Wikileaks Press Release

At 5pm EST Friday 22nd October 2010 WikiLeaks released the largest classified military leak in history. The 391,832 reports ('The Iraq War Logs'), document the war and occupation in Iraq, from 1st January 2004 to 31st Decemc'est un padber 2009 (except for the months of May 2004 and March 2009) as told by soldiers in the United States Army. Each is a 'SIGACT' or Significant Action in the war. They detail events as seen and heard by the US military troops on the ground in Iraq and are the first real glimpse into the secret history of the war that the United States government has been privy to throughout. 
The reports detail 109,032  deaths in Iraq, comprised of 66,081 'civilians'; 23,984 'enemy' (those labeled as insurgents); 15,196 'host nation' (Iraqi government forces) and 3,771 'friendly' (coalition forces). The majority of the deaths (66,000, over 60%) of these are civilian deaths.That is 31 civilians dying every day during the six year period. For comparison, the 'Afghan War Diaries', previously released by WikiLeaks, covering the same period, detail the deaths of some 20,000 people. Iraq during the same period, was five times as lethal with equivallent population size.
This average does not include the slain working in the Iraqi security services or those claimed by US soldiers to be 'insurgents'. When these are added in, almost 50 Iraqis died on average in every single day reported by the logs.
Many of these deaths are violent deaths, often featuring grim details that have never been told before; murdered and tortured bodies discovered all over Baghdad. There are reports of civilians being indiscriminately killed at checkpoints, such as speeding to get a pregnant woman to hospital; of Iraqi detainees being tortured by Coalition Forces; and of US soldiers blowing up entire civilian buildings because of one suspected insurgent on the roof. In amongst all this horror there are just ten lone reports mentioning primary political reasons the public was given for the war weapons of mass destruction (WMD). And many of these purely state that no weapons of mass destruction were found.  There are over 300 recorded reports of colation forces committing torture and abuse of detainees across 284 reports and over 1,000 cases of Iraqi security forces committing similar crimes.
There are numerous cases of what appear to be clear war crimes by US forces, such as the deliberate killing of persons trying to surrender. Prior to the release of the Iraq War Logs, WikiLeaks undertook the arduous task of redacting any piece of information contained that might lead to the identification of any innocent Iraqi. We have performed this process by beginning with redacting everything and then deciding what is safe to put back in. We therefore apologise if you find that there is far too much redacted in these logs at the current stage. We hope to raise the capital necessary  to continue this process and enable more of the data to be un-redacted. The Pentagon refused to assist this process, stating that it was not interested in 'harm minimization', only complete destruction of the record. WikiLeaks has brought together a number of collaborators to go through this vast wealth of previously classified material: Analysis by the independent NGO, Iraq Body Count (IBC) suggests the Logs contain 15,000 civilian deaths that have not been previously discovered outside the pentagon. Most of the newly revealed deaths in the Logs occurred in previously unreported violent incidents involving the deaths of one or two people. They include targeted assassinations, drive-by-shootings, torture, executions, and checkpoint killings. Public Interest Lawyers are presently acting in four judicial review cases which arise from details discovered in the Iraq War Logs. Two of these are ongoing and two are being developed to the pre-action letter stage. The cases will be detailed at a release press conference in London on Saturday 23rd October.  WikiLeaks have also structured collaborations with a number of other media organisations to ensure that as much of the information contained within these logs is brought into the public domain from the moment of the War Logs release.  Please donate to WikiLeaks at xxx to defend this information and our activities. For further information on the content from our media collaborators:
Iraq Body Count - www.iraqbodycount.orgPublic Interest Lawyers  - www.publicinterestlawyers.co.ukBureau of Investigative Journalism - www.iraqwarlogs.comThe Guardian www.guardian.co.ukDer Spiegel www.spiegel.deThe New York Times - www.nytimes.com
    FAQ  What is Wikileaks? 
WikiLeaks is  an international public service that allows whistleblowers and  journalists to get suppressed information out in the public domain as safely as possible. 
 How did it come about?
 A network  of human rights activists, technical people and journalists were tired of  being censored themselves and also of having primary source material that they were unable to publish in their newspaper or online for legal reasons or space constraints.
 How does it work? Where is it based?
 Physically  Wikileaks does two things - it receives disclosures from  whistleblowers or journalists who can't get their material into the  press in the ususal manner due to legal reasons. It then publishes this material and keeps it online in the  face of political or legal attack.So in the first part that's a  matter of protecting the source and there is some sophisticated  infrastructure to do that, bouncing our submissions around the world in  an encrypted way to lose the trail of surveillance activities and also  to pass that information through protective legal jurisdictions like  Sweden or Belgium, which have legislation to ensure communications  between a journalist and a source are protected. Then in the second part, the  publishing aspect, there are other laws in different jurisdictions that  protect the rights of people to communicate in public in different ways.  So we have infrastructure situated in New York, Sweden, Iceland to take advantage of that protection.
 What s different about Wikileaks? 
The  key difference is that we have a stated commitment to a particular kind of process and objective, and that commitment is to get censored  material out and never to take it down. That commitment has driven our  technical and legal process and has resulted in sources understanding  that we are the most trusted organisation to give material to and we  always fight attempted censorship and have always won.  That kind of moral clarity of our position has ensured us a lot of support - from  sources wanting to give us material and from journalists and free press advocates who know that we should be supported because we're the vanguard of an ideal which is that justice comes about as a result of  the disclosure of abuse.
Is the world different because of Wikileaks? 
Yes  its definitely different in places - but it's too early to say the  whole world is different. But we are creating a space behind us for  other media and publishing organisations to operate in a safer way and  that, I think, will have long term consequences.  We've seen  legislative consequences as a result, we've seen changes in governance,  ministers being fired and so on. Clear cut outcomes. Other outcomes are  more diffuse - for example, how a population feels about the progress of  a war. This is something that's not easy to measure. Does it result in  concrete policy changes? We know it does, but it's hard to correlate.
What have you done now? 
We have just released  391,832 reports ('The Iraq War Logs') documenting the war and occupation in Iraq, from 1st January 2004 to 31st December 2009 (excepting the months of May 2004 and March 2009) as told by soldiers in the United States Army. Each is a 'SIGACT' or Significant Action in the war.  They detail events as seen and heard by the US military troops on the  ground in Iraq and are the first real glimpse into the secret history of  the war that the United States government has been privy to throughout. It covers each civilian kill, each military kill, and details when and where  it happened. 
 And how significant is that? 
This is the largest military leak in history and takes the public a large step closer into understanding The nearest equivalent is  perhaps the Pentagon Papers released by Daniel Ellsberg in the 1970s,  which was about 10,000 papers - but that was already four years old when  it was released. 
How many pages are in your report?
About 200,000 pages in this material. The Pentagon Papers was about 10,000 pages. 
What can you tell us about the source? 
We  know from looking at this material, correlating it with public records  and talking to military sources that this material is true and accurate.  As to the specific source, obviously we can't comment. There's  been publicity about Bradley Manning, a military officer, who claims to  be a source for Wikileaks.
What can you say about him?
We have a number of military sources, including ones before Manning joined the army. 
Do you know who the source is?
No, we don't know who the source is. 
So how does Wikileaks work? 
So  other journalists try to verify sources. We don't do that, we verify  documents. We don't care where it came from - but we can guess that it  probably came from somewhere in the US military or the US government,  from someone who is disaffected. Clearly, a heroic act by the  whistleblower.So the same computer system that protects the source also stops you from knowing that source? The system we have deployed to make whistleblowers to us untraceable, also prevents us knowing who they are. Whoever it is, the US military will regard him as a traitor.Well,  we can't speak for the decision of the US military in this case, but  it's clear there are a number of people in the US military who have a  view that abuses should not occur in war, and we have a number of  sources revealing these abuses everyday. It's one of the optimistic  things in the course of this war that there is dissent and that there  are well intentioned people in the US military. 
So is Wikileaks taking a stand - are you anti war?
We  have a stand about justice and we believe that the way to justice is  transparency and we are clear that the end goal is to expose injustices  in the world and try to rectify them. Obviously death is a type of  injustice, and death during war, especially civilians, is an unjust war.  We try to expose them to bring about reform. We don't have a view about  whether the war should continue or stop - we do have a view that it  should be prosecuted as humanely as possible. What do you want to accomplish by putting them out in the open? It's  important to understand that these records are seven months old, so  they do not speak about any immediate ongoing operation - rather they  describe the texture and history of this war in Afghanistan. It's  not our function to get people killed, rather it's our function to try  and achieve justice and save people's lives. So it's not right to say  this material has been classified by the US military because it's  perceived that enemies would use it in such and such a way - or that the  material just goes into a classified bin. But it hasn't been declassified, you're effectively declassifying it. Yes, we are declassifying it effectively.  
What's of interest inside it?
This  is really the entire war and it includes nearly every military event  that has occurred. So it includes all the small things that are not  normally reported but that actually result in the civilian casualties  and the troop kills. For example, a man is seen digging a road,  troops think he is an insurgent placing an IED. They shout, he runs  away, they try to shoot him, he runs away, then they fire some mortars.  The mortar overshoots, hits a village and kills a five year old boy. The  material was full of things like that.  Similarly, troops are in  a field, they see some unexploded ordnance. They could leave it alone  or shoot it with their guns but for some reason, probably because  they're bored, they call in an airstrike. Just a single shell. The bomb  comes in, hits a village, 17 people go off to hospital. Then  there are also the big events - so operation Medusa, late 2006. 181  people killed at once, most by an AC 130 gunship - a big airplane with  canons fixed on the side, circling and shooting.
What is the full story  behind that event? 
This information gives you the time, the  place, the number of killed, the different aircrafts involved.
But  precisely what happened?
It still needs to be discovered by linking up  this information with reports on the ground, witnesses if there are any  left, by soldiers who were involved.  Another example is Task  Force 373 - US Special Forces Assassination Squad. Why this material  does not tend to include Special Forces is that sometimes Special Forces  work together in tandem with the US regular army. There are many  reports discussing the assassination lists that the US military have  - with hundreds, maybe thousands of people on these lists.  We  can see bungled operations, Special Forces go in to kill an alleged  Taliban or Al Qaida, fire off missiles, kill seven children and in fact  the target wasn't there.  We can see how these lists are probably  abused. There's no judicial process or review. We can see governors,  local warlords, unhappy with a competitor and they nominate them to go  onto these assassination lists. It's something quite interesting and  serious and they are called JPEL - Joint Priority Effects Lists.  
That's the code name for the assassination list?
Yes, it's JPEL. There's another assassination list - JEL - which is not a priority.  
You've spoken about injustice - but what injustice is actually exposed in this leak?
So  we can see a broad range of suspicious events. 181 people killed, with  no proper description of why. On one day, only one person wounded, no  captives and only one US soldier killed. Many of these events have a  disparity and they need to be investigated. We also see hundreds, and  there's probably thousands of a child killed here, a girl killed there,  people taken to hospital, lots of corruption by NDS - the Afghan  Intelligence agency, and of course Taliban abuses, IEDs and blowing up  hotels and so on.
 Thousands of journalists have been to  Afghanistan, hundreds of books have been written - will this publication  shift our opinion of the war?
Yes, I think it will. This  material is all positioned by time and geography. Precise co-ordinates.  It involves every minor and major action undertaken by the US military.  So it provides a whole map, if you like, through time, of what has  happened during this war. And those books and the other journalism can  all be placed on this map.  So it's a cohesive picture of the  whole lot and statistical work can be done on this. This is the raw  ingredient the US military uses to draw its own statistics. So we can  look at things like the ratio of killed to wounded in different  provinces and regions. It is an extraordinary body of work for  academics, historians, HR investigations, the public and journalists to  study. 
What does it tell us about Pakistan and the role of the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence)?
There  is a lot of material in there about Pakistan, about the ISI, crossing  over the border, firing over border, firing by US troops from  Afghanistan into Pakistan, drones over flights and even a plot by the  ISI to assassinate Karzai.   Now a number of these reports,  including the assassination plot, could be erroneous. These are  informers, they come and say, "I heard this guy is involved in an  assassination plot." A lot of these are probably burns and designed to  take out a competitor or enemy, it doesn't mean the allegations are  true. That's what is true about the material - it reveals how difficult  the intelligence environment is when there are incentives to say  information for money. As a result, military command can say anything  they want about what is happening. There is always a man in Afghanistan  or Pakistan who is willing to say the right thing. There  is an awful amount of material here that you couldn't have looked  through personally.
Could it cost lives?
Is it putting people in danger  publishing this?
We've gone through the material and  reviewed it and looked for cases where innocent informers, ie an old man  saying next door there is a Taliban, or what he believes is Taliban, so  we've looked for those cases and there's a particular type of report  that frequently has that - those have been withheld and also the source  says they have done some work in doing this as well. So I think it's  unlikely that that will happen. We've worked hard to make sure there's  not a significant chance of anybody coming to harm.  
But you can't guarantee it?
Any  information can be abused for another purpose so we can't guarantee it.  But our understanding of the material is that it's vastly more likely  to save lives than cost lives.  
So you've actually removed stuff from this leak?
Yes.Is that a first for Wikileaks?
Sources know when they submit material that we go through a "harm minimisation" process.  That  harm minimisation process is not about removing material it's about  minimising harm. We have a number of ways to do that. The way we have  done it in the past and it's always been effective - notify and delay.  Notify the people concerned, and delay the publication as a result. So  we have retained some of this material for the harm minimisation  process. No, because it's really impossible for us to notify the  Afghanis in their villages about this material - we will have to do a  redaction of some of it. 
Is that new for you? You're censoring it.
Yes,  that would be new for us. But remember we are an organisation for  justice. We have a method, a strong method, but we don't want to let  that method interfere with the goal.  
How qualified are you to go through this material?
This  is what we do full time. We've spent four years doing this so, as far  as anyone is qualified, we are qualified. It doesn't mean we are  infallible, far from it.  
What kind of life do you lead?
You have courted controversy. We  have courted just reform and as a result, abusive organisations push  back. We have surveillance events in countries, sometimes we have  physical events - two people associated with what we are doing were  assassinated in March last year so there are serious issues in different  countries.  In relation to this issue, in the US, yes there is  significant surveillance. We are not expecting more than surveillance.  It could be right as long as it's within the law of the US.  
Surely this a breach of the law to publish secret information?
No,  that's not true. The US constitution gives robust protection to the  press. The law is not what a General or CEO says it is. The law is what  the Supreme Court says it will be. And so far, it has upheld the right  of publishers to reveal this type of information.  
So you don't think you're breaking any laws revealing this?
No.  But you have been subject to legal challenges.Yes  we have, and we've won every legal challenge. The law is not what a  General trying to cover abuses says it is, or a bank CEO says, it's what  the Supreme Court in the land says it is. 
What will the US reaction be?
I  expect they will see the extensive range of abuses and if they are  intelligent, they will say 'This will not happen again, we will put in  procedures to stop these abuses, to stop this".  I'm sure there  are elements that will say "We will put in procedures to stop this  information coming out again" - but insofar as the US administration  goes down that path, rather than addressing the problems in  Afghanistan, I think it will be seen as a mistake in history. 
What five reports stick in your mind as the most interesting to do?
We  developed a severity metric - the number of killed, wounded, detained -  and from that we can see the most severe according to the internal  reporting, which is not always accurate.  So on top of that we  see 181 killed and then go down the list. So the top area of that list  are serious, and require further investigations. Info about TF 373 -  that seems to have got out of control. That is significant, and  interesting. There needs to be more. How those lists are maintained, how  you get on the lists, how you get off the list - that needs to be  investigated.  We also see example of a Polish Mylee massacre -  an event where, in one day, the Poles are unhappy with a village, they  are receiving fire, so they return the next day and shell it all. But  that was reported to the Polish military and they took action. We're not  really aware of it in the West. Similarly, US forces just saw  some unexploded ordnance and instead of ignoring it, or shooting it,  they called in an airstrike - maybe just for fun - and then a village  was hit and 17 people were taken to hospital. We don't know how many  lived or died. Like the road tolls, it's not the bus accidents  that kill the most people it's the car accidents. But we don't hear  about the cars because they are small and they happen all the time. This  material, if you like, reveals all the car accidents of this war. Just a  couple of civilians being killed, even 17 now is not reportable. So  that totality stands out to my mind. It's just one of these events after  another. Again and again and again. Hundreds of them. The totality of  all these events that killed civilians and people who it's not clear who  they are - I mean this is a civil war. There are weekend  soldiers, men of the family who have a particular allegiance and when  their villages are threatened by US forces or the ANA they come out and  fight, but it's not right to say they are permanently Taliban, it's just  they engage in hostilities in certain circumstances. Really, when you  dealing with a civil war, everyone who is killed is in fact a civilian.  The civilians are killed, including the men of the family who decide to  take one side or the other.  
Is there anything in there that can threaten national security?
We  have to be extremely careful of this term that has been abused over the  years - national security is something that is about the security of  the nation. There is nothing in this material that threatens US  security. I would go so far as to say there is no information that can  currently threaten the security of the US as an entire nation. If you're  talking about individuals - soldiers, a company - it's a different  story. But we should be careful when we use the term. 
So what are the limits of Wikileaks?
This is enormous, but more could come in.We go through the harm minimisation process.
CIA reports?
Yes. As long as we go through the harm minimisation process.
Locations of weapons?
 Absolutely.
Nuclear launch codes?
Well, we would have to go through a harm minimisation process. 
Well, that would be quite a big harm. Well,  after they've been changed - the launch codes - then we could publish  it. That would reveal that the process of securing these things are a  big problem and as we all should know nuclear war, while quite distant,  is still technically possible. 
Can we assume that the Chinese, Iranians, Soviets have got this information?
From  what my intelligence sources tell me we can assume the Russians and  Chinese have this. This is only secret information, there's no top  secret information. Many soldiers can access this material.  But not download it all?Well, if they're smart they can download it all.    

Iraq War Logs, 2004-2009

Wikileaks 


Release date

October 22, 2010
Summary
22nd October 2010 5:00 PM EST WikiLeaks released the largest classified military leak in history. The 391,832 reports ('The Iraq War Logs'), document the war and occupation in Iraq, from 1st January 2004 to 31st December 2009 (except for the months of May 2004 and March 2009) as told by soldiers in the United States Army. Each is a 'SIGACT' or Significant Action in the war. They detail events as seen and heard by the US military troops on the ground in Iraq and are the first real glimpse into the secret history of the war that the United States government has been privy to throughout.
The reports detail 109,032 deaths in Iraq, comprised of 66,081 'civilians'; 23,984 'enemy' (those labeled as insurgents); 15,196 'host nation' (Iraqi government forces) and 3,771 'friendly' (coalition forces). The majority of the deaths (66,000, over 60%) of these are civilian deaths.That is 31 civilians dying every day during the six year period. For comparison, the 'Afghan War Diaries', previously released by WikiLeaks, covering the same period, detail the deaths of some 20,000 people. Iraq during the same period, was five times as lethal with equivalent population size. (Wikileaks)

Flood Disaster in Pakistan

THESE PEOPLE NEED OUR PRAYERS AND HELP.
































ALL THE GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD

EVERY HAND SHAKER IS NOT FRIEND


Gold is precious metal.It has many properties and one of them is that it glitters.Gold has a permanent value.It is useful at all times and under ant conditions.Other metals and things may have the sane glitter but not the same value.It is never wise to judge anything by its external appearance.It is also unwise to consider two things equal because they are similar in appearance.We should judge the things for their inner value.Gold shines brightly but so does brass;and what looks like gold may be of little worth.Gold is Gold even when it loses its luster .Gilted metal ,however lustrous it may be ,cannot be so precious as gold.
Life is full of shares. The world is full of shows and delusive appearances.Vice frequently puts on the garb of virtue.The foolish and shallow often pass for the wise ,by keeping up appearances.A villain who puts on the look of honesty and piety is very often taken for a saint.Hypocrisy puts on an air of honesty and truth.A cheat always approaches his victims as a friend.Markets are flooded with cheep copies of real brand of things.Truly it has said by SHAKESPEARE ,"One may smile and smile,and be a villain." Longfellow supports the idea when he says:"And things are not what they seem." We should be on our guard against the wolve wandering in sheep's skin.

PAK VS SA Highlights|Pakistan vs South Africa


Watch Live Score ball by ball Watch Live Scorecard Out of his 22 fifties in ODI, Misbah-ul-Haq scored 17 in the matches won by Pakistan: Misbah-ul-Haq is the hrst Pakistan‘s captain to win a man-of-match award in ODIS in South Africa: Misbah is the 2nd highest runs scorer in the series so far with 203 runs, only AB de Villiers has scored more runs than him: Cricket South Africa says that all tickets have been sold for Sunday's decider ODI between Pakistan and South Africa: Watch Live Streaming Pakistan vs South Africa 5th ODI cricket match,Watch Pak vs RSA 5th ODI Online Streaming

POVERTY AS AN EVIL




Oh! Life










It is the fashion nowadays to bewail poverty as an evil; and pity the young man who is not born with a silver spoon in this mouth; but I agree to president Garefield's doctrine that the richest heritage , a young man can be born to is poverty.I say what it is that class from whom the good and the great will spring.It is not from the sons of the millionaires or the nobles that the world receives, its teachers , martyrs its inventors , its statesmen , its poets or even its men of affairs.It is from the cottages of the poor that all these spring.





We can hardly read one among the few immortal names who were not born to die,who have rendered exceptional service to our race , who had not the advantage of being cradled , nursed and brought up in the stimulating school of poverty.











People talk about poverty as a great evil , and it seems to be a common belief that if people had plenty of money , they would be happy and useful and get more out of life .But the real fact is that there is more real satisfaction and contentment in  the humble cottages of the poor than in palaces of the rich. And it is for this reason that from the ranks of the poor so many strong , eminent ,self-reliant men have always spring.If you read the list of the immortals who were not born to die , you will find that more of them have been poor.



Wikileaks

1. Introduction to WikiLeaks

"Could become as important a journalistic tool as the Freedom of Information Act." - Time Magazine

1.1 About WikiLeaks

WikiLeaks is a not-for-profit media organisation. Our goal is to bring important news and information to the public. We provide an innovative, secure and anonymous way for sources to leak information to our journalists (our electronic drop box). One of our most important activities is to publish original source material alongside our news stories so readers and historians alike can see evidence of the truth. We are a young organisation that has grown very quickly, relying on a network of dedicated volunteers around the globe. Since 2007, when the organisation was officially launched, WikiLeaks has worked to report on and publish important information. We also develop and adapt technologies to support these activities.
WikiLeaks has sustained and triumphed against legal and political attacks designed to silence our publishing organisation, our journalists and our anonymous sources. The broader principles on which our work is based are the defence of freedom of speech and media publishing, the improvement of our common historical record and the support of the rights of all people to create new history. We derive these principles from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In particular, Article 19 inspires the work of our journalists and other volunteers. It states that everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers. We agree, and we seek to uphold this and the other Articles of the Declaration.

1.2 How WikiLeaks works

WikiLeaks has combined high-end security technologies with journalism and ethical principles. Like other media outlets conducting investigative journalism, we accept (but do not solicit) anonymous sources of information. Unlike other outlets, we provide a high security anonymous drop box fortified by cutting-edge cryptographic information technologies. This provides maximum protection to our sources. We are fearless in our efforts to get the unvarnished truth out to the public. When information comes in, our journalists analyse the material, verify it and write a news piece about it describing its significance to society. We then publish both the news story and the original material in order to enable readers to analyse the story in the context of the original source material themselves. Our news stories are in the comfortable presentation style of Wikipedia, although the two organisations are not otherwise related. Unlike Wikipedia, random readers can not edit our source documents.
As the media organisation has grown and developed, WikiLeaks been developing and improving a harm minimisation procedure. We do not censor our news, but from time to time we may remove or significantly delay the publication of some identifying details from original documents to protect life and limb of innocent people.
We accept leaked material in person and via postal drops as alternative methods, although we recommend the anonymous electronic drop box as the preferred method of submitting any material. We do not ask for material, but we make sure that if material is going to be submitted it is done securely and that the source is well protected. Because we receive so much information, and we have limited resources, it may take time to review a source's submission.
We also have a network of talented lawyers around the globe who are personally committed to the principles that WikiLeaks is based on, and who defend our media organisation.

1.3 Why the media (and particularly Wiki leaks) is important

Publishing improves transparency, and this transparency creates a better society for all people. Better scrutiny leads to reduced corruption and stronger democracies in all society's institutions, including government, corporations and other organisations. A healthy, vibrant and inquisitive journalistic media plays a vital role in achieving these goals. We are part of that media.
Scrutiny requires information. Historically, information has been costly in terms of human life, human rights and economics. As a result of technical advances particularly the internet and cryptography - the risks of conveying important information can be lowered. In its landmark ruling on the Pentagon Papers, the US Supreme Court ruled that "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government." We agree.
We believe that it is not only the people of one country that keep their own government honest, but also the people of other countries who are watching that government through the media.
In the years leading up to the founding of WikiLeaks, we observed the world's publishing media becoming less independent and far less willing to ask the hard questions of government, corporations and other institutions. We believed this needed to change.
WikiLeaks has provided a new model of journalism. Because we are not motivated by making a profit, we work cooperatively with other publishing and media organisations around the globe, instead of following the traditional model of competing with other media. We don't hoard our information; we make the original documents available with our news stories. Readers can verify the truth of what we have reported themselves. Like a wire service, WikiLeaks reports stories that are often picked up by other media outlets. We encourage this. We believe the world's media should work together as much as possible to bring stories to a broad international readership.

1.4 How WikiLeaks verifies its news stories

We assess all news stories and test their veracity. We send a submitted document through a very detailed examination a procedure. Is it real? What elements prove it is real? Who would have the motive to fake such a document and why? We use traditional investigative journalism techniques as well as more modern rtechnology-based methods. Typically we will do a forensic analysis of the document, determine the cost of forgery, means, motive, opportunity, the claims of the apparent authoring organisation, and answer a set of other detailed questions about the document. We may also seek external verification of the document For example, for our release of the Collateral Murder video, we sent a team of journalists to Iraq to interview the victims and observers of the helicopter attack. The team obtained copies of hospital records, death certificates, eye witness statements and other corroborating evidence supporting the truth of the story. Our verification process does not mean we will never make a mistake, but so far our method has meant that WikiLeaks has correctly identified the veracity of every document it has published.
Publishing the original source material behind each of our stories is the way in which we show the public that our story is authentic. Readers don't have to take our word for it; they can see for themselves. In this way, we also support the work of other journalism organisations, for they can view and use the original documents freely as well. Other journalists may well see an angle or detail in the document that we were not aware of in the first instance. By making the documents freely available, we hope to expand analysis and comment by all the media. Most of all, we want readers know the truth so they can make up their own minds.

1.5 The people behind WikiLeaks

WikiLeaks is a project of the Sunshine Press. It's probably pretty clear by now that WikiLeaks is not a front for any intelligence agency or government despite a rumour to that effect. This rumour was started early in WikiLeaks' existence, possibly by the intelligence agencies themselves. WikiLeaks is an independent global group of people with a long standing dedication to the idea of a free press and the improved transparency in society that comes from this. The group includes accredited journalists, software programmers, network engineers, mathematicians and others.
To determine the truth of our statements on this, simply look at the evidence. By definition, intelligence agencies want to hoard information. By contrast, WikiLeaks has shown that it wants to do just the opposite. Our track record shows we go to great lengths to bring the truth to the world without fear or favour.
The great American president Thomas Jefferson once observed that the price of freedom is eternal vigilance. We believe the journalistic media plays a key role in this vigilance.

1.6 Anonymity for sources

As far as we can ascertain, WikiLeaks has never revealed any of its sources. We can not provide details about the security of our media organisation or its anonymous drop box for sources because to do so would help those who would like to compromise the security of our organisation and its sources. What we can say is that we operate a number of servers across multiple international jurisdictions and we we do not keep logs. Hence these logs can not be seized. Anonymization occurs early in the WikiLeaks network, long before information passes to our web servers. Without specialized global internet traffic analysis, multiple parts of our organisation must conspire with each other to strip submitters of their anonymity.
However, we also provide instructions on how to submit material to us, via net cafes, wireless hot spots and even the post so that even if WikiLeaks is infiltrated by an external agency, sources can still not be traced. Because sources who are of substantial political or intelligence interest may have their computers bugged or their homes fitted with hidden video cameras, we suggest that if sources are going to send WikiLeaks something very sensitive, they do so away from the home and work.
A number of governments block access to any address with WikiLeaks in the name. There are ways around this. WikiLeaks has many cover domains, such as https://destiny.mooo.com, that don't have the organisation in the name. It is possible to write to us or ask around for other cover domain addresses. Please make sure the cryptographic certificate says wikileaks.org .

2. WikiLeaks' journalism record

2.1 Prizes and background

WikiLeaks is the winner of:

  • the 2008 Economist Index on Censorship Freedom of Expression award

  • the 2009 Amnesty International human rights reporting award (New Media)

WikiLeaks has a history breaking major stories in major media outlets and robustly protecting sources and press freedoms. We have never revealed a source. We do not censor material. Since formation in 2007, WikiLeaks has been victorious over every legal (and illegal) attack, including those from the Pentagon, the Chinese Public Security Bureau, the Former president of Kenya, the Premier of Bermuda, Scientology, the Catholic & Mormon Church, the largest Swiss private bank, and Russian companies. WikiLeaks has released more classified intelligence documents than the rest of the world press combined.

2.2 Some of the stories we have broken

  • War, killings, torture and detention

  • Government, trade and corporate transparency

  • Suppression of free speech and a free press

  • Diplomacy, spying and (counter-)intelligence

  • Ecology, climate, nature and sciences

  • Corruption, finance, taxes, trading

  • Censorship technology and internet filtering

  • Cults and other religious organizations

  • Abuse, violence, violation

War, killings, torture and detention

  • Changes in Guantanamo Bay SOP manual (2003-2004) - Guantanamo Bay's main operations manuals

  • Of Orwell, Wikipedia and Guantanamo Bay - In where we track down and expose Guantanamo Bay's propaganda team

  • Fallujah jail challenges US - Classified U.S. report into appalling prison conditions in Fallujah

  • U.S lost Fallujah's info war - Classified U.S. intelligence report on the battle of Fallujah, Iraq

  • US Military Equipment in Iraq (2007) - Entire unit by unit equipment list of the U.S army in Iraq

  • Dili investigator called to Canberra as evidence of execution mounts - the Feb 2008 killing of East Timor rebel leader Reinado

  • Como entrenar a escuadrones de la muerte y aplastar revoluciones de El Salvador a Iraq - The U.S. Special Forces manual on how to prop up unpopular government with paramilitaries

Government, trade and corporate transparency

  • Change you can download: a billion in secret Congressional reports - Publication of more than 6500 Congressional Research Reports, worth more than a billion dollars of US tax-funded research, long sought after by NGOs, academics and researchers

  • ACTA trade agreement negotiation lacks transparency - The secret ACTA trade agreement draft, followed by dozens of other publications, presenting the initial leak for the whole ACTA debate happening today

  • Toll Collect Vertraege, 2002 - Publication of around 10.000 pages of a secret contract between the German federal government and the Toll Collect consortium, a private operator group for heavy vehicle tolling system

  • Leaked documents suggest European CAP reform just a whitewash - European farm reform exposed

  • Stasi still in charge of Stasi files - Suppressed 2007 investigation into infiltration of former Stasi into the Stasi files commission

  • IGES Schlussbericht Private Krankenversicherung, 25 Jan 2010 - Hidden report on the economics of the German private health insurance system and its rentability

Suppression of free speech and a free press

  • The Independent: Toxic Shame: Thousands injured in African city, 17 Sep 2009 - Publication of an article originally published in UK newspaper The Independent, but censored from the Independent's website. WikiLeaks has saved dozens of articles, radio and tv recordings from disappearing after having been censored from BBC, Guardian, and other major news organisations archives.

  • Secret gag on UK Times preventing publication of Minton report into toxic waste dumping, 16 Sep 2009 - Publication of variations of a so-called super-injunction, one of many gag-orders published by WikiLeaks to expose successful attempts to suppress the free press via repressive legal attacks

  • Media suppression order over Turks and Caicos Islands Commission of Inquiry corruption report, 20 Jul 2009 - Exposure of a press gagging order from the Turks and Caicos Islands, related to WikiLeaks exposure of the Commission of Inquiry corruption report

  • Bermuda's Premier Brown and the BCC bankdraft - Brown went to the Privy council London to censor the press in Bermuda

  • How German intelligence infiltrated Focus magazine - Illegal spying on German journalists

Diplomacy, spying and (counter-)intelligence

  • U.S. Intelligence planned to destroy WikiLeaks, 18 Mar 2008 - Classified (SECRET/NOFORN) 32 page U.S. counterintelligence investigation into WikiLeaks. Has been in the worldwide news.

  • CIA report into shoring up Afghan war support in Western Europe, 11 Mar 2010 - This classified CIA analysis from March, outlines possible PR-strategies to shore up public support in Germany and France for a continued war in Afghanistan. Received international news coverage in print, radio and TV.

  • U.S. Embassy profiles on Icelandic PM, Foreign Minister, Ambassador - Publication of personal profiles for briefing documents for U.S. officials visiting Iceland. While lowly classified are interesting for subtle tone and internal facts.

  • Cross-border clashes from Iraq O.K. - Classified documents reveal destabalizing U.S. military rules

  • Tehran Warns US Forces against Chasing Suspects into Iran - Iran warns the United States over classified document on WikiLeaks

  • Inside Somalia and the Union of Islamic Courts - Vital strategy documents in the Somali war and a play for Chinese support

Ecology, climate, nature and sciences

  • Draft Copenhagen climate change agreement, 8 Dec 2009 - Confidential draft "circle of commitment" (rich-country) Copenhagen climate change agreement

  • Draft Copenhagen Accord Dec 18, 2009 - Three page draft Copehagen "accord", from around Friday 7pm, Dec 18, 2009; includes pen-markings

  • Climatic Research Unit emails, data, models, 1996-2009 - Over 60MB of emails, documents, code and models from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, written between 1996 and 2009 that lead to a worldwide debate

  • The Monju nuclear reactor leak - Three suppressed videos from Japan's fast breeder reactor Monju revealing the true extent of the 1995 sodium coolant disaster

Corruption, finance, taxes, trading

  • The looting of Kenya under President Moi - $3,000,000,000 presidential corruption exposed; swung the Dec 2007 Kenyan election, long document, be patient

  • Gusmao's $15m rice deal alarms UN - Rice deal corruption in East Timor

  • How election violence was financed - the embargoed Kenyan Human Rights Commission report into the Jan 2008 killings of over 1,300 Kenyans

  • Financial collapse: Confidential exposure analysis of 205 companies each owing above EUR45M to Icelandic bank Kaupthing, 26 Sep 2008 - Publication of a confidential report that has lead to hundreds of newspaper articles worldwide

  • Barclays Bank gags Guardian over leaked memos detailing offshore tax scam, 16 Mar 2009 - Publication of censored documents revealing a number of elaborate international tax avoidance schemes by the SCM (Structured Capital Markets) division of Barclays

  • Bank Julius Baer: Grand Larceny via Grand Cayman - How the largest private Swiss bank avoids paying tax to the Swiss government

  • Der Fall Moonstone Trust - Cayman Islands Swiss bank trust exposed

  • Over 40 billion euro in 28167 claims made against the Kaupthing Bank, 23 Jan 2010 - List of Kaupthing claimants after Icelandic banking crash

  • Northern Rock vs. WikiLeaks - Northern Rock Bank UK failed legal injunctions over the ¡Ì24,000,000,000 collapse

  • Whistleblower exposes insider trading program at JP Morgan - Legal insider trading in three easy steps, brought to you by JP Morgan and the SEC

Censorship technology and internet filtering

  • Eutelsat suppresses independent Chinese-language TV station NTDTV to satisfy Beijing - French sat provider Eutelsat covertly removed an anti-communist TV channel to satisfy Beijing

  • Internet Censorship in Thailand - The secret internet censorship lists of Thailand's military junta

Cults and other religious organizations

  • Church of Scientology's 'Operating Thetan' documents leaked online - Scientology's secret, and highly litigated bibles

  • Censored Legion de Cristo and Regnum Cristi document collection - Censored internal documents from the Catholic sect Legion de Cristo (Legion of Christ)

  • US Department of Labor investigation into Landmark Education, 2006 - 2006 investigative report by the U.S. Department of Labor on Landmark Education

Abuse, violence, violation

  • Report on Shriners raises question of wrongdoing - corruption exposed at 22 U.S. and Canadian children's hospitals.

  • Claims of molestation resurface for US judo official

  • Texas Catholic hospitals did not follow Catholic ethics, report claims - Catholic hospitals violated catholic ethics

3. Short essays on how a more inquiring media can make a difference in the world

3.1 The Malaria Case Study: the antidote is good governance born from a strong media

Malaria is a case study in why good governance not just good science is the solution to so much human suffering. This year, the mosquito borne disease will kill over one million people. More than 80% of these will be children. Great Britain used to have malaria. In North America, malaria was epidemic and there are still a handful of infections each year. In Africa malaria kills over 100 people per hour. In Russia, amidst the corruption of the 1990s, malaria re-established itself. What is the difference between these cases?
Why does Malaria kill so many people in one place but barely take hold in another? Why has malaria been allowed to gain a foothold in places like Russia where it was previously eradicated? We know how to prevent malaria epidemics. The science is universal. The difference is good governance.
Put another way, unresponsive or corrupt government, through malaria alone, causes a children's "9/11" every day. [1]
It is only when the people know the true plans and behaviour of their governments that they can meaningfully choose to support or reject them. Historically, the most resilient forms of open government are those where publication and revelation are protected. Where that protection does not exist, it is our mission to provide it through an energetic and watchful media.
In Kenya, malaria was estimated to cause 20% of all deaths in children under five. Before the Dec 2007 national elections, WikiLeaks exposed $3 billion of Kenyan corruption, which swung the vote by 10%. This led to changes in the constitution and the establishment of a more open government. It is too soon to know if it will contribute to a change in the human cost of malaria in Kenya but in the long term we believe it may. It is one of many reforms catalyzed by WikiLeaks unvarnished reporting.3.2 The importance of principled leaking to journalism, good government and a healthy society
Principled leaking has changed the course of history for the better. It can alter the course of history in the present, and it can lead us to a better future.
Consider Daniel Ellsberg, working within the US government during the Vietnam War. He comes into contact with the Pentagon Papers, a meticulously kept record of military and strategic planning throughout the war. Those papers reveal the depths to which the US government has sunk in deceiving the American people about the war. Yet the public and the media know nothing of this urgent and shocking information. Indeed, secrecy laws are being used to keep the public ignorant of gross dishonesty practised by their own government. In spite of those secrecy laws and at great personal risk, Ellsberg manages to disseminate the Pentagon papers to journalists and to the world. Despite criminal charges against Ellsberg, eventually dropped, the release of the Pentagon Papers shocks the world, exposes the government lying and helps to shorten the war and save thousands of both American and Vietnamese lives.
The power of principled leaking to call governments, corporations and institutions to account is amply demonstrated through recent history. The public scrutiny of otherwise unaccountable and secretive institutions forces them to consider the ethical implications of their actions. Which official will chance a secret, corrupt transaction when the public is likely to find out? What repressive plan will be carried out when it is revealed to the citizenry, not just of its own country, but the world? When the risks of embarrassment and discovery increase, the tables are turned against conspiracy, corruption, exploitation and oppression. Open government answers injustice rather than causing it. Open government exposes and undoes corruption. Open governance is the most effective method of promoting good governance.
Today, with authoritarian governments in power in much of the world, increasing authoritarian tendencies in democratic governments, and increasing amounts of power vested in unaccountable corporations, the need for openness and transparency is greater than ever. WikiLeaks interest is the revelation of the truth. Unlike the covert activities of state intelligence agencies, as a media publisher WikiLeaks relies upon the power of overt fact to enable and empower citizens to bring feared and corrupt governments and corporations to justice.
With its anonymous drop box, WikiLeaks provides an avenue for every government official, every bureaucrat, and every corporate worker, who becomes privy to damning information that their institution wants to hide but the public needs to know. What conscience cannot contain, and institutional secrecy unjustly conceals, WikiLeaks can broadcast to the world. It is telling that a number of government agencies in different countries (and indeed some entire countries) have tried to ban access to WikiLeaks. This is of course a silly response, akin to the ostrich burying its head in the sand. A far better response would be to behave in more ethical ways.
Authoritarian governments, oppressive institutions and corrupt corporations should be subject to the pressure, not merely of international diplomacy, freedom of information laws or even periodic elections, but of something far stronger - the consciences of the people within them.

3.3 Should the press really be free?

In its landmark ruling on the Pentagon Papers, the US Supreme Court ruled that "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government." We agree.
The ruling stated that "paramount among the responsibilities of a free press is the duty to prevent any part of the government from deceiving the people and sending them off to distant lands to die of foreign fevers and foreign shot and shell."
It is easy to perceive the connection between publication and the complaints people make about publication. But this generates a perception bias, because it overlooks the vastness of the invisible. It overlooks the unintended consequences of failing to publish and it overlooks all those who are emancipated by a climate of free speech. Such a climate is a motivating force for governments and corporations to act justly. If acting in a just manner is easier than acting in an unjust manner, most actions will be just.
Sufficient principled leaking in tandem with fearless reporting will bring down administrations that rely on concealing reality from their own citizens.
It is increasingly obvious that corporate fraud must be effectively addressed. In the US, employees account for most revelations of fraud, followed by industry regulators, media, auditors and, finally, the SEC. Whistleblowers account for around half of all exposures of fraud.
Corporate corruption comes in many forms. The number of employees and turnover of some corporations exceeds the population and GDP of some nation states. When comparing countries, after observations of population size and GDP, it is usual to compare the system of government, the major power groupings and the civic freedoms available to their populations. Such comparisons can also be illuminating in the case of corporations.
Considering the largest corporations as analogous to a nation state reveals the following properties:
  1. The right to vote does not exist except for share holders (analogous to land owners) and even there voting power is in proportion to ownership.

  2. All power issues from a central committee.

  3. There is no balancing division of power. There is no fourth estate. There are no juries and innocence is not presumed.

  4. Failure to submit to any order may result in instant exile.

  5. There is no freedom of speech.

  6. There is no right of association. Even romance between men and women is often forbidden without approval.

  7. The economy is centrally planned.

  8. There is pervasive surveillance of movement and electronic communication.

  9. The society is heavily regulated, to the degree many employees are told when, where and how many times a day they can go to the toilet.

  10. There is little transparency and something like the Freedom of Information Act is unimaginable.

  11. Internal opposition groups, such as unions, are blackbanned, surveilled and/or marginalized whenever and wherever possible.

While having a GDP and population comparable to Belgium, Denmark or New Zealand, many of these multi-national corporations have nothing like their quality of civic freedoms and protections. This is even more striking when the regional civic laws the company operates under are weak (such as in West Papua, many African states or even South Korea); there, the character of these corporate tyrannies is unregulated by their civilizing surroundings.
Through governmental corruption, political influence, or manipulation of the judicial system, abusive corporations are able to gain control over the defining element of government the sole right to deploy coercive force.
Just like a country, a corrupt or unethical corporation is a menace to all inside and outside it. Corporations will behave more ethically if the world is watching closely. WikiLeaks has exposed unethical plans and behaviour in corporations and this as resulted in recompense or other forms of justice forms of justice for victims.

3.4 Could oppressive regimes potentially come to face legal consequences as a result of evidence posted on WikiLeaks?

The laws and immunities that are applied in national and international courts, committees and other legal institutions vary, and we can't comment on them in particular. The probative value of documents posted on WikiLeaks in a court of law is a question for courts to decide.
While a secure chain of custody cannot be established for anonymous leaks, these leaks can lead to successful court cases. In many cases, it is easier for journalists or investigators to confirm the existence of a known document through official channels (such as an FOI law or legal discovery) than it is to find this information when starting from nothing. Having the title, author or relevant page numbers of an important document can accelerate an investigation, even if the content itself has not been confirmed. In this way, even unverified information is an enabling jump-off point for media, civil society or official investigations. Principled leaking has been shown to contribute to bringing justice to victims via the court system.