass dispersed denial of service attack." This is exactly what WikiLeaks posted on Twitter. A WikiLeaks spokesperson said the documents deal with “strained relations and embarrassment” and do not endanger United States of America national security. The company has a plan to launch more paperwork. In the next few weeks and months this could be happening.

Citations

CNN

cnn.com/2010/US/11/29/wikileaks/index.html?npt=NP1

Washington Post

washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/28/AR2010112802395_2.html?wpisrc=nl_headline&sid=ST2010112802494

Washington Post

voanews.com/english/news/World-Leaders-Officials-Watch-WikiLeaks-with-Curiosity-Concern-110966864.html



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