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Clinton quips: You should hear what they say about us

White House slams 'criminals' behind WikiLeaks
Washington (AFP) Nov 29, 2010 - The White House on Monday said WikiLeaks and others behind the release of a flood of confidential diplomatic memos were "criminals" and that President Barack Obama was decidedly "not pleased." Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said the people who released of some 250,000 classified State Department memos were "criminals, first and foremost" who had committed a "serious" offense. "This is a serious violation of the law, a serious threat to individuals that both carry out and assist in our foreign policy," he told reporters, adding that it would not alter global counter-terrorism operations. Gibbs said that Obama was decidedly "not pleased" by the release, which details previously unknown diplomatic episodes from the world's hot spots and includes scores of candid remarks about various world leaders.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 29, 2010
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Monday sought to downplay the gravity of a massive leak of secret US cables revealing candid assessments of foreign leaders -- by joking that their opinions of US officials were worse.

"I can tell you that in my conversations, at least one of my counterparts said to me, 'Well don't worry about it, you should see what we say about you,'" Clinton told reporters.

Clinton acknowledged talking with several top diplomats at the weekend in what could be seen as damage control in the wake of the publication of some quarter million US documents by whistle-blower website WikiLeaks.

"This is well understood in the diplomatic community as part of the give and take and I would hope that we will be able to move beyond this and back to the business of working together on behalf of our common goals."

Her joke was the only moment of levity in comments to reporters at the State Department in which said the United States "deeply regrets" the release of the confidential documents, and that such action amounted to an "attack" on the international community.

Washington was left red-faced by some of the embarrassingly frank assessments in the leaked documents.

One described Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi as "feckless, vain, and ineffective as a modern European leader," while another said Germany's Angela Merkel was "risk averse and rarely creative."

The US embassy in Russia referred to Vladimir Putin as an "alpha dog" who made all the decisions in the Russian president's place. It vividly added that President Dmitry Medvedev -- who one dispatch said often looked indecisive and pale -- simply "plays Robin to Putin's Batman."

And one of the documents released by WikiLeaks said veteran Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi almost never travels without his "voluptuous blond" Ukrainian nurse.

earlier related report
Clinton accuses WikiLeaks of 'attack' on the world
Washington (AFP) Nov 29, 2010 - Top US diplomat Hillary Clinton on Monday accused WikiLeaks of an "attack" on the world, as key American allies were left red-faced by embarrassing revelations in a vast trove of leaked memos.

In a lengthy statement, the US secretary of state was apologetic to US allies as she told reporters she "deeply regrets" the release of the more than 250,000 diplomatic cables, all apparently from the State Department.

"This disclosure is not just an attack on America's foreign policy interests. It is an attack on the international community," Clinton said, following talks in Washington with Turkey's foreign minister.

"I want you to know that we are taking aggressive steps to hold responsible those who stole this information," as well as taking steps to prevent future disclosures, she added.

The flood of leaked US diplomatic cables revealed secret details and indiscreet asides on some of the world's most tense international crises.

Officials were quick to criticize the release of the documents -- most of which date from between 2007 and February 2010 -- and to stress the leaks would not harm relations.

The cables were given to journalists from five Western publications several weeks ago and are being released on the Internet in stages.

Highlights already include a call by Saudi King Abdullah for the US to "cut off the head" of the Iranian snake over its nuclear program and leaked memos about a Chinese government bid to hack into Google.

WikiLeaks creator Julian Assange described the mass of documentation as a "diplomatic history of the United States" covering "every major issue."

Despite a cyber attack claimed by a private computer hacker that took down its main website Sunday, WikiLeaks started publishing 251,287 cables -- 15,652 of which are classified "secret" -- on http://cablegate.wikileaks.org.

US officials had raced to contain the diplomatic fallout by warning more than a dozen governments of the impending leaks, but Washington refused to negotiate with WikiLeaks, saying it had obtained the cables illegally.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose policies are the subject of many of the memos, dismissed them as "worthless" and "mischief" which would not affect Tehran's relations with its Arab neighbors.

Afghanistan insisted its relations with the US would not be affected by cables portraying President Hamid Karzai as a paranoid conspiracy theorist and his brother as a corrupt drugs baron.

"We don't see anything substantive in the document that will strain the relationship," Karzai's spokesman Waheed Omer told reporters, adding: "We'll wait and see what else comes out before making further comment."

Russia likewise tried to play down US diplomats' reported assessment of the country as "a virtual mafia state" that is ruled by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and not President Dmitry Medvedev.

"There is nothing new or deserving a comment," Kremlin spokeswoman Yulia Timakov was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.

An unidentified Kremlin official also downplayed the leaks, telling a local paper that "our own diplomats are sometimes just as open in their own private messages to each other."

Britain, which has repeatedly condemned the leaks, said it would continue to work closely with Washington despite the upcoming release of unflattering US memos about Prime Minister David Cameron.

Israel emerged as a surprising beneficiary, with senior officials saying that the leaks vindicated the Jewish state's position as they exposed widespread Arab concern over Iran's nuclear program.

"I don't think Israel was harmed at all," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

US Attorney General Eric Holder said there was an "ongoing criminal investigation" of the leaks and promised to pursue Assange, an Australian believed to be living in Europe, if he was found to have violated US law.

The US government has also ordered a sweeping review of information security across federal agencies.

The Guardian said all five papers had decided "neither to 'dump' the entire dataset into the public domain, nor to publish names that would endanger innocent individuals."

US officials have not confirmed the source of the leaks, but suspicion has fallen on Bradley Manning, a former army intelligence analyst arrested after the release of a video showing air strikes that killed reporters in Iraq.

WikiLeaks argues that its first two document dumps -- nearly 500,000 US military reports from 2004 to 2009 -- shed light on abuses in Afghanistan and Iraq, and denies any individual has been harmed by its disclosures.



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Kadhafi never without 'voluptuous' nurse: WikiLeaks
Washington (AFP) Nov 28, 2010
Veteran Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi fears flying over water, prefers staying on the ground floor and almost never travels without his trusted Ukrainian nurse, a "voluptuous blond," according to a US document released Sunday by WikiLeaks. Kadhafi's eccentric and unpredictable personality is described with relish in the State Department cable, which was posted on the New York Times website, a ... read more







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