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Monday, December 12, 2011

Blinded By Hatred

I wrote in the past that it seemed amazing that the Wikileaks people thought that their release of our diplomatic messages would be a damning indictment of our foreign policy. I seriously pondered whether this was a CIA operation, but concluded the simpler answer was far more likely--the WikiLeaks people hated us so much that they really believed they had released damaging information.

But they really did do us a favor:

In the end, the Manning leak was not as disastrous as first thought. The leaked documents were meant (according to the Wikileaks leader) to embarrass the United States and expose American hypocrisy and underhanded operations, but the result was quite the opposite. The U.S. was shown trying to do what it said, publically, that it was trying to do. But many other nations were shown to be quite different in their private conversations than in their public ones. Some of these leaders now claim that they were misquoted, or that Wikileaks documents were a fabrication. It was initially believed that the released documents would make foreign officials more reluctant about speaking frankly with American officials. Didn't happen. Those conversations take place mainly because everyone wants something from the United States, and unless you establish a relationship with American diplomats or officials, nothing will happen. Moreover, many foreign officials found the revelations useful as the leaks got out into the open things (like Arab relationships with Iran and Israel) that could not be discussed openly at home. For the most part, Wikileaks confirmed what was already known, something the Wikileaks crew assumed could not be true.

Grant me that this is funny. I'm still up in the air about whether Manning should get a medal or be tried for treason.