Deprecated (16384): The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 73 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php. [CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311]Code Context
trigger_error($message, E_USER_DEPRECATED);
}
$message = 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 73 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php.' $stackFrame = (int) 1 $trace = [ (int) 0 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ServerRequest.php', 'line' => (int) 2421, 'function' => 'deprecationWarning', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead.' ] ], (int) 1 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 73, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'catslug' ] ], (int) 2 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Controller/Controller.php', 'line' => (int) 610, 'function' => 'printArticle', 'class' => 'App\Controller\ArtileDetailController', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 3 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 120, 'function' => 'invokeAction', 'class' => 'Cake\Controller\Controller', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 4 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 94, 'function' => '_invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {} ] ], (int) 5 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/BaseApplication.php', 'line' => (int) 235, 'function' => 'dispatch', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 6 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\BaseApplication', 'object' => object(App\Application) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 7 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 162, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 8 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 9 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 88, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 10 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 11 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 96, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 12 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 13 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 51, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 14 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Server.php', 'line' => (int) 98, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\MiddlewareQueue) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 15 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/webroot/index.php', 'line' => (int) 39, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Server', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Server) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ] ] $frame = [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 73, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) { trustProxy => false [protected] params => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] data => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] query => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] cookies => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] _environment => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] url => 'interviews/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750/print' [protected] base => '' [protected] webroot => '/' [protected] here => '/interviews/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750/print' [protected] trustedProxies => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] _input => null [protected] _detectors => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _detectorCache => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] stream => object(Zend\Diactoros\PhpInputStream) {} [protected] uri => object(Zend\Diactoros\Uri) {} [protected] session => object(Cake\Http\Session) {} [protected] attributes => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] emulatedAttributes => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] uploadedFiles => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] protocol => null [protected] requestTarget => null [private] deprecatedProperties => [ [maximum depth reached] ] }, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'catslug' ] ]deprecationWarning - CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311 Cake\Http\ServerRequest::offsetGet() - CORE/src/Http/ServerRequest.php, line 2421 App\Controller\ArtileDetailController::printArticle() - APP/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line 73 Cake\Controller\Controller::invokeAction() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 610 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 120 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51 Cake\Http\Server::run() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 98
Deprecated (16384): The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 74 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php. [CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311]Code Context
trigger_error($message, E_USER_DEPRECATED);
}
$message = 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead. - /home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line: 74 You can disable deprecation warnings by setting `Error.errorLevel` to `E_ALL & ~E_USER_DEPRECATED` in your config/app.php.' $stackFrame = (int) 1 $trace = [ (int) 0 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ServerRequest.php', 'line' => (int) 2421, 'function' => 'deprecationWarning', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'The ArrayAccess methods will be removed in 4.0.0.Use getParam(), getData() and getQuery() instead.' ] ], (int) 1 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 74, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'artileslug' ] ], (int) 2 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Controller/Controller.php', 'line' => (int) 610, 'function' => 'printArticle', 'class' => 'App\Controller\ArtileDetailController', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 3 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 120, 'function' => 'invokeAction', 'class' => 'Cake\Controller\Controller', 'object' => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ], (int) 4 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php', 'line' => (int) 94, 'function' => '_invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(App\Controller\ArtileDetailController) {} ] ], (int) 5 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/BaseApplication.php', 'line' => (int) 235, 'function' => 'dispatch', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 6 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\BaseApplication', 'object' => object(App\Application) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 7 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 162, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 8 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 9 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 88, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 10 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 11 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php', 'line' => (int) 96, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 12 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 65, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware', 'object' => object(Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {} ] ], (int) 13 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Runner.php', 'line' => (int) 51, 'function' => '__invoke', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 14 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Http/Server.php', 'line' => (int) 98, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Runner', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Runner) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\Http\MiddlewareQueue) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) {}, (int) 2 => object(Cake\Http\Response) {} ] ], (int) 15 => [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/webroot/index.php', 'line' => (int) 39, 'function' => 'run', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\Server', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\Server) {}, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [] ] ] $frame = [ 'file' => '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php', 'line' => (int) 74, 'function' => 'offsetGet', 'class' => 'Cake\Http\ServerRequest', 'object' => object(Cake\Http\ServerRequest) { trustProxy => false [protected] params => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] data => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] query => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] cookies => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] _environment => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] url => 'interviews/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750/print' [protected] base => '' [protected] webroot => '/' [protected] here => '/interviews/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750/print' [protected] trustedProxies => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] _input => null [protected] _detectors => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] _detectorCache => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] stream => object(Zend\Diactoros\PhpInputStream) {} [protected] uri => object(Zend\Diactoros\Uri) {} [protected] session => object(Cake\Http\Session) {} [protected] attributes => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] emulatedAttributes => [ [maximum depth reached] ] [protected] uploadedFiles => [[maximum depth reached]] [protected] protocol => null [protected] requestTarget => null [private] deprecatedProperties => [ [maximum depth reached] ] }, 'type' => '->', 'args' => [ (int) 0 => 'artileslug' ] ]deprecationWarning - CORE/src/Core/functions.php, line 311 Cake\Http\ServerRequest::offsetGet() - CORE/src/Http/ServerRequest.php, line 2421 App\Controller\ArtileDetailController::printArticle() - APP/Controller/ArtileDetailController.php, line 74 Cake\Controller\Controller::invokeAction() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 610 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 120 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51 Cake\Http\Server::run() - CORE/src/Http/Server.php, line 98
Warning (512): Unable to emit headers. Headers sent in file=/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Debugger.php line=853 [CORE/src/Http/ResponseEmitter.php, line 48]Code Contextif (Configure::read('debug')) {
trigger_error($message, E_USER_WARNING);
} else {
$response = object(Cake\Http\Response) { 'status' => (int) 200, 'contentType' => 'text/html', 'headers' => [ 'Content-Type' => [ [maximum depth reached] ] ], 'file' => null, 'fileRange' => [], 'cookies' => object(Cake\Http\Cookie\CookieCollection) {}, 'cacheDirectives' => [], 'body' => '<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <link rel="canonical" href="https://im4change.in/<pre class="cake-error"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6800110a3178c-trace').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6800110a3178c-trace').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none');"><b>Notice</b> (8)</a>: Undefined variable: urlPrefix [<b>APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp</b>, line <b>8</b>]<div id="cakeErr6800110a3178c-trace" class="cake-stack-trace" style="display: none;"><a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6800110a3178c-code').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6800110a3178c-code').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Code</a> <a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="document.getElementById('cakeErr6800110a3178c-context').style.display = (document.getElementById('cakeErr6800110a3178c-context').style.display == 'none' ? '' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr6800110a3178c-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr6800110a3178c-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 4659, 'title' => 'Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> &nbsp; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332"><em>http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332</em></a> </div>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 14, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 4750, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 4659, 'metaTitle' => 'Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'metaKeywords' => 'Corruption,media', 'metaDesc' => ' WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; His observation perhaps reflected his...', 'disp' => '<div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br />&nbsp;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 4659, 'title' => 'Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> &nbsp; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332"><em>http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332</em></a> </div>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 14, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 4750, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 4659 $metaTitle = 'Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange' $metaKeywords = 'Corruption,media' $metaDesc = ' WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; His observation perhaps reflected his...' $disp = '<div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br />&nbsp;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>interviews/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win." 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The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be "taken out" by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be "hunted down like Osama bin Laden", a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a "transnational threat" and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: "You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!" Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect "US interests".</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government". The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /> </div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $maxBufferLength = (int) 8192 $file = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/vendor/cakephp/cakephp/src/Error/Debugger.php' $line = (int) 853 $message = 'Unable to emit headers. 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'' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr6800110a3178c-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr6800110a3178c-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 4659, 'title' => 'Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> &nbsp; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332"><em>http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332</em></a> </div>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 14, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 4750, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 4659, 'metaTitle' => 'Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'metaKeywords' => 'Corruption,media', 'metaDesc' => ' WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; His observation perhaps reflected his...', 'disp' => '<div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br />&nbsp;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 4659, 'title' => 'Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> &nbsp; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332"><em>http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332</em></a> </div>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 14, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 4750, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 4659 $metaTitle = 'Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange' $metaKeywords = 'Corruption,media' $metaDesc = ' WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; His observation perhaps reflected his...' $disp = '<div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br />&nbsp;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>interviews/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win." 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The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be "taken out" by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be "hunted down like Osama bin Laden", a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a "transnational threat" and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: "You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!" Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect "US interests".</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government". The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /> </div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $reasonPhrase = 'OK'header - [internal], line ?? 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'' : 'none')">Context</a><pre id="cakeErr6800110a3178c-code" class="cake-code-dump" style="display: none;"><code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"></span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">head</span><span style="color: #007700">> </span></span></code> <span class="code-highlight"><code><span style="color: #000000"> <link rel="canonical" href="<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">Configure</span><span style="color: #007700">::</span><span style="color: #0000BB">read</span><span style="color: #007700">(</span><span style="color: #DD0000">'SITE_URL'</span><span style="color: #007700">); </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$urlPrefix</span><span style="color: #007700">;</span><span style="color: #0000BB">?><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">category</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">slug</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>/<span style="color: #0000BB"><?php </span><span style="color: #007700">echo </span><span style="color: #0000BB">$article_current</span><span style="color: #007700">-></span><span style="color: #0000BB">seo_url</span><span style="color: #007700">; </span><span style="color: #0000BB">?></span>.html"/> </span></code></span> <code><span style="color: #000000"><span style="color: #0000BB"> </span><span style="color: #007700"><</span><span style="color: #0000BB">meta http</span><span style="color: #007700">-</span><span style="color: #0000BB">equiv</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"Content-Type" </span><span style="color: #0000BB">content</span><span style="color: #007700">=</span><span style="color: #DD0000">"text/html; charset=utf-8"</span><span style="color: #007700">/> </span></span></code></pre><pre id="cakeErr6800110a3178c-context" class="cake-context" style="display: none;">$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 4659, 'title' => 'Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> &nbsp; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332"><em>http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332</em></a> </div>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 14, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 4750, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 4659, 'metaTitle' => 'Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'metaKeywords' => 'Corruption,media', 'metaDesc' => ' WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; His observation perhaps reflected his...', 'disp' => '<div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br />&nbsp;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 4659, 'title' => 'Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> &nbsp; </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332"><em>http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332</em></a> </div>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 14, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 4750, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 4659 $metaTitle = 'Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange' $metaKeywords = 'Corruption,media' $metaDesc = ' WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot; His observation perhaps reflected his...' $disp = '<div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: &quot;In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win.&quot;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be &quot;taken out&quot; by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be &quot;hunted down like Osama bin Laden&quot;, a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a &quot;transnational threat&quot; and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: &quot;You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!&quot; Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect &quot;US interests&quot;.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said &quot;only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government&quot;. The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br />&nbsp;</div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'</pre><pre class="stack-trace">include - APP/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp, line 8 Cake\View\View::_evaluate() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1413 Cake\View\View::_render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 1374 Cake\View\View::renderLayout() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 927 Cake\View\View::render() - CORE/src/View/View.php, line 885 Cake\Controller\Controller::render() - CORE/src/Controller/Controller.php, line 791 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 126 Cake\Http\ActionDispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/src/Http/ActionDispatcher.php, line 94 Cake\Http\BaseApplication::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/BaseApplication.php, line 235 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\RoutingMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/RoutingMiddleware.php, line 162 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Routing\Middleware\AssetMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Routing/Middleware/AssetMiddleware.php, line 88 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Error\Middleware\ErrorHandlerMiddleware::__invoke() - CORE/src/Error/Middleware/ErrorHandlerMiddleware.php, line 96 Cake\Http\Runner::__invoke() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 65 Cake\Http\Runner::run() - CORE/src/Http/Runner.php, line 51</pre></div></pre>interviews/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750.html"/> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"/> <link href="https://im4change.in/css/control.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="all"/> <title>Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange | Im4change.org</title> <meta name="description" content=" WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win." 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The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be "taken out" by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be "hunted down like Osama bin Laden", a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a "transnational threat" and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: "You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!" Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect "US interests".</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government". The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /> </div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div> </font> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> </td> </tr> <tr> <td height="50" style="border-top:1px solid #000; border-bottom:1px solid #000;padding-top:10px;"> <form><input type="button" value=" Print this page " onclick="window.print();return false;"/></form> </td> </tr> </table></body> </html>' } $cookies = [] $values = [ (int) 0 => 'text/html; charset=UTF-8' ] $name = 'Content-Type' $first = true $value = 'text/html; charset=UTF-8'header - [internal], line ?? 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$viewFile = '/home/brlfuser/public_html/src/Template/Layout/printlayout.ctp' $dataForView = [ 'article_current' => object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 4659, 'title' => 'Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win." </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be "taken out" by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be "hunted down like Osama bin Laden", a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a "transnational threat" and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: "You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!" Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect "US interests". </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government". The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332"><em>http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332</em></a> </div>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 14, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 4750, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ [maximum depth reached] ], '[dirty]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[original]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[virtual]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[invalid]' => [[maximum depth reached]], '[repository]' => 'Articles' }, 'articleid' => (int) 4659, 'metaTitle' => 'Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'metaKeywords' => 'Corruption,media', 'metaDesc' => ' WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win." His observation perhaps reflected his...', 'disp' => '<div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win."</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be "taken out" by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be "hunted down like Osama bin Laden", a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a "transnational threat" and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: "You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!" Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect "US interests".</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government". The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /> </div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div>', 'lang' => 'English', 'SITE_URL' => 'https://im4change.in/', 'site_title' => 'im4change', 'adminprix' => 'admin' ] $article_current = object(App\Model\Entity\Article) { 'id' => (int) 4659, 'title' => 'Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange', 'subheading' => '', 'description' => '<div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win." </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be "taken out" by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be "hunted down like Osama bin Laden", a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a "transnational threat" and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: "You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!" Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect "US interests". </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> ► The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government". The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <br /> </div> <div style="text-align: justify"> <em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332"><em>http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332</em></a> </div>', 'credit_writer' => 'The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332', 'article_img' => '', 'article_img_thumb' => '', 'status' => (int) 1, 'show_on_home' => (int) 1, 'lang' => 'EN', 'category_id' => (int) 14, 'tag_keyword' => '', 'seo_url' => 'dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths-by-julian-assange-4750', 'meta_title' => null, 'meta_keywords' => null, 'meta_description' => null, 'noindex' => (int) 0, 'publish_date' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenDate) {}, 'most_visit_section_id' => null, 'article_big_img' => null, 'liveid' => (int) 4750, 'created' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'modified' => object(Cake\I18n\FrozenTime) {}, 'edate' => '', 'tags' => [ (int) 0 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {}, (int) 1 => object(Cake\ORM\Entity) {} ], 'category' => object(App\Model\Entity\Category) {}, '[new]' => false, '[accessible]' => [ '*' => true, 'id' => false ], '[dirty]' => [], '[original]' => [], '[virtual]' => [], '[hasErrors]' => false, '[errors]' => [], '[invalid]' => [], '[repository]' => 'Articles' } $articleid = (int) 4659 $metaTitle = 'Interviews | Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange' $metaKeywords = 'Corruption,media' $metaDesc = ' WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win." His observation perhaps reflected his...' $disp = '<div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win."</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be "taken out" by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be "hunted down like Osama bin Laden", a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a "transnational threat" and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: "You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!" Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it?</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts:</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect "US interests".</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"> The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify">In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government". The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth.</div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /></div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks.</em></div><div style="text-align: justify"><br /> </div><div style="text-align: justify"><em>The Australian, 8 December, 2010, </em><a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332" title="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-shoot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn775xjq-1225967241332">http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh<br />oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7<br />75xjq-1225967241332</a></div>' $lang = 'English' $SITE_URL = 'https://im4change.in/' $site_title = 'im4change' $adminprix = 'admin'
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Don't shoot messenger for revealing uncomfortable truths by Julian Assange |
WIKILEAKS deserves protection, not threats and attacks. IN 1958 a young Rupert Murdoch, then owner and editor of Adelaide's The News, wrote: "In the race between secrecy and truth, it seems inevitable that truth will always win." His observation perhaps reflected his father Keith Murdoch's expose that Australian troops were being needlessly sacrificed by incompetent British commanders on the shores of Gallipoli. The British tried to shut him up but Keith Murdoch would not be silenced and his efforts led to the termination of the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. Nearly a century later, WikiLeaks is also fearlessly publishing facts that need to be made public. I grew up in a Queensland country town where people spoke their minds bluntly. They distrusted big government as something that could be corrupted if not watched carefully. The dark days of corruption in the Queensland government before the Fitzgerald inquiry are testimony to what happens when the politicians gag the media from reporting the truth. These things have stayed with me. WikiLeaks was created around these core values. The idea, conceived in Australia, was to use internet technologies in new ways to report the truth. WikiLeaks coined a new type of journalism: scientific journalism. We work with other media outlets to bring people the news, but also to prove it is true. Scientific journalism allows you to read a news story, then to click online to see the original document it is based on. That way you can judge for yourself: Is the story true? Did the journalist report it accurately? Democratic societies need a strong media and WikiLeaks is part of that media. The media helps keep government honest. WikiLeaks has revealed some hard truths about the Iraq and Afghan wars, and broken stories about corporate corruption. People have said I am anti-war: for the record, I am not. Sometimes nations need to go to war, and there are just wars. But there is nothing more wrong than a government lying to its people about those wars, then asking these same citizens to put their lives and their taxes on the line for those lies. If a war is justified, then tell the truth and the people will decide whether to support it. If you have read any of the Afghan or Iraq war logs, any of the US embassy cables or any of the stories about the things WikiLeaks has reported, consider how important it is for all media to be able to report these things freely. WikiLeaks is not the only publisher of the US embassy cables. Other media outlets, including Britain's The Guardian, The New York Times, El Pais in Spain and Der Spiegel in Germany have published the same redacted cables. Yet it is WikiLeaks, as the co-ordinator of these other groups, that has copped the most vicious attacks and accusations from the US government and its acolytes. I have been accused of treason, even though I am an Australian, not a US, citizen. There have been dozens of serious calls in the US for me to be "taken out" by US special forces. Sarah Palin says I should be "hunted down like Osama bin Laden", a Republican bill sits before the US Senate seeking to have me declared a "transnational threat" and disposed of accordingly. An adviser to the Canadian Prime Minister's office has called on national television for me to be assassinated. An American blogger has called for my 20-year-old son, here in Australia, to be kidnapped and harmed for no other reason than to get at me. And Australians should observe with no pride the disgraceful pandering to these sentiments by Julia Gillard and her government. The powers of the Australian government appear to be fully at the disposal of the US as to whether to cancel my Australian passport, or to spy on or harass WikiLeaks supporters. The Australian Attorney-General is doing everything he can to help a US investigation clearly directed at framing Australian citizens and shipping them to the US. Prime Minister Gillard and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have not had a word of criticism for the other media organisations. That is because The Guardian, The New York Times and Der Spiegel are old and large, while WikiLeaks is as yet young and small. We are the underdogs. The Gillard government is trying to shoot the messenger because it doesn't want the truth revealed, including information about its own diplomatic and political dealings. Has there been any response from the Australian government to the numerous public threats of violence against me and other WikiLeaks personnel? One might have thought an Australian prime minister would be defending her citizens against such things, but there have only been wholly unsubstantiated claims of illegality. The Prime Minister and especially the Attorney-General are meant to carry out their duties with dignity and above the fray. Rest assured, these two mean to save their own skins. They will not. Every time WikiLeaks publishes the truth about abuses committed by US agencies, Australian politicians chant a provably false chorus with the State Department: "You'll risk lives! National security! You'll endanger troops!" Then they say there is nothing of importance in what WikiLeaks publishes. It can't be both. Which is it? It is neither. WikiLeaks has a four-year publishing history. During that time we have changed whole governments, but not a single person, as far as anyone is aware, has been harmed. But the US, with Australian government connivance, has killed thousands in the past few months alone. US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates admitted in a letter to the US congress that no sensitive intelligence sources or methods had been compromised by the Afghan war logs disclosure. The Pentagon stated there was no evidence the WikiLeaks reports had led to anyone being harmed in Afghanistan. NATO in Kabul told CNN it couldn't find a single person who needed protecting. The Australian Department of Defence said the same. No Australian troops or sources have been hurt by anything we have published. But our publications have been far from unimportant. The US diplomatic cables reveal some startling facts: The US asked its diplomats to steal personal human material and information from UN officials and human rights groups, including DNA, fingerprints, iris scans, credit card numbers, internet passwords and ID photos, in violation of international treaties. Presumably Australian UN diplomats may be targeted, too. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia asked the US to attack Iran. Officials in Jordan and Bahrain want Iran's nuclear program stopped by any means available. Britain's Iraq inquiry was fixed to protect "US interests". Sweden is a covert member of NATO and US intelligence sharing is kept from parliament. The US is playing hardball to get other countries to take freed detainees from Guantanamo Bay. Barack Obama agreed to meet the Slovenian President only if Slovenia took a prisoner. Our Pacific neighbour Kiribati was offered millions of dollars to accept detainees. In its landmark ruling in the Pentagon Papers case, the US Supreme Court said "only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government". The swirling storm around WikiLeaks today reinforces the need to defend the right of all media to reveal the truth. Julian Assange is the editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks. The Australian, 8 December, 2010, http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/dont-sh
oot-messenger-for-revealing-uncomfortable-truths/story-fn7 75xjq-1225967241332 |