Wikileaks, Resistance, Genuine Heroes,
and Breaking the Goddamned Rules (I)
by Arthur Silber
The other day, I offered some observations about the Wikileaks story
and the latest release of a huge number of documents. My comments were
focused very narrowly: I wanted to highlight the great heroism of those
who run Wikileaks and are otherwise involved in these continuing leaks
and offer my thanks for their invaluable work, while contrasting their
immense courage with the loathsome, murderous behavior of the rulers of
the American imperial state.
Oh, the emails I've received! Oh,
the posts I've seen! Among other charming critiques, I was informed
that I've proven to be a witless dupe. Don't you see, my detractors
inquired with iron fist delicately wrapped in, well, iron fist, oh,
Arthur, don't you see that this is yet another subterfuge by the
endlessly duplicitous ruling class?
Don't you see how all the talk
about Iran and Pakistan aiding the resistance in Afghanistan only helps
the warmongers in their quest for another chapter (or two, or five) in
the neverending war? Don't you see that the U.S. government has been
incredibly clever in using Wikileaks itself for its latest propaganda
campaign? Oh, oh, oh, Arthur, don't you see? [Added in response
to inquiries and some pushback: later in this extended essay, I'll
explain in detail why I find this theory extremely problematic and
unsatisfactory.]
Although I've had a little fun in presenting
this counterargument (I note, however, that some of the emails I
received had a very similar tone but were regrettably not half as
enjoyable, and considerably ruder as well), I took the point itself
seriously. I was prepared to admit that my critics were right, and that
I had made a bad mistake. So I thought about it. A lot. I also did
further reading.
I realized several things. There are two
perspectives we can utilize in analyzing this latest Wikileaks story, as
well as in analyzing the Wikileaks phenomenon itself. (We could
undoubtedly identify additional perspectives as well; these are the two
that seem to me most relevant and fruitful in this case.) The first,
comparatively superficial perspective concerns the contents of the
Wikileaks documents themselves: the details about civilian deaths and
casualties, operations gone bad, speculations of all kinds, reflecting a
variety of interests and agendas, concerning who's behind the
resistance, and so on.
The second perspective, which inquires more deeply, focuses on the leak itself, entirely apart from the specifics
of what is leaked. This inquiry examines the system in which leaks of
this kind occur. What is the nature of that system? How does it work?
What are the rules upon which the system is based, and upon which the
system insists? How do those who direct the system's operations react
when those rules are broken? Why do they react that way?
As I
reflected on these matters, and as I considered the criticisms of my own
initial comments on this story, I realized that the second perspective
is of much greater significance. And I came to understand a further
point: if you analyze this story (or any similar story) by using only
the first perspective, that is, by focusing solely on the specific
content of the leak, you are very likely to go astray, sometimes very
badly. I finally concluded that this is what happened to some of my
critics.
But it took me quite a while to see that, and the
argument is not a simple one. It is hardly self-explanatory.
(Obviously.) So what follows is not short. For me, the most critical
questions concern the nature and the personal source of resistance to power, what I sometimes refer to as "the power of 'No.'" (See " You're Either with the Resistance -- or with the Murderers" for more on that.) But I need to cover some preliminary matters before I get to that.
Come
along with me on my journey, if you wish. We need to begin with some
of the details I learned about Wikileaks, its founder, Julian Assange,
and Bradley Manning as I read further about these matters.
Concerning Wikileaks and Genuine Heroes
Several statements from Julian Assange are especially noteworthy:
[Wikileaks']
highest-impact leak came this year, with a 2007 video – dubbed
“collateral murder” by Wikileaks – which appears to show a US helicopter
firing on a group in Baghdad, killing two Reuters employees. A US
army intelligence analyst has been charged in connection with the video
leak and Mr Assange has not visited the US since, fearing arrest.
“We
believe that transparency in government activities leads to reduced
corruption, better government and stronger democracies,” Wikileaks says
on its site. Holding governments to account requires information, which
has historically been “costly – in terms of human life and human
rights”, it says. “But with technological advances – the internet, and
cryptography – the risks of conveying important information can be
lowered.”
...
[Wikileaks'] ethos is rooted in hacker
culture; the “wiki” of its name refers to the same open-access
publishing technology used by Wikipedia.
But Wikileaks’ emphasis
on fact-checking, verification and protection of its sources has a
longer journalistic lineage. Its rise to prominence has come as
newspapers’ capacity to invest in investigative journalism has been
impaired by falling circulation and difficulties in making money from
the web.
...
Speaking at the TED conference in Oxford
this month, Mr Assange, 39, described the gathering of hard facts as the
only true form of journalism. “Capable, generous men do not create
victims, they nurture them,” he said of his motivation.
Mr
Assange recently told the Guardian that he lived a nomadic lifestyle,
carrying a computer in one rucksack and his clothes in another. After
keeping a low profile for several years, Mr Assange’s public appearances
have recently become more frequent. He has often criticised
traditional media outlets for distorting the truth in their stories,
telling an audience at London’s City University in July that he hoped
the publication of primary source material online would reduce “lying
opportunities”.
In joining up with the Guardian, the New
York Times and Der Spiegel to release the Afghan war logs, Wikileaks has
sought to combine the impact of front-page news and analytic skills of
specialist reporters with the radical transparency of publishing
thousands of original documents.
“This archive shows the vast
range of small tragedies that are almost never reported by the press but
which account for the overwhelming majority of deaths and injuries,”
Wikileaks wrote on its site as it published the 91,000 documents. Its
servers struggled under the weight of traffic on Monday.
Even as
governments and authorities round the world seek to plug the leaks and
their latest outlet, Mr Assange has said that there are plenty more
controversial documents in the pipeline.
Several points
deserve emphasis. With regard to the particular role he seeks for
Wikileaks and, relatedly, in connection with the mechanics of how that
role can be made to function with astonishing effectiveness, Assange is
nothing less than brilliant. This is a man who understands the system
he's up against, and he knows how to jam the gears of that system.
You'll find this issue explored further in this valuable piece from Jay Rosen. Note these passages, for example:
4.
If you go to the Wikileaks Twitter profile, next to “location” it says:
Everywhere. Which is one of the most striking things about it: the
world’s first stateless news organization. I can’t think of any
prior examples of that. (Dave Winer in the comments: “The blogosphere is
a stateless news organization.”) Wikileaks is organized so that if the
crackdown comes in one country, the servers can be switched on in
another. This is meant to put it beyond the reach of any government or
legal system. That’s what so odd about the White House crying, “They
didn’t even contact us!”
Appealing to national traditions of
fair play in the conduct of news reporting misunderstands what Wikileaks
is about: the release of information without regard for national
interest. In media history up to now, the press is free to report on
what the powerful wish to keep secret because the laws of a given nation
protect it. But Wikileaks is able to report on what the powerful wish
to keep secret because the logic of the Internet permits it. This is
new. Just as the Internet has no terrestrial address or central office,
neither does Wikileaks.
5. And just as government doesn’t
know what to make of Wikileaks (“we’re gonna hunt you down/hey, you
didn’t contact us!”) the traditional press isn’t used to this, either.
As Glenn Thrush noted on Politico.com:
The WikiLeaks report
presented a unique dilemma to the three papers given advance copies of
the 92,000 reports included in the Afghan war logs — the New York Times,
Germany’s Der Speigel and the UK’s Guardian.
The editors
couldn’t verify the source of the reports — as they would have done if
their own staffers had obtained them — and they couldn’t stop WikiLeaks
from posting it, whether they wrote about it or not.
So they were
basically left with proving veracity through official sources and
picking through the pile for the bits that seemed to be the most
truthful. Notice how effective this combination is. The
information is released in two forms: vetted and narrated to gain old
media cred, and released online in full text, Internet-style, which
corrects for any timidity or blind spot the editors at Der Spiegel, The
Times or the Guardian may show.
As I said: brilliant. Jay Rosen has much more, and his commentary is well worth your time.
These
facts about the operations of Wikileaks tell us a great deal about the
kind of man Assange is, and I find all of it profoundly admirable. On a
more personal, even intimate level, we have this kind of comment: "'Capable, generous men do not create victims, they nurture them,' he said of his motivation."
And Assange speaks of "the vast range of small tragedies" that account
for the horrors of U.S. policy overseas. Our culture today is suffused
with cynicism, distancing irony, cheap sarcasm, and many other devices
which insulate us from confronting and acknowledging the reverence we
should feel for the irreplaceable value of a single human life.
Assange's actions and the consistency of his statements about his work
speak in direct opposition to a culture of death of this kind. Most of
us have made ourselves unable or unwilling to see the heroes in our
midst. If you are one of those people, you should ask yourself which
individuals you help with your actions, and which individuals you harm.
And never forget the grave personal risk undertaken by Assange and those who work with him. As noted in the story above: "A
US army intelligence analyst has been charged in connection with the
video leak and Mr Assange has not visited the US since, fearing arrest."
If you were to tell me that you could demonstrate that Assange is
nothing more than an opportunistic seeker after glory, I would not
believe you. I don't believe that mere opportunists run risks of this
particular kind. And in another sense, I wouldn't care even if you
could prove such a contention. Just as I will be demonstrating the
importance of the leaks entirely apart from their specific content,
Assange's repeated actions take on their own significance apart from his
particular motivation. My evaluation of Assange's personal character might alter; my evaluation of the value and immense worth of his actions themselves would not.
Speaking of grave risks brings us to Bradley Manning. I urge you to read this story at Wired.
As the direct result of Manning's (alleged) leaks of videos and
documents to Wikileaks, Manning has been charged with eight violations
of federal criminal law. If he is convicted on all eight charges, he faces up to 52 years in jail. Even now, Manning is under "pretrial confinement."
Bradley Manning is 22 years old.
His life has barely begun. Due to the actions of our endlessly
destructive and murderous Death State, his life may effectively already
be over. Words that are far more damning than "evil" and "monstrous"
are required to identify accurately the nature of the goddamned bastards
who would condemn this young man to such a fate.
The Wired story reveals some of the factors that led Manning to act as he did:
Other
classified leaks [Manning] claimed credit for included an Army document
evaluating Wikileaks as a security threat and a detailed Army
chronology of events in the Iraq war. But the most startling revelation
was a claim that he gave Wikileaks a database of 260,000 classified U.S.
diplomatic cables, which Manning said exposed “almost-criminal political back dealings.” [Wikileaks denies that it has received these 260,000 cables.]
“Hillary
Clinton and several thousand diplomats around the world are going to
have a heart attack when they wake up one morning, and find an entire
repository of classified foreign policy is available, in searchable
format, to the public,” Manning told Lamo in an online chat session.
Manning anticipated watching from the sidelines as his action bared the secret history of U.S. diplomacy around the world.
“Everywhere
there’s a U.S. post, there’s a diplomatic scandal that will be
revealed,” Manning wrote of the cables. “It’s open diplomacy. Worldwide
anarchy in CSV format. It’s Climategate with a global scope, and
breathtaking depth. It’s beautiful, and horrifying.”
...
In
January, while on leave in the United States, Manning visited a close
friend in Boston and confessed he’d gotten his hands on unspecified
sensitive information, and was weighing leaking it, according to the
friend. “He wanted to do the right thing,” 20-year-old Tyler Watkins
told Wired.com. “That was something I think he was struggling with.”
Manning
passed the video to Wikileaks in February, he told Lamo. After April 5
when the video was released and made headlines, Manning contacted
Watkins from Iraq asking him about the reaction in the United States.
“He would message me, ‘Are people talking about it?… Are the media saying anything?’” Watkins said. “That
was one of his major concerns, that once he had done this, was it
really going to make a difference?… He didn’t want to do this just to
cause a stir…. He wanted people held accountable and wanted to see this
didn’t happen again.”
At the age of 22, Bradley Manning
has attained a moral stature most people never reach in an entire
lifetime. He came to understand the unforgivable brutality and horror
of what the U.S. government is doing, and he sought to stop it in any
way he could. He wanted to do the right thing, he "wanted people held accountable," and he wanted to make sure "this didn't happen again."
This
is the man the U.S. government now seeks to destroy. Bradley Manning
is a remarkable hero, but most of us will not acknowledge the heroes who
appear in our lives. The deeply admirable Mike Gogulski is not "most
of us." He has set up a site for donations to Bradley Manning's legal
defense fund, and for support of other kinds.
Please go there right now.
Donate as much as you can, as often as you can. Some of us write
about these issues. Perhaps that's all we can do. Bradley Manning has
put his life on the line to expose the atrocities committed by
his government -- and the U.S. government is therefore determined to cut
him down.
With this background, we can now turn to a more
general consideration of the nature of resistance itself, and to some
especially critical questions. I said this wouldn't be short. I'm just
getting started.
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