Europe needs to get real on defence; Britain needs to get real on Europe
13 February 2025
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29 November 2010
3 minute(s) read
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27 May 2026
Posted by Alastair Campbell
Can you take any of this at face value? I cannot. It looks like a grooming job to get us all ready for an inevitable ‘surprise’ attack on Iran. The boxes are all neatly ticked; we learn they have medium range missiles, they have unknown nuclear capabilities (and some within civilian sites), the US have deployed bunker busters to Israel, and even the Arabs are calling for an attack. The rest of the leaks are just fluff, of course.
What I find most disturbing is the tone of reporting that takes at face value anything which is difficult for the US, and which takes with the usual media cynicism anything which might benefit the US. The Guardian editor certainly fits your sanctimonious label
Considering the budgets the USA have for spying, I too would be a little surprised if they did not do a lot of it. Am in Italy at the moment — be interesting to see if the Berlusconi-Putin relationship gets much play here
I have just wasted an hour of my life reading the Guardian. I found little to shock me, let alone which would produce these shock waves apparently reverberating around the world. I too find Mr Assange really creepy. He manages to play victim whilst being agressor
Let us all hope that the leaks include those exchanges in the year or more before the Iraq war. Many questions could be answered: “You have the right to remain silent.”
After passing the Freedom of Information Act, you and your mates have regretted it ever since!
A DA-Notice is an official request to news editors not to publish items on specific subjects for reasons of national security. It is merely a request and it is not legally enforceable.
But they are usually accepted by the media. A DA-Notice reminds newspapers that they should be concerned about national security.
On 25 November 2010 the government issued a DA-Notice (types 1 and 5) in relation to WikiLeaks documents.
The fact that Arab countries… especially ones that aren’t even democracys.. want to attack Iran.. DOES NOT MEAN IT’S RIGHT TO DO SO.. Mr Cambell..
Anway, I though you Mr Cambell was feeling unloved and wanted to blow your own brains out… what happened? Changed your mind?
I agree with your comments.
I believe that if the USA did not want these details “leaked” then there is no way they would have been.
I don’t think there will be too many people who would disagree in principle with Iran’s nuclear capability being taken out. I would be in favour of “cutting the head off the snake” The rest of the world can’t be threatened by these crack-pot regimes. And whilst they the USA are about it they might as well sort out North Korea at the same time. One way or another.
50/50 that either the US or Israel will attack Iran before the end of 2011. Iran has seen that North Korea can not be attacked, thus they might rush for the bomb, they have bought new missiles from North Korea, who is to say that dont have the bomb already!
Nice to hear someone talking about the very fact this was leaked at all–you’re right, it was far too easy!
http://politicalreboot.blogspot.com/2010/12/need-to-know-us-embassy-cables.html
Hi Alastair,
When you say ‘any system which means a country’s entire diplomatic traffic can be put onto a single memory stick is a disaster waiting to happen.’
Can you suggest another system where transparency could be achieved in a more peaceful way? A lot of reports have been focusing on the consequences of wikileaks but not on the very difficult and broadly contested principle of FOI. You raised an interesting point about journalist acting like arbiters, do you think that it is to early to say what the effects of wikileaks realy are?