Julian Assange - The Unauthorised Biography
Julian Assange - The Unauthorised Biography
Julian Assange - The Unauthorised Biography
1Solitary
2Magnetic Island
3Flight
5Cypherpunk
6The Accused
NIC assigned domain names the .com or .net at the end of an email address for the entire
Internet. NIC also controlled the US militarys own internal defence data network, known as MILNET.
NIC also published the communication protocol standards for the Internet. Called RFCs (Request for
Comments), these technical specifications allowed one computer on the Internet to talk to another . . .
Perhaps most importantly, NIC controlled the reverse look-up service on the Internet. Whenever
someone connects to another site across the Internet, he or she typically types in the site name say,
ariel.unimelb.edu.au at the University of Melbourne. The computer then translates the alphabetical
name into a numerical address the IP address. All the computers on the Internet need this IP address
to relay the packets of data onto the final destination computer. NIC decided how Internet computers
would translate the alphabetical name into an IP address, and vice versa.
If you controlled NIC, you had phenomenal power on the Internet. You could, for example, simply make
Australia disappear. Or you could turn it into Brazil.
We got inside, and the feeling was overwhelming. Some people make the mistake of saying its like
playing God: its not, because God, if hes God, already has all the answers. We were twenty. The joy
was an explorers joy at breaking through to a new frontier despite all the odds. I created a back door
into the system for future adventures. This system was awesome, and I felt almost subdued at the
connectivity on offer: for me, and this is relevant to my future work on WikiLeaks, I saw a perfect join
between a mathematical truth and a moral necessity. Even in those early days, I saw that breaking
through the portals of power was not just a matter of fun. Governments depended on secrecy and
patronage networks to deepen their advantages, but it began to appear possible that what street riots,
opposition groups, human rights gurus and electoral reform had always struggled to achieve, we could
actually begin to bring about with science. We could undermine corruption from its dead centre. Justice
would always in the end be about human beings, but there was a new vanguard of experts, criminalised
as we were, who had fastened on to the cancer of modern power, who saw how it spread in ways that
were still hidden from ordinary human experience.
Our skills made us valuable, and some of us were unable to resist the Faustian pacts we were offered. It
amazed the rest of us that some hackers were working for governments hacking was innately
anarchistic but they were, and I saw it from inside the US Department of Defense network. They were
hacking their own machines as target practice, and no doubt hacking computers around the world on
behalf of what they understood to be US interests. As treasure hunters with an ethical bias, we entered
a labyrinth of power, corruption and lies, always knowing that we would be the ones accused of
corruption if we got caught. We were a hardcore unit of three: Prime Suspect, myself and Trax, who was
the best phreaker in Australia. He wrote the book on how to control and manipulate telephone
exchanges.
We were anarchists, I suppose, by temperament if not by political conviction. We had started off having
fun and ended up wanting to change the world. There was a developing understanding that
cryptography was a liberating concept and that it would allow individuals to stand up to government, to
whole governments, and that it was now possible for people to resist the will of a superpower. Our
temperaments were drawn to an Enlightenment sense of liberty and we felt we were part of the way
forward for technology. Many mathematicians were involved with the cypherpunks. Timothy May wrote
the crypto anarchist manifesto and John Gilmore was another founding member of the group. These
guys were pioneers in the IT industry Gilmore was the fifth employee of Sun Microsystems and they
had both made money and bailed out, to focus on trying to physically realise their liberation ideals with
the help of mathematics and cryptography. For instance, they wanted to come up with a new kind of
digital currency, a digital coin, something that would replace the Gold Standard, which would make
financial transactions cleaner and not traceable by governments. Your credit rating and your credit
history would be yours and yours alone. This was the dream of cryptography: to permit individuals to
communicate securely and be at liberty. (If you look at the cypherpunk alumni, you see some of them
went on to invent watered-down versions of all this, such as PayPal.) If allowed to develop, I foresaw
that it would permit small activist groups who were in danger of being surveilled to resist government
coercion. That was the hope, anyway. That was the plan and the dream. But many of the brilliant minds
of my generation of cypherpunks floated off in the dot com bubble. They became obsessed with stock
options and Palm Pilots and lost the urge for real change.
Digging down into our cypherpunk mindsets, we saw that one of the great battles our Spanish Civil
War, if you like was going to be about how we served in the effort to defend the world against the
surveillance of private computer networks. Issues of freedom and the fight against oppression were
located there, as surely as they once were in the hills of Catalonia, and we wanted to zip up and go out
and fight the good fight against police statehood as best we could. We were idealistic, of course, and
young: the usual condition of people wanting to make a difference. We would make mistakes and we
would be punished for them. We also might never gain the sense of possibility again that we had among
ourselves. That is lifes risk, almost lifes certainty, though we set out nonetheless.
The issue of privacy would always haunt me. It haunts me now. At WikiLeaks, I would come to seem the
arch-proponent of transparency, forever described as the man who thinks all privacy is bad. But it was
never my position that all privacy is bad: rather the opposite. We fought, as cypherpunks, to protect
peoples privacy. What I opposed, and continue to oppose, is the use of secrecy by institutions to
protect themselves against the truth of the evil they have done. This is a clear distinction. Even in this
book, where I try to tell my story as best I can, there will be moments of privacy, because I owe it to
some greater sense of justice, to my children, for example, not to drag them into the limelight. Some
people, in love with a category error, will wish to hold me to account on this score, as if the founder of
WikiLeaks must, out of some bogus sense of consistency, blow the whistle on every element of his
private self.
I will not indulge that fantasy. I will not play that game. Yet I will try to open up about all the matters
that truly matter. I say this, because at the time I have reached in this account of my life, I had a child
with the woman I was going out with and living with. The child is Daniel. He is a good man, and I have
tried to be a capable father to him. We had him young and his mother and I were later in dispute, for a
long time, about how he should be cared for, but that is all there is to it. It was a difficult time, there was
a custody battle, and no great principles emerge out of it. This is a book about my life as a journalist and
as a fighter for freedoms: my children are not part of that story and I wont say much more about them.
There is Daniel and there are other children born to people I cared about. Over my career so far, when I
speak about the need for truth, I am talking, very often, about the truth in relation to the deaths of
thousands of people. Or I am talking about frauds, tortures, corruptions that destroyed peoples lives.
Despite the wishes of the category error-makers, I will not insult that legacy by suggesting some kind of
equivalence between those truths and my own small concerns. I will reveal to you the growth of a mind,
and an attitude, a sensibility, and a plan. I will talk to you about criminal charges brought against me.
But I will not pour forth on issues that matter only to my family and which can add nothing to your sense
of the personal journey towards the work of WikiLeaks. Disclosure is my business, but we dont deal in
gossip.
Ive got ahead of myself. The cypherpunks mailing list, and with it the movement, was launched in 1992
and would capture my attention during the middle years of the decade. But let me take you back to
1990. Just before Daniel was born, my girlfriend and I had been living in untraceable accommodation in
Fitzroy, a bohemian suburb of Melbourne. Fitzroy had an Italian population and a Greek crowd and lots
of students, all of whom felt comfortable being near the university. We began squatting. And many of
our political thoughts at the time thoughts that would lead to bigger questions about ownership of
information and so on were centred around the issue of squatters rights. We formed a squatters
union. I would put posters on lamp-posts and encourage people to call into our office with information
about empty properties. Id plot them on a map, then go round there and work out how to break in. We
kept filing cards of these places, and noted whether they had working gas and electricity, how long they
were likely to be empty and stuff like that. My girlfriend and I moved into an Edwardian property and
made an issue of the freedom to use these properties and the rights adhering to occupants. I realised I
was probably built for struggle because this wasnt the easiest way to live. Conditions of threat suited
me and made me work harder. Anyway, we were tossed out of that house but the union worked well,
giving homeless people a place to call. The way of organising it was interesting: we behaved like a real
estate agency for no profit and for the good of the community. It was a lesson in using free-market
means to ridicule free-market ends.
The uncertainty that surrounded our daily life our home, our gas and electricity connections and such
was mirrored in our night-time activities. Each of us in the International Subversives knew that the
police were seeking to make an example of us. The Australian Academic and Research Network were co-
operating with the Australian Federal Police in order to try and catch us, and we were able to hack into
their various systems to see how close they were getting. Our nemesis in the police even had a name,
Sergeant Ken Day, and he seemed to have become obsessed with our activities. To us he was just a
name at the time, though we came to know him well after our arrests, which he had worked so hard for.
(It is one of the ironies of my life that Ken Day would later become a strong supporter of WikiLeaks in
the Australian press.) We were visiting systems and learning from them, but, as hackers, we were also
fairly competitive, each wanting to be first. I would work hard to create Trojans, ways of tricking a
computer system into letting you inside and believing you are the legitimate user, which encouraged it
to give up its secrets to you. All good, clean fun, except it was the kind of fun that made authorities
crazy. We were basically turning ourselves into people who had the power of system administrators
over many powerful networks.
The net closed in on us with Nortel, the system belonging to the Canadian telecommunications company
that ran a network stretching over the globe. It had been one of our greatest explorations. There were
more than 11,000 computers in Nortels network, and we had fought long and hard to gain access to
them. From Melbourne, I had commandeered, or hijacked, forty computers housed in Canada, with the
intention of bombarding Nortel with guesses as to their passwords. The program Id designed could
throw 40,000 guesses per second. Eventually we got in and it was like walking inside the Sistine Chapel
at midnight. You could look at all the expertise, all the evidence of civilisation, and notice their methods,
their habits, their corners of liturgy and mystery. We had root control within that system and could have
transferred money or sold their commercial secrets. But we did none of those things. Prime Suspect,
Trax and myself would have considered that the lowest move. We were above that kind of dirt, wanting
simply to master the system and move on.
One night I realised I was being watched. It was 2.30 a.m. and a Nortel system administrator was on to
us. I tried for an hour to circumvent his inspections, block his way, all the while deleting the
incriminating directory and walking backwards, clearing the path of my footprints. The administrator
had been logged on from home, but after a break he appeared at the main Nortel console. He had gone
into work. I was now in trouble: you can only obfuscate for so long, and I could no longer block this guy.
He had me. Well, he didnt have me right there and then: it was still cat and mouse, but Prime Suspect
would unwittingly lead him straight to us the next morning. I made a message appear on the
administrators screen:
I have finally become sentient.
The administrator kept cool. He began checking all the modem lines. The scene could only play out to
his advantage. I typed:
Its been nice playing with your system.
For several years we had been Houdini-like and had invented ways to deepen our own escapological
nature. Tracer calls to our modems would go dead in the middle of the effort. We had the Australian
phone lines down pat, and no one could reach us. Until 1 October 1991 that was. After that date the
Feds managed to trace a line back from Nortel and started tapping Prime Suspects phone. He led them
to Trax, and then to me. The Feds were listening to us, hearing our conversations, watching our moves.
They called it Operation Weather. It dawned on us that we were on borrowed time. Trax flipped and
went to the police. The police came and dragged Prime Suspect away from a party on 29 October. The
game was up. Or, more accurately, the game, for me, was really beginning.
I was alone and sad when they came. My wife and child had just left, and I had come to the end of my
rope. My computer disks were strewn around the computer table. The squat was a mess, and I sat on
the sofa reading a vision of things to come the prison letters of George Jackson, kept in the toughest
US prisons at the pleasure of the authorities. I was broken. I was listening, half listening, to a telephone
fault signal that was sounding through my stereo speakers. At 11.30 that night there was a knock at the
door and a play of shadows outside. The police announced themselves and I thought of all the times I
had expected them, all the times I dreamt they were coming. I opened the door and found about a
dozen federal officers with battering equipment. A man at the front looked me in the eye as if he always
knew we would meet. At that moment it occurred to me that the disks with the Pentagon stuff on them
werent in the beehive. They were on my desk in full view of the cops. Im Ken Day, the head policeman
said. I believe youve been expecting me.
6
THE ACCUSED
I wonder if I knew before the trial that literature could bring clarity. It was during that period that I read
Solzhenitsyns The First Circlee, and it was more than clarifying and more than revealing: it made me
understand the meaning of empathy and it gave me strength. I had been a reader since childhood so I
certainly knew about the pleasure of books, but this one, this book, made me see into the heart of my
predicament. If a book can make you feel less lonely, then this was the one for me and it came just in
time. I suppose Ive always forced feeling to give way to action that was the kind of practical,
campaigning childhood I had but in those years when I was waiting for the court case Im sure I was
close to feeling lost. Where there is lostness, there are sometimes the seeds of new strength. Professor
Chelnov, in the novel, is an old mathematician imprisoned seventeen years earlier. When filling in a
form and asked for his nationality he puts not Russian, but Prisoner. His mind is set upon inventions
and he feels he is nothing if not stateless. And that is a kind of empowerment when the state is against
you.
The struggle is always to be oneself.
The Federal Police took sixty-three bundles of my belongings away from the house in the Melbourne
suburbs. I stood in the street and watched them go. It was dark, a warm October night, the crickets were
out, and I felt I was whirling down a chasm.
In the event, it took them until 1994 to come up with some charges. Its worth remembering, as more
than an aside, the extent to which the sudden infusion of computers into society had created a
legislative and common law vacuum. State prosecutors tried to apply traditional property protection
and deception laws to new technological crimes, and often they succeeded. Yet there were a number of
high-profile cases where the prosecution of hackers was a farce, cases where the only real crime
revealed was the crime of the computer geek having embarrassed someone powerful. In an atmosphere
of increased government reliance on computer databases, legislation rushed towards the absurd
criminalisation of a plethora of computer use. What we saw with computer science was how quickly it
allowed for a society of information-sharers, and this sharing, this society, exists in a greater condition of
democracy and freedom than the traditional worlds of publishing and broadcasting. Freedom of
information and freedom from information were quickly on the table, but the legislation has always
struggled to understand what it might be asking the law to deal with and recognise. Given that
ownership in the digital sense is not at all like ownership in the old physical sense of owning a watch, the
legal world has failed to see whats in front of it. You dont steal information. You simply create a
platform for it when it finds its way into the public realm. If I have a look at your watch, Im not mugging
you, I just want to know the time. Even by the mid-1990s, and even today, the legal establishment are
none the wiser on how to consider the legal implications of our life with computers. Thats why it took
our Australian case so long to come to court.
Eventually, the trial came together in 1996. And all the while the struggle, indeed, was to be oneself to
go on and do the work you knew you could do and play your part. Opponents past and present have the
same essential weakness about them: first they want to use you, then they want to be you, then they
want to snuff you out. Its a pattern that stretches in my life from toytown Feds to hacks at the
Guardian: the old human pattern of someone needing something from someone else, getting it, denying
they got it from them, then resenting the person for having been in a special position to give them what
they needed, which is usually, by the way, an aspect of self-hatred on the askers part for having needed
any help at all. Usually it ends with these people enumerating ones personal faults, a shocking,
ungrateful, unmanly effort, to be filed under despicable in my book. Youll meet more of these people in
due course, but Ive been meeting them all my life.
The long wait for an arrest and a trial was one I wanted to use, and I was keen to see how I could
discover more and more useful applications for the knowledge I had. Trax and I teamed up to form a
computer security company and bought a massive mainframe computer from La Trobe University. It was
quite funny to meet an old friend: this computer, the size of four fridges, one Id hacked into years
before. The security work basically involved me being paid to hack into the systems of large companies,
at their behest, just to see how secure they were. They never were very secure and the work was
boring. But it allowed me to continue with my own investigations and get back on my feet. I knew it
wouldnt work out for me in the long run because Im not sufficiently interested in money and not at all
interested in legitimacy.
I am interested in what I can do to further the cause of justice. In 1993 part of that involved helping the
police to break an Internet paedophile ring. I helped them to understand what these men were passing
around on the Internet and how they were doing it. I could see how these people moved around on the
Net in ways the police could not, because they didnt have the expertise. I could lead them to an
understanding of who these people were. I wasnt coerced into this, and did it less to help the police, in
fact, than because I was concerned about protecting children.
But the raid took something out of me, for a time. The old nomadic strain took hold and has never gone.
I suppose to a large extent I was unhappy. More than unhappy: I was stressed beyond anything Id ever
known. That rebellious climate that had always surrounded me travelled inwards, and for a while I lived
outdoors and felt anguished. If I want to be comical about it, and encourage my critics, I would say it
was my period in the wilderness. The only bit of Jesus worth having is the bit where he percolates his
rebellion, and he does that over forty days while eating berries, facing down the temptations of the
Devil and preparing to do the do. Like Milton, I believe the Devil quite often has the best lines, so, for
that reason, and more obvious ones, I wont be aligning myself with the God-child. Lets just say I was
upset and felt abandoned as I wandered in the Dandenong Ranges National Park. I must have been
exhausted as well, yet filled with a notion that significant achievements lay up ahead if only I could
reach that point. In the Sherbrooke Forest the temperatures could be extreme: freezing at night, and in
the day the mosquitoes ravaged me. I drank water from the creek and otherwise just picked up
provisions from town. I wanted to be alone and contemplate my position. I never saw a computer. I was
out of communication.
I felt I could be a good father to my son but not a good mother. I was good at teaching, structuring,
protecting, even at the bedtime stories, but I was hopeless at the other bits, the more mundane and less
heroic parts of parenting. Eventually, I came to be looking after my son. That brought me back into
focus, and so, over time, did my old friend, communications. At the time, people could only run email
through the university system, and, back in Melbourne, I got involved in setting up a non-profit network
and lobbying for deregulation of the Internet. It was a platform for setting up Suburbia Public Access
Network, one of the first Internet Service Providers in Australia. We were the free speech ISP, and we
made a point of hosting material others wouldnt. You dont get any thanks for that, but we fought for
connectivity in the country and it came in the end. I continued to write code, most of which I released
for free, culminating in Rubberhose.
Many of the early cryptographers, these inspired brain-iacs at Stanford or MIT who wanted to live in a
world of pure maths and blue-sky thinking, were concerned about how to protect privacy. Everyone
with a computer now takes it for granted, but the facts of authentication and key protection were
established by guys working hard with little thanks: they knew that electronic mail and digital signatures
and so on would depend on privacy, or else the Internet would become an enemy of free speech.
Without security, peoples computer lives would be too easily monitored, controlled and abused. So this
was the great issue and it was a matter, at that stage, of mathematics, the basis of cryptography.
As things got established with the Internet, I began to flow more naturally in that direction and I felt
very strongly, as I still do, that you have to fight to organise and maintain freedom of intelligence. I
wrote a posting in March 1996 appending an online advert for something called the Emailers Profit
Centre, a Multi-Level Marketing project that aimed to sell millions of email addresses to commercial
companies. Who wants to take this site down first? I wrote to fellow cypherpunks. This was the kind of
challenge we were facing back then: how to stop the Net from simply becoming a vast tool for giant
companies and governments to exploit people. Or for the security state to keep an eye on us. I loathe
these security types, the types who point out that Everything which is not explicitly permitted is
denied. Who do they think they are, or, more to the point, who do they think we are? They are security
fascists who would mobilise technology to secure their brutal vision. They are types whose idea of
Nirvana is to maintain a cyberspace status quo in which the laws of physics have been rewritten so it is
not possible for you to shift your chair without written authority. No longer a case simply of Big Brother
watching you, but of Big Brother controlling your fingers, the movement of your mind, and keeping you
from finding the world and its information on your own terms. Big Brother is home. He is installed in the
item you just dragged home from the Apple Store.
That was the threat, and we applied ourselves to it, quite frankly, while everyone else was still trying to
work out how to spell email. As I say, its taken tremendously for granted by everyone: people who send
a hundred emails a day and never worry, kids who live on Facebook, but these things had to be
invented, and the governments at the time were reluctant to allow ordinary Internet users to encrypt
freely. Governments, especially the US government, wanted a back door into the system. They were
working for a military understanding of surveillance, and the early Internet, the early forms of electronic
mail, presented issues they wanted control over. But the cryptographers stuck with it and now we have
an Internet relatively free of government interference, unless you happen to live in China.
I was moving towards this the dissolving of my hacker instincts into something more mathematical,
more purposeful when the hacking case finally came to court in 1996. My two friends in the
International Subversives, Prime Suspect and Trax, had suffered differently since the raid. For Prime
Suspect it was the short joy of Ecstasy and the long misery of coming down, ending in paranoia and
depression, and the slow unravelling, with the help of a counsellor, of his relationship with his mother
and of his feelings about the death of his father. For Trax, it was panic attacks. His downward spiral had
started well before the raid, and led to it, indeed. He was in a car crash that left him constantly fearful.
In her book Underground which I had helped research in the intervening years Suelette reports that
Trax at this point was reduced to fully-fledged agoraphobia. That was about the size of it. The police raid
brought us all low. We all vanished for a time into a private hell, all in our early twenties, badly marked
for too little reason, it seemed. The charges were shuffled around. There was a terrible kind of ignorant
glee going on within the press at the time. They didnt know what the offences meant and they had built
up a ridiculous picture of the threat posed by these teenage boys. In reality, ours was just a grubby little
case of too much obsession and too much curiosity and not enough care; but it was turned into
something of epic, state-threatening proportions by a bunch of lunatic prosecutors and media slags who
should have known better.
I wrote something on the cypherpunk mailing list in January 1996 that captures my disgust at the time.
My comments related to the felling of Kevin Mitnick, an American hacker, characterised in a book
written by his capturer, Tsutomu Shimura, as Americas Most Wanted Outlaw. This makes me ill, I
wrote. Tsutomu, when Mitnick croaks, will you dig up his grave and rent his hands out as ashtrays? The
man who murdered one of the last notorious American gunslingers went on not long after to produce
and act in a strange show which described just How He Did It. Some years later, he himself was
murdered by a disgusted member of the audience.
People were feasting on us and on our naivety, but the fact was that, by the time of the trial, the old
hacking scene was dead. The Internet had made it too easy and many of the new breed were too brazen
about what they did. It had become part of the pop and film culture, and some of us were already
thinking about other ways in which secrets could be accessed or revealed.
The other two wanted to plead guilty but I didnt want to collaborate, so to speak, in my own
criminalisation. By the trial date, I faced thirty-one charges; Prime Suspect, twenty-six; and Trax, six. Part
of our crime was to have written articles for our own International Subversives magazine, which had a
circulation of three the three of us. Stress breeds stress, of course. And by the time of the committal
hearing in Melbourne Magistrates Court my mind was blown apart, not least by the news that Prime
Suspect had turned Crown Witness against me. As Ive found again and again to my cost, you dont get
far in this world by over-relying on loyalty. People are loyal until it seems more opportune not to be. Im
sorry if thats cynical, but experience brings its own slow wisdom. Prime Suspect signed the papers,
though he didnt colour the picture as menacingly as he could have done. When I saw him across the
courtroom I stared at him. He looked impassive. He was frightened, he was young, but it was a look that
I would come to know: the look of betrayal, organised on the face to look like a high-minded interest in
the truth. Nevertheless, it brings a focus to your life, the moment when a judge says, The prisoner shall
now rise, and the only person standing is you. I once said true belief begins at that point. In my line of
work, true belief begins with that and with the jackboot at the door.
Prime Suspect, having pleaded guilty, was heard some time before me. There was no custodial
sentence, a $5,000 good behaviour bond, and an order to pay reparations to the Australian National
University to the tune of $2,100. The judge made the point that no special leniency had been afforded
Prime Suspect as thanks for his co-operation. That was a sad moment: both of us realising that he had
crossed the divide for nothing, wrecked our friendship and compromised our dignity without benefit.
Court seems long, but it is never as long as memory: I have never spoken to him again. In some ways, my
ethics must be simple-minded, but I am not a politician: I couldnt abuse a private or a working
friendship for a public gain. I just couldnt. And for someone who was part of a group called the
Subversives to ally himself with the pieties of the law in times of strife, well, I felt very sorry. Trax did
similarly well and would have done so without coughing up: the judge in his case ordered that no
conviction be recorded against him.
My case presented itself first to the Supreme Court almost as a point of order, or as a case study, to
help define the terms of the trial and this allowed us to seek an understanding of what the charges
meant. What exactly did it mean to accuse someone of gaining access to a computer? If there was
commercial data on the system that was not read by the intruder, does he still stand accused of theft? If
a crook breaks into a house and steals that days newspaper, is he then liable to stand trial for the theft
of the Matisse that was hanging over the sitting-room fireplace? The Supreme Court, however, wanted
to make a point to the County Courts that they should not send matters to them except in extreme
circumstances. This was a shame, as it would prove a missed opportunity when it came to future
computer crimes cases. The law failed its own benchmark of intellectual curiosity that day, and
everybody suffered, not least Australia itself, which even today fails to spot the difference between a
child molester and a person interested in using computers to secure our liberties.
In the end, I was tried before a judge who knew little of the case. He made it clear he would have
preferred a custodial sentence, but, following a code of parity, he gave me a similar sentence to that
enjoyed by Prime Suspect. My good behaviour bond was ten times greater and I had less time to pay the
$2,100 reparation. I was tarred as a criminal, and I minded that, of course; but there was some relief
that I wouldnt, this time, be going to jail. Nobody would be opening champagne, and I had a working
life to rebuild, but the case taught me how vulnerable hackers would be in the future. I walked into that
court already a different person from the boy who had hacked into Nortel, and my dander was up, as
they say, not to follow the logic of the court, which was primitive in my view, but to follow the logic of
mathematics and exploration, and go further into the realms of justice. I wanted to discover how
computer science could influence the ethics of the modern world. That was my plan, and I rebuilt myself
for the purpose. In the meantime, Nortel and other victims of my so-called hacking crimes began using
the cryptography software Id invented during my late-night walks through their system.
No victory comes without a shadow of defeat. And some decades of your life, weirdly, can come out of
the wash looking defeated. Some people say that being young is a victory in itself, but I doubt that. I was
tired and nervous in my twenties in a way that I never am now. What I might observe is the strain of
trying to push things forward. Theres an invitation in front of me to a party we threw in North
Melbourne at Easter, 1996, organised by the group of us involved in setting up that early ISP,
suburbia.net. Just looking at the invitation gives me an indication of who I was at the time. I was
excitable and committed, but no doubt overbearing and a pain in the arse. Having set out the logistics of
the party on the invitation, there follows a little questionnaire.
Q: whos invited?
A: you. A cross-social strata of individuals, occupations and ages. It will be an eclectic evening.
A: now is not the time for potentially dichotomatic simplifications of character, but what the heck . . .
Suburbia users:
From magistrates and politicians to convicted computer hackers. We have as users private investigators,
writers, programmers, QCs, record producers, musicians, film directors, journalists, policemen,
intelligence agents, chess champions, members of obscure religious sects, netball umpires, many, many
types of scientists and engineers, security experts, doctors, accountants, bartenders, choral conductors . .
.
I hope you like netball umpires. Im not sure what their role was intended to be in the coming
revolution. Anyhow, the invitation goes on to suggest our reliable associates were to be found among
fans of the rock group St Etienne, and fans of the writing of Philip K. Dick and Nabokov. There was no
entry fee, though people could bring hardware and cables as a donation. Dress code: 1930s incognito is
just fine.
I cant recall if the party quite lived up to my rhetoric. But all of my life at the time was there, in the
invitation, if not at the event. Among these rather soulful wilderness years, I also learned to hate
religion. I say hate, but Im enough of a child of Aquarius not to want to hate anything. Let us say I
learned in the period before going to university my next move, to study Mathematics and Physics at
Melbourne the extent to which organised religion was probably a kind of evil. I would come to
understand my dislike of religion to be a crucial part of my confidence. Take that as you will. Im sure its
true of many of us. I once ended up at a backpackers place filled with dozens of Christians from the
Australian University Christian Convergence. Most were young women, and I turned, somewhat
disgracefully, into a sort of Chestertons Hardy, the village atheist, while they tried to convert me with
the rise and fall of their bosoms. One of the devout was the lovely daughter of a Newcastle minister. At
some point in my unintended wooing of her, she looked up, fluttered her eyelids and said, Oh, you
know so much! I hardly know anything!
That is why you believe in God, I explained. This conversational brutality appeared to take her breath
away. It seemed I was exactly what she secretly longed for: a man willing to openly disagree with her
father. A man, in other words, willing to be man enough, strong enough, the romance-writers might say
(and I felt shed read them), not to creep in supplication before her fathers God.
This, Ill call the funny side of religion. The less funny side I found to be manifest amongst the
Scientologists, the brain-burp of the late L. Ron Hubbard, which rakes in millions a year and is the acme
of occultist thinking. As usual with such cults, they have found it advisable to keep their more wacko
beliefs and practices out of the new recruits faces until the recruits are sufficiently wacko themselves,
which can take years as the fresh blood works its way through the costly levels. The whole Scientology
system breeds subservience and secrecy, the two things I was born to run from. Im sure I have had my
moments of bad judgement, but none of them can ever compete with the constant jet of nonsense
coming from the Church of Scientology. I may be wrong, of course, and the earth is, in reality, the
destroyed prison colony of aliens from outer space, but Im not convinced. In our defence of the
Internet, it became clear, years ago, that Scientology was among the great enemies of the freedom it
might make possible. The Internet is, by its true nature, a censorship-free zone. Not good for those in
the Hubbard cupboard, who see censorship, concealment and revelation (for a fee) as the very reason
for their existence.
The church has fostered a large network of manipulation. It has used legal processes and illegal
harassment to pursue newspapers, ex-members and many others, even while it remains subject to an
FBI investigation itself. Sinisterly, the church considers its religious teachings to be copyrighted trade
secrets. Later, WikiLeaks blew the whistle on them by publishing a collection of these nonsense
teachings, complete with Copyright 1966, by L. Ron Hubbard, All Rights Reserved emblazoned on each
page: The state of Clear is terrific. We have waited on this state for a very long time. When an individual
goes Clear, he goes over a bump. If youll forgive the pun, confronting these nutters brought me clarity.
The fight against the church is far more than the Net versus a bunch of wackos with too much money. It
is about the corporate suppression of the Internet and free speech. It is about intellectual property and
the meaning of personal expression and the principle of unfettered access. The year of my Australian
trial I wrote about all this, and of how the precedents set by the Church of Scientology today would
prove to be useful weapons for corporate tyranny tomorrow. Id always been an activist in my bones,
but back then all my time, when not with my son, was spent building what you might call global
platforms for local protest. We demonstrated outside the Church of Scientology, for instance, on
Flinders Street, handing out leaflets while also opposing, on mailing lists and message boards, their
every effort to suppress free speech.
It was a journey from the local to the global and back again. My favourite kind of journey.
7
THE MATHEMATICAL ROAD TO THE FUTURE
Towards the end of 1998 I wrote an email to what had become an international band of merry men and
women. I was taking off from Melbourne the planets most liveable city to throw myself into the
wider world of snow, ice, slush and imploding Communism. I dont know how other people meet
colleagues, but my approach has always been a little, say, existential. You like someones face or the fact
they loved a book that you read and liked, too. Maybe they set up a group or opposed some fetid old
council or just rambled late one night in a nice way. I wasnt yet the head of an organisation, but, even
when I was, my methods have remained the same. Keep moving on, keep trusting people. If anyone
feels like getting together for beer, vodka, Siberian bear steak, or just a good yarn, please let me know, I
wrote in the round-robin email.
28 Oct 98San Francisco
5 Nov 98London
6 Nov 98Frankfurt/Berlin
15 Nov 98Helsinki
20 Nov 98Moscow
25 Nov 98Irkutsk
3 Dec 98Beijing
The itinerary was ambitious, but it worked out. As I met, stayed with, drank and ate with like-minded
young people across Europe and Asia, I felt at every turn I was seeing a new world. It was a world
running at its own heels, not sure quite how it would turn out or how it would express its beliefs or
share its technology, but it opened my eyes all the same.
Some people have a talent for friendship. It might be one of the things that marks out leadership. I used
to have it, but Im not so sure nowadays. After Id been back in Melbourne a while, I started making
plans to attend the University of Melbourne, to study maths and physics. I met a great guy there called
Daniel Mathews, who was bright, with a kind of electric flair for fresh thinking and political judgement. I
met some people who shared my political instincts, and of course my friends and colleagues understood
the power of the Internet, but Dan was the only person I met who shared both of my great passions. He
really understood the opportunity that new technology offered to activists. He once wrote a long poem
called If You Saw, which I posted on my blog, liking the nice, idealistic sweep of the lines:
The ordinary people, not ese and not ism,
Nobody should be immune from the hope embedded in those lines. I was living in eastern Melbourne at
the time, with my son, who went to Box Hill High School, and I was burying myself in maths problems.
There had already been a coming together, in my mind, between activism and technology, and I had
founded a fledgling organisation called leaks.org in 1999. Like many a fledgling, it was starved of
nourishment and didnt go anywhere, but it grew in my head and so did the name. But, as I was saying,
the future seemed to lie for me in new friends and new kinds of problems. There was something
beautiful in the truth revealed by maths something perfect and just, and I grew experienced in the
study of that, not just the problems themselves but the entire moral scope of quantum mechanics.
I finally started at university in 2003. It felt overdue, like something I had been working towards for a
long time. Melbourne University is the second oldest in Australia, an avowedly secular institution run by
the state. The campus is in Parkville, a leafy part of town with many Victorian terraces, and I always had
a sense of contentment coming to study there. I had always been pretty good at maths, and enjoyed the
history of it and the practical side, making my own machines and so on when I was a boy. By the time I
came belatedly to study maths at Melbourne, I was probably to some extent jaded with cryptography
and by what the best cryptographers were doing to make money in the Internet boom. My experience
with hacking had made the universe seem harder to understand, not easier, and I suppose I wanted to
retreat into the realm of pure thinking.
At first, the university felt like a sheltered workshop for mental outpatients. Everything was so tame,
and the days were so structured, and everyone was absorbed in a way that made it seem like the real
world had somehow been filtered out. It was nobodys fault, of course, but it was hard for me to
connect with my fellow students, given the fifteen-year age gap with most of them and everything that I
had been through in my twenties. After all the ups and downs Id suffered the hurly-burly of the
underground and the media attention round the trial it felt weird suddenly to have become this
passive student. But I was determined to master quantum mechanics and pure maths. I wanted very
much to learn everything I could from them and suspected they would push me forward. In no time at
all I was immersed in the whole history and traditions of physics, Nils Bohr and Heisenberg and
Feynman, and I was keen to become a figure in the Mathematics Society, if not in the university.
I remember, during one period, going to the University of New South Wales to do some advanced maths
courses. It was a good time, and I had got back in touch with my real father Ill write more about that
in a minute and was riding on my bike every day to the university. One day, as I was turning a corner
on my bike, a truck suddenly appeared and swiped me into the gutter. I smashed my arm in six places. I
was picked up and taken to hospital, where they put my arm in plaster. They also gave me Tramadol,
which had a strange and interesting effect. Its a synthetic opiate, and, though it didnt interfere with the
clarity of my thought, it removed all negative emotion, including every experience of what you might
call psychological pain. So, during a conversation, for instance, I would experience all the positive parts
of the conversation but not the negative parts. I went to a class and was aware that my heart rate was
up. And all my calibrations were off: the way I placed my foot down to take a step was off, and so was
my social sense, my notion of how much attention to give a person who was speaking in a way that
wasnt accurate, for instance.
This was the way my mind was going at the time. My study of quantum mechanics was causing me to
question the measures of pain and pleasure in my life, and how they could be balanced, or what would
happen if I had more of one than the other. The broken arm was important for me it was an analogy,
almost a parable, of how to go about making and sustaining a change. That probably sounds odd. What I
mean is that it made me think about the way in which single discrete events could have far-reaching
consequences. When my arm broke it had to be healed remade, in some way. I started to think about
how I could begin to heal the injustices I saw around me how one could remake the world through a
political act. In this way I was arriving at a philosophy of change and I believe it influenced everything I
later did. I knew you couldnt test these things in the cloistered economic unreality of the university in
the long run, but the process began, for me, from that period of study in which I deepened my
experience of cause and effect.
Yet, my capacity for finding things intolerable was always in evidence. Too much in evidence, perhaps.
But what can you do? There was a research project in the department to study sand, because the
Americans were dealing with sand as part of their adventures in the Middle East. Some woman came to
give us a talk about how beautiful it had been to take part in the testing of military hardware and
assisting with the flying of the cargo planes that bombed retreating Iraqi troops in the first Gulf War and
created all that carnage. I thought, Why are we sitting here listening to this mass murderer? I began to
see how the universities were being used by people interested in military profiteering. You could see it if
you went to conferences, the whole thing being underwritten by the Australian Defense Science and
Technology Organisation. Everything was coming together in my head during this period: the clarity of
mind that quantum mechanics forced upon me, my ideas about cause and effect, my horror at military
outrages and my increasing insights into Western foreign policy. It was becoming obvious to me, during
those years of studying at university, that we needed mechanisms brand new ways to take the fruits
of science and implement them for the common good. Not for the service of particular agencies, but for
truth itself. I loved studying physics, but my hatred for institutionalism only grew. I could see how
spineless many of the scientists were, how willing to accept a sponsors logo, no matter how vile or how
murderous or how anti-intellectual, and I suppose I must count that part of my university education.
I once represented my university at the Australian National Physics Competition. At the prize ceremony,
the head of Physics at the Australian National University motioned to us and said, You are the cream of
Australian physics. I looked around and thought to myself, Christ Almighty, I hope hes wrong. But I
had a certainty, a covert certainty in that company, that my interest in quantum mechanics could do
more than make the chancellor blush with pride. I shared the view with a handful of computer scientists
around the world that quantum mechanics offered a methodology for understanding justice.
Let me explain. Quantum mechanics is not merely a description of how the small parts of the world
operate and operate together to create very large parts of our experience, the whole observable
universe it also constitutes a systematised way of thinking about physical phenomena. If you study it
properly, it will train you how to think clearly. You might remember that my early experiments with
computers made me realise the difference between saying I want the computer to count and This is
how you count. Studying quantum mechanics was a bit like that. It taught me how to ask questions
about the world in such a way that I left every option on the table, not prejudicing the outcome. Youve
probably seen TV journalists asking soft questions to politicians with whom they or the boss of their
network are sympathetic. You know, like Have you always been motivated by a desire to serve your
country? or Can you explain how your spending cuts will help our economy? Quantum mechanics
doesnt involve questions like that. It teaches you to ask questions that might actually produce a useful
answer, and over time it will enable you to organise your thoughts about the natural world. It shows you
how to prove things through experiment, and how to take nothing for granted, no hypothesis, until it
has been exposed to every test of cause and effect. After the end of the Crypto Wars, and my trial, I had
decided that I had some unfinished business in this area. As I said, I wanted to try and pierce the fabric
of reality, and, when it came to social action, take the skin off all our assumptions and see what was
underneath. Advanced mathematics and quantum mechanics allowed for that.
To get to the truth, you have to look at your behaviour in how you set up the experiment and see how
much the outcome has been affected by what you did and how you did it. You have to find a true
measure. You have to look at how things are constructed and how you yourself have constructed your
way of looking so as to get some insight. Now, the more I looked at this feature of quantum
mechanics, the more I saw that it might constitute the thing I had long been looking for: a theory of
change, a theory of human-initiated change in the world. Thats the beginning of quantum mechanics. I
had a handle on the subjective element, which is part of the thinking behind the book you are holding.
By laying out my own life, I can show you how it was we did what we did.
I began to think of information as matter, and started to examine how it flows through people and
through society, and how the availability of new information brings about change. Let us imagine there
is a pipeline that allows a flow of material towards what provides for a state of justice. You can look at
who contributed to the flow and come to an estimation of what it was that helped constitute the state
of justice. Of course Im not talking about an actual, physical pipeline, Im talking about all the different
ways in which people communicate. But just imagine for a moment that we are talking about a real
pipeline. In order to examine the way that information moves around the world you would have to be
interested in the whole pipeline: who makes the pipeline, who pays for it, who maintains it, and
whether it is blocked anywhere or whether the flow is hindered. Then what if we map that pipeline onto
the Fourth Estate, onto the media, and how it helps or hinders that flow of information? We are
interested in what it is that contributes to a state of just actions. What do we see? How can we
introduce ethical reforms into the system to enhance justice? We want to remove blockages, but we
also want to increase the number of observers who are contributing towards the good of this flow. If
material is suppressed, we must see it as a blockage and allow the maximum number to observe the
suppression and alleviate the problem. That way, we get to justice.
So it occurred to me that the Internet is a reconfigurable system of pipes that can connect these
observations and these people who can take actions, leading to an increased likelihood of virtue. In the
future, I felt, there would be a new way of providing an optimal flow between observers and actors. And
that seemed to me to be a new way forward for societies: to make their media answerable to its
observers, to make agencies watchable, and to break the hold on information maintained by
governments and their collaborating Fourth Estates. There would have to be an alternative gathering
process, a gathering process that would combine new information with the information you already
know about the world. It would mean contextualising it for all these different actors. We would require
a way that kept the actors honest, which is why WikiLeaks which would grow out of this yoking of
quantum mechanics to journalistic ethics would require the involvement of the mainstream press in
the effort to publish material that led to a greater state of justice. In this way, the flow of information
would not be a matter for single journalists alone, or for individual media organisations, but for societies
working together.
At the time I was still at university, but everything had led to this, and there was some way to go. Its
important to write it down, because later hysteria and blaming and mistakes including mistakes on my
part would obfuscate the basic philosophy of change I was aiming for. Later on, it would always baffle
me, when I was too much in the public eye, how people wouldnt want to handle the ideas being
generated. They wouldnt have a clue about the issues at stake or the methods being deployed. They
would just want to write about my hair or my girlfriends. This has been happening to me, as you know,
on an international scale now, and I dont suppose Ive helped the situation one bit. But I didnt invent
the medias smallness: I merely got tangled up in it and tried to turn it towards something important.
But turning the medias attention towards, say, justice, or the real issues of cause and effect in modern
history well, even the so-called good papers are only interested for a couple of headlines and then
theyre back to how weird you are. Its the most morally offensive way of living you can imagine, to
pretend to be interested in life, and committed to the truth about it, but actually you are not interested
in complexity at all. And worse: you are cynical about the possibility of your readers interest in it. Ill
save my Jeremiad until later. But my experience at university told me how complex were the relations
between the search for truth and the possibility of justice. It took me, a former hacker, directly into the
world that produced WikiLeaks.
There are a few recurring themes in my life, and in the telling of it, too. I already mentioned reading
Solzhenitsyns Cancer Ward in Wandsworth. At one point in the story Kostoglotv is discussing the value
of university with a fellow patient: Remember, education doesnt make you smarter . . . of course you
should study. Study! Only remember for your own sake, its not the same as intelligence.
However much I learned from studying quantum mechanics, I learned almost as much from my more
frivolous-seeming activities. Ive always loved to exercise my mind in unusual ways, and this instinct was
served during this period by my starting the Melbourne University Mathematics and Statistics Society
Puzzle Hunt. For the first-ever prize hunt, in 2004, we challenged contestants to solve a wacky scenario
based around the Australian election and the death of the then Prime Minister. Who hit Howard? our
promotional material asked. John Howard seems to have been vaporised while giving a secret speech at
Melbourne University. Who was behind such a dastardly act and why? What, if anything, does it have to
do with grave robberies in marginal electorates, temperature swings and strange night-time goings on
under Melbourne University Private? There was a serious point to all this silliness, though. As I said at
the time, when I spoke to the university newspaper, Its about thinking clearly and deeply to try to solve
a problem. In the end a team of statisticians, computer programmers and a musician dug up the $200
prize buried under a garden gnome in the System Garden of the Parkville campus. I know, all this hardly
puts me up there with the great hedonists of the age, the great druggists, sexualists and rock and rollers
of the period, but, despite what they say in the papers, intellectual playfulness has always been more
my thing.
I shared such intellectual adventures with my son. I wanted to protect him from some of the real
harshness of the adult world and yet I could see he had good humour. Many parents are, I suppose,
frightened of what their children might learn, but I wanted Daniel to follow his own organic growth. By
then he would be spending half his time with his mother, and he was great with words, better than I
was. Theres always frivolity if you have a child. The pressure of adult life can knock the frivolity out of
you, just like a queer storm can blow the wind out of your sails, but I loved the fact that my son was
such an optimistic creature. We would go out exploring abandoned buildings together, and, at Christmas
one time, we gathered Barbie dolls and toy dragons and blew them up with some homemade explosives
and liquid nitrogen.
Clever children, because they pick things up quickly, then very quickly become themselves. So they start
to deviate from the average. You can see how their inquisitiveness begins to make individuals of them,
because they are looking for unusual things in their environment, things that their peers wouldnt even
begin to notice. So much of what Im telling you now is about the children, but also about myself: even
today, I constantly want to find the unexpected thing in a room or in a person. Jean Renoir once said
that in every imaginable situation theres the perfect shot: it could be through a glass or from behind
someones head. The job is to find it. Thats my instinct, anyhow, and its an instinct I love in other
people.
Im sure I felt I was in preparation for something. Not to play a giant personal part that wasnt the
intention but to bring the experience I was gathering, and the expertise I had gained, into forming an
organisation that might itself guarantee the pursuit of justice in public affairs, despite the aura of
complacency that so often surrounds them. You could say, without too much sentiment, I hope, that the
stars were coming into alignment for that organisation. I began to feel the pulse of them, the possibility
and the stars, during a trip to see a total solar eclipse in the Australian desert at the end of 2002. We
were physicists, and the tradition of skywatching in that discipline remains a thrilling part of the game.
We worked out that the eclipse would be at its best over a 7.5-kilometre track for thirty-eight seconds,
and that wed want to be at the centre of that track for the duration.
A team of us, about twelve cars in all, headed off for this three-and-a-half-day drive to find a little patch
of desert. In the event, we would have to be so precise in our predictions that wed be standing on only
one piece of ground, no more than half a kilometre long, and for this I laid out a great deal of
expenditure and came near to exhaustion. But the philosophical impact was very great on me at the
time: I finally realised that if you believe something is true, and you weigh and measure the possibilities
well, and you carry on with good faith, then your prediction will come good. I had put myself into the
project entirely and trusted our powers in conjunction with the intellectual traditions we had studied.
And it was the right thing to do.
Stick with me. Behind the setting up of WikiLeaks was not only the experience of a life, and the lives of
others, but also an experience of thinking my way towards clarity about human rights. There is no way
to give you an honest and good book without going into those ideas. I have tried to show you the extent
to which it grew out of my personal history, but a great deal of it, too, came from thinking hard about
what to do. Im told by industry-watchers that thinking is no great aphrodisiac when it comes to
celebrity memoirs: then so be it, let us agree to let this book fail as a celebrity memoir. The work of
WikiLeaks that would become so famous was born, and continues to be born, out of a passion for new
ideas about how global society might go about protecting freedom. It is also born from the application
of a scientific frame of mind to the issue of rights.
What are rights, anyway? Rights are freedoms of action that are known to be enforceable. A right
therefore implies an equal responsibility. I dont mean this in the way that right-wing journalists mean it
when they say that a petty thief has forfeited his rights because he didnt meet his responsibilities. I
mean that if we recognise that somebody possesses a right, we must also recognise our own
responsibility to protect that right. As I write these words, children are dying of starvation. I may
proclaim the right of every child to freedom from hunger but if I stand by while they starve, my words
are worthless. And yet some rights go unrealised, unenforced. An oppressive state squeezes dissidents,
tries to make them small, to lock them up, to isolate them all in an attempt to diminish their right to
speak until they are alone, chatting to themselves in an empty room. And to return, therefore, to our
goal of justice with a seemingly banal but truly fundamental observation: we cannot realise the basic
rights that underpin justice in a world of concealment, secrecy and lies. It is the right to know that draws
forth the right to speak. And, taken together, we can call these two rights the right to communicate
knowledge.
We should remember that the decision about which rights will be enforced, and which shall be ignored,
is always a matter of politics. To put it baldly: I have a single goal, not a very original one but a definite
goal to my life, which is to help in the creation of a more just society to live in. I am not for transparency
all round, or even democracy all round, but I am for justice, and the contribution we are making is to
argue the case for new inevitabilities when it comes to justice and technology. I believe we have an
innate yearning for justice. We have an innate aversion to censorship. And the Web can speak to that.
We have a responsibility to knowledge. We have a duty to information. That is why we love our libraries.
But, in the digital age, we might also understand that, finally, we have a responsibility to use our
technology to stand against those who would prevent knowledge or information from appearing in the
public record. We cannot trust newspapers alone, as they have proved again and again to be both
censors and partisans. We cannot trust broadcasters, who show, in most cases, that the value of
advertising is more compelling to them than news values. Publishing in the computer age therefore
becomes about performing the task that the systems allow and facing down the ingrained, self-
protecting habits of the old publishing way. As our work has shown and our ongoing collaborations
attest, we are not against the old media. We just forged a position that allowed us to do better
publishing on the modern scene than they could do. We work with them because we do not wish to be
rivals: we wish to pool resources, but they, as we will see in forthcoming chapters, struggle with the
notion of their own legitimacy in the computer age, and with the machinations of their own egos. That is
fine. But civilisation, if I may suggest so, is moving on without them. They are dying.
I grew towards WikiLeaks by trying to establish in my mind a science of journalistic honesty. What would
keep us honest? I had established infinite deniability of sources when I was a hacker and activist. And
now I wondered if this could help people place stories in the public domain? Could a new method of
publishing sustain a new way of localising power? It was inevitable, once the heat was on, that the old
media institutions would shy from these questions, rush into their habitual dugouts and prepare to
denounce me. But none of that matters. The more important issue is to do with how institutions adapt
to the new expectations put upon them. When clever young people trust their social media more than
they trust their elders, how will institutions prove their virtue? Our fathers took them for granted, but
our knowledge, in detail, of how human institutions actually behave across the world in the modern era
is very poor.
And that wont stick any more. People relate to each other, countries relate to each other, ideas relate
very differently now that the technology keeps the globe in touch with itself. Thats it, really. All the old
hiding places are open to exposure, and the institutions can bark, the military can weep, the New York
Times can ride its pious high horse, but it wont change the fact that people want answers now to
questions they once didnt even know were questions. And they know where to look. They know how to
talk to each other about the fact that certain public bodies are keeping secrets. As WikiLeaks began to
look possible, I started to believe, myself, that the old security state was no longer feasible. It is not an
emotional position; it is just a fact of modern life. The game is up.
But what if I have it wrong? What if justice isnt really the most important goal and I overestimated its
chances of ever being wholly achieved? Then we will have the pleasure, if only a small one, of knowing
that week by week we helped achieve some modest goals for justice. We are not an ideology and we are
not fastened to some kind of historical imperative: we are publishers who tried to respond honestly to
what was happening. Part of setting up the organisation was to do with inspiring people journalists,
broadcasters, activists, readers, viewers, ordinary punters to expect better behaviour from their
institutions and from themselves. That little dream would stand behind everything we would set out to
do.
But theres one guarantee in journalism: if you make it your business to point out a vast sickness, it
wont be long before theyre accusing you of being in the throes of some sickness yourself. I would come
to say Jaccuse, and, like all Dreyfusards, I would in quick time find myself characterised as a child-
frightening weirdo with questionable hygiene and a horrible record in the treatment of colleagues and
lovers. But that was all to come. As I left the University of Melbourne in 2006, it looked like the night sky
and my own past gave a guide to how to proceed.
I had one or two certainties. Just one or two. They were to do with how we generated our history and
our stories and our justice. George Orwell caught it best, when he wrote, in his novel Nineteen Eighty-
Four, that he who controls the present controls the past, and he who controls the past controls the
future. Orwell was talking about the power of governments to manipulate the people by propaganda,
but, increasingly, I foresaw that by using our technology to understand why certain material was kept
out of the public domain, and then devoting ourselves as publishers to making that material public, we
could subvert the meaning of Orwells words and turn them into a message of hope. Who would control
the future? All of us. The digital era could begin to answer Orwells point. The message, in fact, was the
medium. And we were the messengers. The Net would work for the cause of revelation no matter what.
And our job was to work as editors and context-makers, as well as protectors of sources. But could it
actually work? Was there a way to make such a thing reliable and how could it be funded and how
would we deal with the flak? Because one thing was certain and for sure: the messengers would be the
first to be shot.
It was a US president, Theodore Roosevelt, who pointed to a crucial truth about good governance.
Behind the ostensible government sits an invisible government, he wrote, owing no allegiance and
acknowledging no responsibility to the people. To destroy this invisible government, to befoul this
unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of statesmanship. Out of
all my youthful experience came a certainty about how to do this. It was a certainty in my imagination,
at least, and I was now ready to move and make it a progressive reality.
Authoritarian power knows how to strengthen itself through conspiracy, but it came to seem natural to
me, logical indeed, that resistance would grow in direction proportion to how much people understood
the conspiracy. I am not talking about conspiracy in the sense of secret, one-off cover-ups, the ramblings
of tinfoil-hat-wearing weirdos. I am talking about systemic conspiracy, the habitual modus operandi for
governments who prefer to do everything in secret. Information would set us free. And computer
science, as a form of maths, would be our aid in revealing political relationships. Conspirators trust and
depend on other conspirators I have called these dependencies patronage networks and when we
stop being hysterical about conspiring parties in society, and become instead rational, we can begin to
oppose actions they commit together that they could never commit alone.
And what does a conspiracy compute? It computes the next action of the conspiracy. By the time I was
ready to found WikiLeaks, the biggest question for me had become, How can we reduce the power of a
conspiracy? And the answer seemed within our grasp: to chase their secrets into the open air. I did not
invent opposition to these forces: I merely saw that they bred their own opposition, and then tagged
them to our new technology. Our job is to stop conspiratorial power from thinking and acting efficiently.
And the way to do this, on a global scale, is to open up those conspiracies to the people. We might
remember the soothsayers advice to Julius Caesar Security gives way to conspiracy and add a coda
of our own: And conspiracy gives way to the peoples power to know it and break its power.
I should also say something about the role of the technology in all this. The Internet by itself does not
give you freedom. The Internet is simply a way to make publishing cheap and, within the limits of local
censorship, international. But it does not give you any extra freedom. If you want freedom in the age of
the Internet, you still have to fight for it yourself. Some people have referred to the transformation of
Egypt in 2011 as the Twitter Revolution, as if Mubarak was toppled by a flash mob in Silicon Valley.
Theres a reason for the popularity of this fiction, and that is that it serves the American perception of
itself in the world as intrinsically benign. It also serves the American tendency to see any form of
popular yearning for freedom and democracy as inherently American in character. Thus Hillary Clintons
rhetoric switched in a second from Mubaraks a great guy and he should stay to Isnt it great what the
Egyptian people have done, and isnt it great how the United States did it for them? I will never know
how she managed to keep a straight face when she proclaimed, on 15 February 2011, that Internet
freedom was to be at the heart of American foreign policy on the very same day her government went
to court to force Twitter to give up the account information of three members of WikiLeaks staff.
The fight against oppressive regimes begins, and will end, always, with the fight for information and
communication. Egypt was not the Twitter Revolution, any more than the French Revolution was the
revolution of the printing press and the political pamphlet; but what they both represent are revolutions
of the people sharing ideas and information using the technology available to them, and expressing
themselves in the public space. My friend John Pilger got it right when he said that it is not WikiLeaks
the United States government is afraid of, and it is not Julian Assange that they are afraid of. What does
it matter what I know? What does it matter what WikiLeaks knows? It matters not at all. What matters
is what you know. This is all about you.
Back in Melbourne, in 2006, Im glad to say some of the old hacking spirit remained. A bunch of us were
living on a house at 177 Grattan Street, right next to a busy road, and the general chaos in the house
was only made worse, Im sure, by our mathematical adventures and nocturnal habits. In the flurry of
working things out, I had scrawled algebra and diagrams first on a number of light boards, then on the
walls and on the windows, on the tables and over anything flat, and sometimes the noise of traffic
outside would become too much for concentration. There were traffic lights outside. One day, in the old
style, we hacked into the city traffic system and changed the lights to be on permanent green. That put
an end to the revving for a while, though not for long enough.
It was around this time I began to think about my biological father. I had no view of him when I was a
child. I had a view of my stepfather as a good father and was loyal to him in that way. I called him Dad.
My actual father wasnt mentioned much, neither pejoratively or otherwise, and I suppose that was just
tactful of my mother, given Bretts commitment to us. There had been no visitation and that was
standard in Australia at the time; the idea was that you didnt contaminate the dynamics of the new
family with regular and possibly resentful incursions from the old. My childhood was pretty much
without stress and I didnt think about him all that often.
But something happens to boys in puberty. You have this sudden spike in self-awareness and hopefully
in intelligence. Youre suddenly embracing the world and rejecting parts of it, too. In quick time I was a
father myself, and I had taught myself with books. The books had become special to me, all that
Dostoevsky, Koestler, Kafka, and I think I realised at the time that I wasnt getting that interest from a
mysterious source. It took me years to discover that it was probably coming from my father. During
those years, it seemed an unnecessary emotional complication, the idea of seeking out my father, but,
nonetheless, I felt his presence in me. By the time I was completing university, I saw that a significant
part of who I was, whoever I was, had come from this invisible person who might have helped me.
After a little correspondence, we spoke on the phone. And then I went up to Sydney to see him. It was
odd. They came to the airport to meet me my father, his partner and a son. I had brought my bike with
me, which my father decided to ride back to their house in New Town, while we went ahead in the car.
The partner was curious: a film producer, clearly besotted with him but in some way unconventional.
My father had, at some point around thirty-five, decided to retrain as an actor. I dont know if the
experience was an opening-up of things, or a closing-down, but it was poignant all the same to be in the
house and see him. And I had a weird experience there. In the evening I walked around the house
looking at his bookshelves. I found myself getting sort of angry as I did so, because there, on shelf after
shelf, were the exact same books as those I had bought and read myself. I suddenly realised I had
started from the bottom of myself, on the first rung, and built myself up via many trials and tribulations,
when, all the time, if I had only known him, I might just have picked his books down from the shelf.
Maybe the feeling was acute because of the work I had embarked on, the investigations of cause and
effect, the attempt to find a scientific basis for understanding the relationship between individuals and
authority. Anyway, the feeling was powerful. It galvanised me, somehow. I suddenly knew there was this
genetic connection between us, an intellectual temper as much as anything, and that I had missed out
by not having him to refer to or learn from. I was struck during that visit by a sense that I had done too
much on my own. Perhaps, if Id known him, I would have built faster. It wasnt about love; it was about
rapport. He had a kind of cultivated graciousness that made you warm to him and I found it easy to talk
to him, even though he could sometimes be aloof. We still have that ability to talk to each other very
easily, having this instant access to one anothers mental make-up. I never had a mentor. On reflection,
that might always have been a problem for me. I was forced to make myself up as I went along and was
happy to be a mentor to other people. Its odd, that. It leaves you always having to play the part of the
strong one.
I always knew I was different, but meeting him made me feel less so. It would probably be fair to say
that Im not good at making people feel relaxed. I was born arguing. And there is always so much to fix
and so little time. My father was also a yoga teacher, and I once went with him to an early morning yoga
class, after which everybody met in a caf for breakfast. People were happy and drinking their orange
juice or whatever and somehow I started a debate about maternity care. You could feel the agitation,
but I had fixed upon this intellectual problem and continued making my point, while, one by one, people
started peeling away from the table. I didnt know these people from the yoga class especially well and
eventually I saw Id emptied the table. When most people sit down, they look for commonality, but I
dont, I look for difference. But these people had paid their $25 to feel relaxed and they ended up
drinking juice with this guy trying to get an unruly debate doing. Its just part of the story. Being relaxed
was not relaxing to me. I know my faults.
I saw my father was the same. But maybe I did better not to be surrounded by his books and his
patronage. I had to fend for myself and find my own ground, not being able to rely on the established
power network of my father and all he stood for. As he and my mother would once have avowed in their
60s heyday: the personal is political. And maybe my avoidance of him all those years was part of my
politics. I wanted to find a fresh way to be in the world, and, by then, in 2006, I wanted the world to be
free of the taint of patronage, the conspiracy of mutually assured benefits that make the world tick and
eventually cause it to explode.
8
THE BIRTH OF WIKILEAKS
And so the rubber hits the road. I happen to have seen many institutions from the inside, either by going
out to greet them or by hacking their systems and walking through their portals in the night. But in 2006
that exploration came to an end and I wanted to tackle those institutions and those governments,
wherever they led their dark lives. Im not an original political thinker, never claimed to be, but I know
the technology and I understand the structures of government; and I was ready to throw the latter,
where possible, into a bath of acid and boil them down to the bone. It occurred to me: we can just live
our lives complacently, worrying about the mortgage or whether were famous enough or rich enough
or truly loved, or we can look at the bones of our world and test if they are good and true.
When you get stuck into most institutions, you see they float on power and patronage and defend
themselves with marketing. That seems to me just a basic truth about the world, though one, Ive
learned, that most organisations will go to the wall denying. Whether its the government of Kenya or
the Bank Julius Baer, they work for themselves, and they build a clever network of people who can gain
by them, and prop them up, while ordinary people are cast into a state of disadvantage. Since my teens,
really, Id been exposed to patronage networks, and I understood their incentives. Any person or
organisation that stood against them would be murdered, either in the courts, or by intelligence agents,
or in the press. I was ready for them. I had honed the technology and the method of using cryptography
to protect sources to a point that I wouldnt even know them myself. We had the activist experience and
the will to disempower. We didnt have offices, but we had our laptops and our passports. We had
servers in different countries. We knew that we would be the most secure platform for whistleblowers
the world had ever known. We had the gumption. We had the philosophy. Game on. I registered
WikiLeaks.org on 4 October 2006. I guess I knew that my ordinary life, if Id ever had one, would never
be the same again.
I had a number of helpers or exemplars, you might say, such as the New York architect John Young, who
founded cryptome.org in 1996. Not everything on Cryptome is a leaked document, but Young does
make it his mission to publish material that governments and corporations would rather keep hidden.
Theyve been attacked by Microsoft and, like WikiLeaks, had a run-in with PayPal. Cryptome is on the
right side in the battle over information, but they dont have protection mechanisms for the people
giving material to them, and I knew that would be required. Young was treading on the right domain,
but he wasnt ready to be a publisher of last resort, which is what I envisaged, using the complex system
of deniability I had by then refined for WikiLeaks. It was all happening quickly and I wanted to make sure
the curating and archiving were excellent. Most of the work to set these things up was being done by
me at various locations around the world, with the help of some old cypherpunks. My old friend Daniel
Mathews from the maths department more of a traditional leftist, a Chomskyist, I suppose also
helped me at that time. In fact, Dan helped me to put together the founding documents for WikiLeaks,
and, later on, wrote an analysis of the first thing we ever leaked.
My job at that point was to create alliances. I was trying to build up an advisory board and tap into
future sources of data. At that stage the board was more about giving ourselves some credibility and
building contacts that could be useful later; it didnt actually sit anywhere and it didnt really do any
advising. Still, I made contact with important, inspiring people such as Daniel Ellsberg, and he agreed to
be involved and has stayed loyal throughout. A British mathematician called Ben Laurie also came on
board. His father, Peter Laurie, wrote an influential 60s book, Beneath the City Streets, about
underground nuclear bunkers and government facilities in Britain, and perhaps Ben saw something of
his fathers work in ours. I tried to build contacts with Chinese activists as well. Because we were
predominantly Western ourselves, and subject to Western jurisdictions, I tried to give birth to WikiLeaks
not as an anti-Western organisation which wasnt difficult, because its not anti-Western, its pro-
information but I knew wed turn our attention to the likes of America eventually. At first, the
corruption in African countries seemed the obvious place to start. Our philosophy was, from the
beginning, fundamentally anti-bastard, and, coarse as that seems, its also got a certain honesty.
Before the launch, the finance for registering domain names and so on came from me. Everybody else
contributed their time for free. From the start, we knew we would face legal challenges and I was keen
to register as much as possible in San Francisco, knowing that the civil liberties movement there would
prove to be significant fire-power on our behalf once we got into trouble. After that, it was just a case of
emailing everybody we could think of and waiting for the responses.
Our first leaked document, which we published on 28 December 2006, seemed to come from the Union
of Islamic Courts in Somalia, though, as we explained at the time, it was of mysterious provenance,
coming to us via a Chinese source, and we couldnt be sure that it was genuine. Following years of
violence in Somalia, which had already seen the secession of around two-thirds of the country, the
Union had begun to establish some kind of order out of the chaos. People began to feel safer in
Mogadishu and ordinary citizens became more confident that they would be protected from everyday
violence and the frequent systematic looting by warlords. Our leaked document purported to be a letter
from a military commander, an inflammatory instruction in which he referred to the Islamic Republic of
Somalia, a form of words rarely used by the Union. As you are all aware, the commander wrote, the
so-called Transitional Government formed for Somalia is hunting the Somali religious leaders and the
Muslims in general. They have influenced the International Community to believe that the Somali
religious leaders are Al-Qaeda. Intercepted email traffic that was passed to us along with this document
seemed to imply that Somali ministers, including the minister for petroleum, were preparing to meet
with Chinese officials. It appeared to reveal something that people should have known about the Somali
attitude to China and the Chinese attitude to Africa.
This situation in Somalia was getting no real attention in the West at the time, and here, in two small
documents, one could begin to see how complex the situation was. The Union really was trying to make
a difference: under them, the garbage was collected in Mogadishu for the first time in eleven years. But,
whatever they did, the US were unthinkingly opposed to them through their strongest regional ally
Ethiopia, seeing any kind of politicisation of Islam in East Africa as somehow linked to the 1998 bombing
of the US embassy in Nairobi. Just after we prepared the leaks, Ethiopia invaded Somalia, with US
assistance. We continued to follow the situation, offering analysis, comment and other leaked
information where we could. Even if the document was a fake, perhaps prepared by Chinese sources, it
still raised important questions and showed how the disclosure of secret documents could enhance our
understanding of complex political situations. It seemed like a good first move for a young website like
WikiLeaks.
Were so used to the pieties of the Western media to say nothing of the rampant censorship in vast
portions of the East that we forget how many countries have a great hunger among their people for
free publishing and for the exposure of abuses. We got a quick response from many areas of the world,
not all reliable, not all helpful, but people were tuning in to what we were doing. From the start, of
course, being a whistleblowing website, as they call us, certain people were keen to blow the whistle on
us and that hasnt changed. My response was, Fair enough. We should eat our own dog food and see
how it tastes. We were a group of committed, idealistic people who were trying to get something done.
We could take what flak was on offer, but our basic position was strong and ethical, and I couldnt see
what rubbish could be thrown at us. I suppose I hadnt prepared myself for the personal smears, or, to
any great degree, the smearing of the whole organisation by people who decided to hate us. Some mad
individuals thought we were working for the CIA.
But we pressed on. I tried to bring in friends, but friendship, in my experience, will only buy you about
nine hours of free labour. And there was an unbelievable amount of work. I had worked through the
ideas over many years, but the programming and the logistics had to be done quickly and effectively. I
was going from Kenya to Tanzania to Cairo, building the site all the way, and thats when I really began
to live out of a small rucksack. I must say I had never been one for belongings. I didnt have many
clothes. I ate whatever was going. I spent or gave away whatever money I had almost instantly. It was
galling, watching so many of the bright computer nerds of my generation become millionaires, not
because I wanted the money but because I couldve used their help. But during these itinerant years
that began WikiLeaks, I realised, quite gradually, that I had need of very little material stuff at all. I had a
bag of socks and underwear, and a bigger bag of laptops and cables.
I came through Paris and London looking for more help. I often got volunteers for short bursts, but
theyd burn out, understandably, or want something that paid in cash or glory. At one point I was shut
up in a room in Paris on my own for two months while Nicolas Sarkozy was going about getting himself
elected as president. It was spring 2007. I felt completely crushed, knowing WikiLeaks could be great,
but that I was just ailing under the sheer volume of work required to make it happen. I was the only one
doing the work, and it was hard to remember, on those Paris nights with the sound of laughter in the
street below, that the site might actually do something good in the end. I had a girlfriend who would
come round. She just brought food and I stayed at the computer. She spoke Russian, and would
sometimes lend a hand with that, but it was a lonely time. Obsessional. I just couldnt see how to leave
the computer.
Sometimes, Id imagine I heard a squawk outside and think it must be one of the tropical birds from
Magnetic Island. Or Id feel for a second that sugar ants were running over the desk and across the floor.
It got strangely warm as the days and weeks flowed on, with me trying to ensure that the submissions
system for WikiLeaks would be totally right. Although I already had a large cache of material, we began
attracting new stuff right away, and much of that new stuff came with a promise from me that wed
publish it. So I prioritised the new stuff, while also doing the final tinkering with the system, working out
how people would email each other, and establishing how, say, the Kenyans would be able to get secure
interaction. It was like setting up a branch office of the CIA. It was inevitable that WikiLeaks would, like
any new business, have to grow organically: even more so, in our case, because it wasnt like a normal
company where you had the financing and a business model under which the whole thing would be run
by advertising or by fresh injections of venture capital. It wasnt like that. I was constantly searching for
voluntary labour and having these online meetings that Id scheduled. Once or twice, quite comically
(though not at the time), I turned out to be the only person at those online meetings. And of course the
whole thing was right on the border of schizophrenia: Id be there, tapping away, being the Chair and
the Secretary and bringing the next thing on the agenda and calling the vote. Mad. But I felt I had to go
on as if the whole thing were possible, and that way it would really happen. In the same spirit of self-
reinforcement, I would sometimes decide that a particular piece of work writing an important press
release, say would demand that I wore clothing that suited the gravity of the occasion. Imagine me
sitting in a hot poky flat in Paris, unshaven, typing away, but wearing exactly the right sort of jacket. I
know.
Daniel Mathews stayed on board as long as he could but he started to burn out with the lack of rewards.
By this time he had moved to Stanford, where he was completing his PhD and teaching at the same
time. It wasnt even, at that point, as if we were getting a lot of positive feedback from the community.
Theres wasnt any sense of us gaining an uplift in our popular reputation on the back of all the hard
work: the volunteers must have asked themselves, as they probably still do, what was in it for them and
at the time I had no answer to that. I was just intent on doing it and I hoped other people would find a
deep source of motivation in the work itself. It all got pretty difficult at several moments. It wasnt
human, the amount of work in front of us in 2007, the intensity, the pressure. I went to Africa during
that time and came back to Paris with good connections, but I wasnt feeling well. After a while it turned
into a fever and there was a sudden spike in my temperature. As youll have gathered, Im a bit of a
know-all one of those vices that can quite often be turned into a virtue so of course Ive read a few
medical textbooks and Im extremely sceptical of doctors. The fever was bad, but I felt certain it would
burn itself out in a few days. After ten days or so of sweating and suffering, it wasnt getting any better.
I had malaria. Spending time in a French hospital can make you understand why there was, and always
will be, a need in that country for revolution. A short visit, even, can make you see why Flaubert hated
the bourgeoisie and why the 60s radicals wanted to burn down the Sorbonne. Not that I came out of it
very well, either. The nurse who was looking after me had the demeanour of a natural bully. She tried to
put paracetamol in my arm. I said I wasnt in pain and didnt need it. She said they gave it to all the
patients, no matter what. I said no. She tried to stick it in during the night and I refused and she tried
again, so I ripped it out and said if she kept it up I would walk out of the hospital. I know, I know, who
would go to war with a nurse? But, Im telling you, these nurses are fascistic, and I was ill with fever so I
was a bit off my head anyway. And this old man who was sharing the room with me was cheering me
on, saying the nurses were always trying to push you around. He loved this display of resistance to the
nursing staff. They just couldnt deal with me because I wouldnt take paracetamol. And when I later got
a stomach cramp they wouldnt bring a doctor, because Id refused the stuff. The whole system is rigged
to punish people who have different ideas of how things should be done.
I dont have the gene that helps you to help yourself. And that lack would cause trouble for me all the
way down the line. But I cant make too many apologies for that: I was, and always will be, more
concerned with the wars going on around the world than with making things easier for myself. It soon
became clear that WikiLeaks would have a crucial role in throwing some true light onto these wars
when, in the autumn and winter of 2007, we received a number of documents that had come from deep
inside the US military. In November we published this incredible database that revealed all the military
equipment that has been registered by the US Army for use in Iraq, about 150,000 records. I made an
analysis of the material and saw that what it amounted to was what is called the order of battle, the
whole pyramidal planning system, detailing each unit, their name and everything they had; not
expendables like bullets, but fixed-down stuff like Persian rugs and computers. I took the complete list
and wrote a computer program to analyse it: looking at a military supply site and getting the prices, we
were able to get a sense of both the giant costs and which units had been the best-funded. About half of
all equipment purchases had been focused on dealing with insurgents improvised explosive devices,
most commonly called roadside bombs or IEDs. Most of this money was being spent on warlock
machines, which are very sophisticated jammers of radio signals. The total money spent on evading IEDs
on detectors, jammers, robot defusers, extra armour and so on amounted to about $13 billion. Even
if you adjust the figure for inflation, thats more than the entire cost of the Manhattan Project, and
something I believe the world has a right to know.
It was like setting up scaffolding for lots of new and deeper stories about what was actually happening in
Iraq and Afghanistan. Reporters, generally, were taking too much for granted; no one was asking where
the money was going and how the command structure worked.
New material began flooding towards us and I could see the change it might bring about. We were going
to crack the world open and let it flower into something new. Yet we found early on what the struggles
were going to be, and one of the biggest, one of the most persistent, was to do with journalists apathy.
You could open up all these new lines of enquiry, these new routes to justice, and they would just shrug
and say they didnt have the time to work through the material. It was frustrating. But I now see it as an
important factor in the way we see the world through the media. The journalists dont just report: their
assumptions and their apathy have a part to play in making the picture that comes down to us. And we
saw ourselves as journalists from the start. Better ones.
In the Internet Age, when so many people are driven into knowledge by their search engines, I knew the
material would filter down anyhow. Even some military personnel themselves began visiting our site, to
see what kind of replacement parts they might need for their vehicles. Irony of ironies: some NATO
military contractor would appear in a chatroom saying can you help me find a wheel for my armoured
vehicle. But the media sat back. I suppose we werent yet an authoritative source, and we couldnt offer
exclusivity a thing that controls the whole universe of motivation in the media. Worst of all, the
material we revealed was complex. But we had built a system that would alter the basic rules of
journalism. With powerful organisations, such as the British Army, for instance, the Fourth Estate is used
to looking at uniformed individuals and waiting for briefings, the journalist situating himself in a position
of deference to an unregulated body of power. We forget there is real skin under those uniforms, and
that is what we wanted to reveal, the naked truth under the disguises of power.
We had set off on a mission of grand witnessing. Computer technology was watchful, indeed, and was
coupled, in our minds, with a burgeoning psychology of decency. I wrote a blog post at the time, trying
to describe our motivations and our task. I wrote:
Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence
and thereby lose all ability to defend ourselves and those we love. In a modern economy it is impossible
to seal oneself off from injustice . . . If we can only live once, then let it be a daring adventure that draws
on all our powers. Try as I may I cannot escape the sound of suffering. Perhaps as an old man I will take
great comfort in pottering around in a lab and gently talking to students in the summer evening and will
accept suffering with insouciance. But not now. Men in their prime, if they have convictions, are tasked
to act on them.
Reality is an aspect of property. It must be seized. And investigative journalism is the noble art of seizing
reality back from the powerful. By the time WikiLeaks was up and running and making headlines, much
of this had been forgotten, or had not occurred to a new generation of journalists or readers. We made
it our task to revivify the art of observation. With all due modesty, I think we became the first
intelligence agency of the people. And those early, heady days, only four years ago in real time, but a
different era to us, were filled with a sense that we would spill over borders and prejudices, including
our own, and get better by the month. We still had a lot to learn. But the principles of good journalism
in service of better governance would remain undiluted from those days to these.
The African experience was filtered through this period, but I want to relate that experience in the next
chapter. The day before leaking the equipment list for Iraq, we hit a home run by publishing the manual
for Guantnamo Bay. Its an incredible modern document, something that one can imagine being read
in hundreds of years time by people who want to understand the ideological struggles of our period.
Not just ideological struggles, either, but mental ones. Its classification was low, so clearly the
authorities never expected this manual to be read by anyone outside the prison camp, and isnt that
part of the problem with secret documents? They are often written by people with a heavy bias, an
almost fetishistic hatred, and with a deep wish to inculcate that bias in their colleagues. The
Guantnamo manuals cover all the main aspects of how detainees are brought to the installation, how
they are to be kept, and what should happen to them. It reads like something taken in dictation for
Attila the Hun or Vlad the Impaler: relentlessly cruel, dehumanising, paranoid, dramatic and excessive, it
would make even the sleepiest tax-payer wonder what fundamental weakness, what fatal need, was
being addressed by this manual and this crazy detention centre, all paid for in tax dollars.
The manual relates how records should be faked to hide prisoners from the Red Cross. It states that all
prisoners will be placed in maximum security for their first month after arrival, to soften them up for
interrogation. The two week period following Phase 1 will continue the process of isolating the detainee
and fostering dependence on the interrogator. It outlines the whole aggressive mindset of the Quick
Response Force (QRF), the unit on permanent standby in case of a disturbance in the Detention
Facility. How the prisoners could ever cause any kind of dangerous disturbance given the conditions
they were held in was a mystery, but the QRF soldiers will don riot control gear consisting of: face
shields attached to the Kevlar, non-ballistic shin guards, a shield, and a baton. The manual shows how
fear at the highest level can inform brutality: these prisoners were not treated like normal opponents or
normal men, they were to be handled like Hollywood supervillains who posed, as they lived and
breathed, the most extraordinary security risk ever encountered. They must be kept like demons and
patrolled by dogs. One detainee was forced to wear womens underwear on his head. Psychological
torture was rampant. And the manual made it clear that disorientation and humiliation were
understood to be part of common practice. The insecurity present in all of this is truly staggering; it tells
you about America under Bush, a place that appeared willing to suspend all its constitutional decencies
in the effort to annihilate the phantoms of danger. These techniques, as later reported in the
Washington Post, informed the way things were done at Abu Ghraib. Cruelty and hatred live inside
individuals, but when I talk about injustice I am making an observation about a political and social
system. The torture techniques used at Abu Ghraib were not invented by a few working-class American
military policemen and women who were later conveniently scapegoated. They were part of the system
and the moral responsibility starts at the top.
We released this manual without fanfare and with little introduction. It didnt need anything at first
glance you saw how explosive it was. Nothing happened for a week and then we got a letter from
Southern Command, who are responsible for Guantnamo, asking us to remove it. That was good news:
it proved the publications authenticity. We ignored it. Then Wired magazine picked up the story and
later the New York Times and the Washington Post. It was the way Id always expected word to get
out, bubbling up from blogs and smaller press and into the mainstream. At first, when the heat came, it
didnt come directly to me. I was called Investigations Editor, and there wasnt yet the habit, which has
now become a contagion, of linking every WikiLeaks utterance to me. At the time I think I knew that my
past, as a convicted hacker, wouldnt necessarily help the cause wed undertaken, and I wanted to keep
my position dark as far as possible. But the rules of showbusiness, and, it must be said, the wiles of
treachery, made it predictable that I should become the Bond villain and the designated bogeyman.
As the press coverage increased, Lieutenant Colonel Edward M. Bush III, who was the public affairs
spokesman for Guantnamo, responded to our leak by saying it was no longer like that. The manual
related how things had been under Geoffrey Miller. So we then leaked the 2004 manual so that people
could compare the two. What they found was that the second manual was, if anything, worse. They
revealed how the prison would perform these show-trial rituals, and how, when a visiting dignitary
came to call, the prisoners had to turn their heads away. That kind of thing. Oh, and where was Miller
posted after Guantnamo? Abu Ghraib.
We wanted people to have an opportunity to understand exactly what was going on under our noses,
and that it stank. We were able to describe how the renditions actually happened and we printed the
floor plan of the aircraft that carried the detainees to the island. The detainees somehow required
goggles, helmets and hoods, and had to be chained to the floor. Why did the US authorities imagine
these men had superhero powers? What deep well of fantasy did that tap into?
WikiLeaks was gathering momentum. The Guantnamo leak, and the accompanying press coverage,
brought us more sensitive material. The US Armys report into the Battle of Fallujah was marked
classified for twenty-five years. But we posted it as soon as it was handed to us in December 2007. On
31 March 2004, four Americans working for the private security firm Blackwater were kidnapped by Iraqi
insurgents who beat them, burned them, and hung their bodies off a bridge. The following attack by US
troops was reactive, and the report made it clear that there had not been enough planning beforehand,
not enough understanding of the political landscape or preparing of the media. Growing civilian
casualties led to pressure on the US from the Iraqi Governing Council and a unilateral ceasefire was
announced on 9 April. The WikiLeaks documents made it clear the fighting did not cease, however the
ceasefire was a bit of a misnomer and also revealed that the whole operation had been mounted
more as a media-pleasing exercise than anything else.
Our leaked document made it clear that the attack was ordered at the behest of Donald Rumsfeld, who
resented the way Fallujah had become a symbol of resistance. There were many civilians in the area
and these facts were ignored by the US military. A journalist from Al Jazeera who was known to me,
Ahmed Mansour, was in the city during the final assault, and he and his colleague were attempting to
tell the truth about the battle and the methods being used. According to our leaked report,
approximately 150 air strikes destroyed 75 buildings, including two mosques, and the operation stirred
up a hornets nest across the Al Anbar Province. As part of the ceasefire agreement, the US insisted that
the Al Jazeera journalists be removed from the city. As our leaked document put it, Al Jazeera was
claiming that up to 600 Iraqi civilians had been killed by the US offensive. Images of dead children were
being displayed repeatedly on televisions around the world. The report-writers lamented the fact that
there were no embedded Western reporters in the area to present the views of military authorities.
In November the US attacked Fallujah again. It was later to become famous as the bloodiest battle of
the war. The Americans had used white phosphorous as part of their campaign, and while this was
perhaps not illegal it was deemed highly controversial at the very least. Indeed, Saddam Husseins
deployment of white phosphorous against his own people in 1991 was counted a war crime and used as
part of the justification for the Allied invasion of 2003. In between the original attack on Fallujah and
this second one, the scandal of Abu Ghraib broke in the worlds press or, as the writer of the report
preferred to see it, ignoring American responsibility for this scandal, the insurgents got lucky.
The work never stopped. I sent the leaked Fallujah document to 3,000 people and waited for the levees
to break. Nothing. That was one of the most baffling of all the situations weve got into. Just no
response. People had been writing about Fallujah for the previous three years; they never had a
document from inside the mind of the US military like this one, and yet they didnt jump on it. I must
say, I wasnt just baffled at my journalistic colleagues at that point, I was ashamed of them. The
shallowness exhibited by those correspondents is actually mindblowing, if you think about it, and you
are left, or I was left at the time, wondering if the mainstream of Western journalism wasnt just made
up of theres no other word wankers.
But, for the long term, there was a lesson. It would become part of my thinking when it came to the
Afghan War Logs. What were the unfakeable metrics in modern journalism? They were sales, hits, take-
up and exclusivity. And I had to learn how to use these metrics to get the stories out.
9
THE WORLD THAT CAME IN FROM THE COLD
Not long before the incidents Ive just been writing about, I made a point of going to Africa and testing
my ground. It was early days for WikiLeaks and I felt I had to travel in order to broaden, if you like, the
mind of the project. I knew that the World Social Forum would be happening in Nairobi in January 2007,
and a Melbourne friend, Matt Smith, was willing to finance some of the journey and come with me. The
forum sprang up as an alternative to the World Economic Forum. As it was happening in Kenya, I knew it
would attract many NGOs and connected participants, which made it the ideal place to give the first full-
blown talk about WikiLeaks. I hoped at the time that it would attract volunteers and contacts. We had
published a few of our early things, but the big initial leaks Guantnamo and Fallujah were to come.
Im sure I felt that opening my stall in Africa would set the tone for us, making it plain from the start that
we were a global organisation, not a Western one, with eyes everywhere.
I immediately felt a connection with Africa. The air was different, and during the great period of labour
to set things up, I needed a change of atmosphere, as well as the tonic sense of expansiveness that
seemed to travel on the wind. Isak Dinesen caught the perfect breeze Im talking about in Out of Africa.
In the middle of the day the air was alive over the land, she writes, like a flame burning; it scintillated,
waved and shone like running water, mirrored and doubled all objects . . . Up in this high air you
breathed easily, drawing a vital assurance and lightness of heart. In the highlands you woke up in the
morning and thought: Here I am, where I ought to be.
After buying our $50 visas, Matt and I drove in from the airport and watched the giraffes loping in the
distance. They say human beings initially came out of the Rift Valley in Kenya, and so, at some level,
coming to Kenya is always a returning to Kenya: you are coming back to what your biology expects, to a
certain right degree of light and humidity and temperature. Maybe that is why people often remark how
at home they feel. Isak Dinesen said it, but we all say it when were in Kenya. And the people are
friendly. For someone like me, who has always been on the road, there was this sense of generosity and
general satisfaction that this was the place to be. The rates of crime and the incidence of Aids, of course,
are very high, but if I felt at all tense on our way to Kisumu and the Commonwealth Games Stadium, it
was because I felt so sure that this visit would be crucial to the development of WikiLeaks.
Think global, act local had long been an article of faith among the left-wingers that predominantly
made up the crowd at the World Social Forum, but I preferred to see things slightly differently. When
the world only extended to your surrounding villages, hills and mountains, and beyond them was only
legend, saving the world was approachable and a natural activity to all of independent character. But in
the modern world, one needs only a minimum of education and a little access to the media to realise
how vast the world is. And this fact is demoralising. It is impossible to envisage your actions making any
significant difference. To interact meaningfully with the world, one either has to constrain ones
imagination to artificially shrink the world or try in some way to really engage with the world as you
perceive it now, information overload and all. I was becoming convinced that this second option was the
only way to achieve real change, and coming to Africa was in a way an attempt to test that out, to see
whether WikiLeaks could be an organisation that thought globally and acted globally.
Nairobi was quite wild, in a way. We were staying in tents, three tents, as it happens, one built inside
the other to avoid mosquitoes (fat chance), and we quickly found ourselves helping to organise the
recording, translation and archiving of the events at the forum. At one point I moved into the
presidents suite at the stadium. It was thought to be a good centre from which to co-ordinate things. A
large desk, cheap Georgian furniture everywhere, and paintings of former president Daniel Arap Moi
looking down from the sun-bleached walls. The corridors were lined with female security officers
bearing wooden truncheons. On one of the days there was a commotion in the corridor and suddenly,
out of nowhere, a crowd of Kenyan Communist Party members came bustling down the hall, pressing
the guards and everyone else to the walls as they entered our makeshift office. They were accompanied
by a large press pack carrying notebooks and video cameras. A large black woman threw herself on the
desk, stood up, and began ranting first in Swahili and then in English, demanding that the World Social
Forums entrance fees must be reduced to allow greater access for people from the Kabira slums. She
gave this loud press conference from the top of the desk and then vanished, taking the crowd with her.
Yes, I thought, now here is a country I can work with.
After twenty-four years of misrule, Daniel Arap Moi was finally removed from power at the Kenyan
election of 2002. His replacement, Mwai Kibaki of the Rainbow Coalition, was elected chiefly on an
anti-corruption platform, but by the time we arrived it wasnt looking so cool. Despite the new regime
having gained support and momentum out of the movement for constitutional reform, we found that
they were little better than Moi and were carrying out a whole new rash of injustices and oppressions.
Kibaki himself, in fact, wasnt quite the new broom that was hoped for: a scion of the old regime, he
developed an alarming capacity for suppressing free speech. The offices of the Kenyan newspaper The
Standard had been raided by the police six months before we arrived and the editorial staff had been
incarcerated for half a day. The Standard had managed to capture this brutality on their security
cameras, and, excitingly from our perspective, were able to report it in full. But an atmosphere of
intimidation lingered, and it became clear that the press existed there in a state of threat, which
encouraged us to think we might help them.
A company called Kroll Associates, who did private investigative work into businesses and assets, looking
at accounts and security systems, were commissioned by the Kibaki regime to find out what had
happened to the money embezzled by former president Moi. It looked like Kibaki wanted some of this
money but also, clearly, he wanted to use this information to blackmail Moi into compliance with the
new dispensation. (Moi was still a powerful figure on the scene.) The report revealed that up to
1billion had been channelled abroad by Moi, his sons and their associates through a litany of
companies and banks. The report was explosive in that it names the banks in Zurich and London, and
gives details of further properties and commercial interests in America and Kenya. The staff at Kroll
didnt pull any punches. These extracts concern a Moi associate, accused of being one of the biggest
money-launderers in Geneva:
Katri devised an elaborate system. Rather than send corrupt money straight to banks overseas, he
would use local banks in Kenya, such as Trans National Bank, owned by the Mois, Biwott and Kulei, to
send vast sums through Nostro accounts the banks Forex accounts overseas and then several
months/years later would send the money on and split it between several banks such as UBP . . . Katri
has gone underground since 2001, when a Swiss investigation was launched into his dealings in Kenya. It
is understood that he lives in Monte Carlo. Katri has also been connected to the Halliburton scandal in
Nigeria through Jeffrey Tessler who he helped to set up an account at UBP five years ago. Tessler, an
unscrupulous lawyer from north London, was getting commissions somehow connected to the bribes
paid out by Halliburton, and new evidence implies he is still receiving commissions.
Even major global institutions such as Barclays and HSBC were named, and while there was no
suggestion that they themselves had done anything illegal, the report showed that no part of the
international financial system was free from the taint of stolen, dirty money. Looking at the report, you
could also see exactly how such money had been routed through other jurisdictions, wearing a new
disguise at each stage, often but not always ending up in international tax havens. This was exactly the
kind of corruption WikiLeaks was set up to reveal. And upending tax havens would be a future hobby of
ours.
I got hold of this document and later, after leaving Africa, it became an important new posting for us.
We fed it to Xan Rice of the Guardian, who ran it as a front-page story on 31 August 2007, headlined
The Looting of Kenya. The coverage was good but was not much picked up by other papers in Britain.
The reaction in Kenya itself was giant: they took their lead from the Guardian, though they were more
cautious in the way they presented the story. The Kibaki regimes denials were prominent, though we
felt satisfied, knowing the secret was not only out but that the long-term effects were sizeable. It was
clear that Kibaki, who had been supported by Moi perhaps as a result of the leverage Kibaki had
gained by commissioning the report in the first place was now on the back foot and that was a gain for
justice. A former UK High Commissioner to Kenya had a clear view of it when he said that the report had
enough in it to blow not just the Mois but most of the Kenyan establishment out of the water.
From our point of view, the leak supported the idea that oppressed media organisations could suddenly
be freed when a story that mattered to them and which they couldnt reveal on their own was given
legitimacy and the oxygen of international exposure first. WikiLeaks was the publisher of last resort, but
also an untouchable platform: we had proved it, and established a modus operandi for the future.
We had other business in Kenya, culminating in a document we published in November 2008 detailing
cases where, in seeking to confront a criminal organisation known as the Mungiki, the Kenyan police had
ignored any kind of consideration of the basic principles of evidence, due process or justice, and had
engaged in the extra-judicial murders of hundreds of people. We published this information in the form
of a heart-rending report called The Cry of Blood, containing the stories of some of the disappeared
a 26-year-old mechanic, a farm help in Kanunga, a taxi driver in Eastleigh, a hawker in Baba Dogo
and photographs of some of the victims and the places their bodies had been dumped. Police had
sometimes demanded large sums of money from family members to spare the lives of arrested men.
This was a huge, shocking story, and two of the human rights activists who had helped us, Oscar Kungara
and Paul Ulu, were later followed by the police and shot dead in the street in central Nairobi. We made
this front-page material on WikiLeaks and made the point that the possible murder of at least 349
people by an out-of-control police force was implied by the material we were seeing. Our commentary
made it clear that this was comparable to what happened in Chile under Pinochet. And this was not
happening in the Congo, or in neighbouring Sudan: Kenya is a place with significant business
development and a sophisticated relationship with the West.
We kept at it, kept publishing stuff that the African papers were too frightened to publish, and
eventually Philip Alston, an Australian who was the UN Special Reporter on Extra-Judicial Killings, came
to Nairobi for a week to document what had happened and what had been revealed. The issue was now
out and has never really gone away since. We had worked on it non-stop while fighting to breathe life
into WikiLeaks. Kenya was a massive test case. We gave it everything we had and our work began to
change the picture. We wanted to do better and do more, but were happy when, after all that, we won
the Amnesty International Reporting Award for our coverage of the country.
But things are never easy for more than a minute at a time. The thing about WikiLeaks, right from the
start, is that we were subject to hostile fire from the left as much as the right. You think you have
natural allies, but, when youre dealing with material this sensitive, and with journalists under such
economic pressure in a culture of distrust, you find that everywhere you turn there are people waving
their finger at you. Thats fine, so far as it goes, and it must come with the territory, but its vexing to
find yourself in conflict with people you thought were on the same side. During the Kenyan campaign,
we came across a very important book by Michaela Wrong called Its Our Turn to Eat. The book gave a
detailed insight into the ways of Kenyan corruption and was banned there, or banned in the sense that
no one would distribute it and no bookseller would stock it. And so, seeking to expose the immorality of
the ban and ensure that Kenyans could gain access to the text despite the actions of their government,
we outwitted the censor by leaking on the site a typeset PDF of the book. What we failed to outwit,
however, or in any way foresee, was the authors sense of copyright. Michaela Wrong erupted. She felt
that we were robbing her not only of her royalties, but also, in some way, of the credit to which she felt
she was her due.
I think I made the point that such a book, such an excellent book, might originally have been her baby,
but it was now out there in the world, and had captured the attention and imagination of the people of
Kenya it was now bigger than her alone. I eventually saw her argument in terms of how our posting of
it might eat into Western sales, so I put her in touch with our friend Mwalimu Mati, who had been
involved in so much of our work in Kenya, suggesting that he could buy the rights to distribute the book
in Kenya in paper and electronic form. But the author was slighted and remained so. We were trying to
create deterrents and reforms in Kenya, and these people, these smart people, were attacking us for not
respecting democracy by insulting copyright law. I found the whole thing baffling, but another early
lesson in the complications of political commitment. People have their different priorities, for sure, and
it would be a mistake to assume that people who were critical of the authorities were immune from
criticism of each other. The left has always been provincial in that way, and I wrongly imagined the
issues were much bigger in all our minds. But you cant predict whats going to ail people: one persons
bigness is another persons smallness, and it was obvious already that we were being characterised as
mavericks who stepped on peoples toes. Im sure we could have been more sensitive to that, but the
issues seemed to me too pressing for social or professional niceties, and I guess I wrongly assumed Ms
Wrong would be pleased to know her book was so appreciated. Maybe I was over-zealous, but you get
like that when the stakes are so high and the conditions so desperate.
We had to learn to deal with resistance. Another person we had admired, a transparency activist called
Steven Aftergood, head of the Federation of American Scientists Secrecy Project and someone I had
originally hoped to recruit to our advisory board, also came after us from our own side. When it came to
government corruption, we imagined we could begin to become the peoples silent advocate in the
room. But often we found the prosecution side included people we thought we might have counted on
for guidance, for support, for encouragement, or just for tolerance. Aftergood attacked our editorial
judgement, feeling some of our targets were undeserving or unworthy of scrutiny the Church of
Scientology, for instance, or the operating manual for the US militarys guided bombs while other work
of ours he felt to be irresponsible.
It was never my intention to be responsible in the sense that Aftergood understands the word. We are
not of a party or a state; our remit is neither national nor corporate, and we hold no candle for one
grouping over another. Unlike too many media organisations, we are not parti pris. We will shine a light
into any murky corner. When Aftergood spoke of responsibility, he was invoking a misnomer: what he
really meant, though he couldnt see it, was that we should take on trust the idea that some secrets
have to be kept secret just because a powerful and interested party said so. He knows too much about
the self-serving nature of modern government to imagine that we could ever take such a thing on trust.
And neither should he. The fact was our organisation was taking a tough new stand. Invading peoples
privacy, as he put it at the time, was no great crime in my book, not when the potential crimes of the
people whose privacy we were invading were evidently so great and so covered up. Aftergood disliked
some of the same things we did, but he wasnt willing to shake them down. He was timid. And, like so
many, he was probably dismayed at the way our relentless working methods put the softly-softly
approach that he favoured in the shade.
To our emerging critics, we were primitive. But in my mind, we were not primitive enough. You have to
get over your own need for reassurance and resist the comfort zone of knowing youre only doing what
others have done or are doing around you. Innovation cant work with that. We would certainly make
mistakes, but even our mistakes would be honest if we resisted the temptation to shy away from
danger. To me, a great number of those working for liberal causes are not only shy but borderline
collusive. They want change to happen nicely, and it wont. They want decency to come about without
anybody suffering or being embarrassed, and it wont. And most of all they want to give many of the
enemies of open government the benefit of the doubt, and I dont. Its not just a difference of approach,
its a complete schism in our respective philosophy. You cant go about disclosure in the hope that it
wont spoil anybodys dinner.
My travels in Africa also took me to Cairo. An American contact we had made in Kenya invited us to
share the place she was staying in, a house that belonged to a former Miss Egypt. It was a grand house,
and there were several paintings of Miss Egypt on the walls, so it was an amusingly surreal place to stay.
However, it was right next to the American embassy there was a van full of soldiers permanently
stationed near our front door and I thought it might be easier to keep a low profile if I moved
somewhere else. Together with a Korean girl I had also met in Kenya, I moved into an apartment near
the Nile. It was an enormous, tall building and we were almost on the top floor; sometimes when the
Cairo smog wasnt too bad we could see the Great Pyramids through the windows.
It was easy to sense the tension under the surface in Egypt. There were always lots of police on the
streets and there was an air of controlled confrontation, particularly in the centre and near to
government buildings. But the great changes we have seen recently were still four years away, and like
many people I didnt see them coming. Cairo had an influence on me in more emotional ways, I
suppose. Being in that teeming metropolis of the rapidly developing world validated my sense that, to
have a true impact, WikiLeaks would have to be an organisation with global reach.
I soon felt a great affection for Cairo. I enjoyed the bustle and the activity of the streets, the cafs, the
Shisha in the evening. On the roof of an apartment building near me a family kept a tiny city farm. Every
morning the daughter would feed and water a few sheep, while her brother released his flock of pigeons
from their cages to search the city for scraps. He had trained them to follow a huge chequered flag, and
I used to love to watch him waving this flag against the sky like some Grand Prix starter, while the call to
prayer rose from mosque to citadel and the sun lit the haze into a furnace.
By Christmas 2007, we had a number of successes or succs de scandale under our belts. Fallujah
and Guantnamo had brought too little attention, given the size of the leaks, and we continued to add
to the Kenyan revelations. I attended the 24th Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin, which allowed
me to meet some of the people Id been chatting to or otherwise dealing with online. Among these was
an excitable fan of our work called Daniel Domscheit-Berg, a systems company employee who soon
proved useful for some tasks. From the beginning, Daniel Schmitt, as he was referred to then, was a
curious asset. He couldnt write code, but he could prove dutiful to the needs of the growing
organisation. We couldnt have guessed then how ambitious or how reckless he would become. But
need is blind when it comes to volunteers, and we badly required as much help as we could get.
The Chaos Computer Club, which organised the convention in Berlin right at the end of 2007, is famous
for good reasons and bad ones. They are a hackers organisation, founded in 1981 to campaign for
technological progress, openness, freedom of information and free public access to technology. They
quickly grew from their origins in Berlin and they are now a powerful, cross-border organisation that
keeps a close eye on how information technology is being used and abused in contemporary societies.
They have protested against French nuclear testing and against the use of biometric data in passports,
but others of the group, led by Karl Koch, were arrested for cyber-espionage activities in the late 80s,
including taking material from corporate and government computers in the US and feeding it to the
KGB.
That wasnt our bag. We admired the brainpower in the group and supported its broad efforts to
question how information was used, but WikiLeaks never saw itself as an organisation that would
campaign for one ideology against another, or for one nation against others. Inside the organisation, we
are a broad church and our enemies are, in each case, and everywhere, the enemies of truth. We
accepted no piety when it came to the work of security services and governments (a fact that would
bring us much hostility when it came to altering the documents we leaked); we simply felt it was for
history to judge what was in the public interest and what was not. We would use our best editorial
judgement, but it was not for us to do as most media organisations do, and act as censors on behalf of
governments and commercial interests. We would reveal what we judged should never have been made
covert: others would take it further. And almost always our efforts would lead us into a lions den of
self-interest.
Talking about the lions roar? Look at the case of Switzerlands Bank Julius Baer, who even in times of
banking crisis were subject to allegations of malfeasance thanks to our having taken custody of
important revelations about them in January 2008. Julius Baer is the largest Swiss bank and it has trusts
in the Cayman Islands. We were given evidence that those trusts were used for asset-hiding and tax
minimisation, arguably tax avoidance, and it seemed entirely in the public interest that we revealed
what these people were doing and to what extent they were doing it. Right on publication, we received
legal notice from a lawyer who wouldnt even reveal who his client was, but the potential litigant was
Julius Baer. The legal firm, Ludley & Sanger, are a Hollywood outfit representing the likes of Celine Dion
and Arnold Schwarzenegger, who specialise in keeping things out of print. Theyre very aggressive and
they came on hard. They made various threats and were going on about banking law and secrecy law in
the Cayman Islands and in Switzerland, proper baloney, but our own lawyer told us these people were
too powerful to mess with, too connected, too rich, that they would stop at nothing and the whole thing
was too murky. I said we would certainly go ahead and publish and stand by the publication: I had
established certain principles against censorship and would not fold. We had made promises that if
sources gave us good material we would publish it, and we were uncensorable: thats what our
technology dictated, and thats what our ethic dictated, too, as a matter of fact. It didnt mean, We are
uncensorable, except in cases where a very rich person appears to scare us off. I knew that, tactically,
this might be a very difficult (and potentially ruinous) first fight, but we had established a principle and
that was that.
Like everything else, it was a giant lesson delivered in real time. We were being brutally squeezed by a
relentless patronage network, in this case two branches of that network, Julius Baer and the American
lawyers, the former protecting a mint and the latter making a mint, and determined to protect these
things at all cost, even in the face of our vulnerability and our chutzpah. They immediately brought a
case against us in San Francisco, as a result of which the judge repealed our domain name,
WikiLeaks.org, and demanded to know who had registered it and from what address. The company,
Dinadot, immediately rolled over and closed the site. But we had set a trap for our opponents by
registering in San Francisco, the cultural centre of gravity for the cypherpunks and the Californian
instinct for non-conformity and free speech. They could have sued us in Switzerland or London, but by
going through with San Francisco they immediately faced the wrath of the ACLU, the Committee of the
Freedom of the Press and many other organisations. When we went back to court we had twenty-two
organisations and a battalion of lawyers fighting for us, with favourable coverage in the New York Times
and CBS giving out our domain number (since the name was banned) in order to reach us (Free speech
has a number). We had set up other ways of accessing our site, anyway, via secret links and mirror sites,
which we knew would come in useful. Youve got to remember, we established ourselves knowing we
would, early and late, be dealing with the Chinese and their throwing-up of firewalls.
We won the case completely against Julius Baer and it was seen as being a crucial win, not only for us
but for First Amendment campaigners all over the place. The bank were just about to launch themselves
in America before the court case, and afterwards they held off. It was an important victory because it
showed how WikiLeaks would stand up to just about anyone and not be immediately crushed by those
who could pay for the kind of lawyers who facilitate such crushing. The sub-prime thing was riding high
and the British mortgage lender Northern Rock had already gone under. It was looking like a bad time
for a private bank to be suing the arse off a not-for-profit whistleblowing team.
The real tragedy of this incident was that it finally saw the end of Daniel Mathews involvement with
WikiLeaks. Dans name was on quite a few bits of paperwork, and Julius Baer were looking for anybody
and everybody they could prosecute. He was sitting in his office at Stanford one afternoon, marking his
students homework, when some bloke walked in with a huge stack of paper and slapped it down on the
desk. He told me afterwards that his first thought was that it was the biggest homework assignment
hed ever seen, but, no, it was a subpoena. Dan found this quite scary and afterwards elected to focus
on his academic career. Hes now a visiting assistant professor at another American university but hes
definitely one of the good guys and I will always value his support and his friendship.
The guy who brought us the material on Julius Baer, Rudolf Elmer, wished to be outed, and he was fined
7,500. He then said he wanted to call a press conference at which he could be seen handing over to me
two CDs full of data about the bank. We did the press conference, and it seems it might bring him
further trouble, but whos to say what was on the CDs? You cant prosecute a person for handing
another person a couple of blank CDs, unless you can prove there was something on them. Deniability is
not just a word, its a way of life and a programme for us. We had faced big threats before, not least
from the Church of Scientology. And we always seek to reward our torturers with further revelations.
Lawyers often behave like thieves, especially the good ones. And legal action has proved a blunt
instrument with which to dissect WikiLeaks. We are designed like the many-headed Hydra: you cut off
one of our heads and another one pops up elsewhere. This only reflects the irrepressible nature of
peoples appetite for the truth, and my own liking for a scrap. There would be court cases that seemed
to me terribly sinister, the kind one would relish neither fighting nor winning one can never relish
losing but the majority of those who sought legal injunction against the activities of WikiLeaks can best
be understood with reference to King Canute. He ordered the waves to go back and they ignored him,
wetting his feet.
Occasionally, though, you see how legal action has simply scared a good moral cause out of its wits at
the first post. Late in 2008, we became aware that eight Guardian and Observer stories on Nadhmi
Auchi, an Iraqi-British billionaire whose bank, BNP Paribas, was the sole financial institution receiving
billions in oil-for-food programme money during the regime of Saddam Hussein, had been pulled from
their website. Auchi has been the subject of a 2004 Pentagon Inspector Generals report into mobile
telecommunication licences. And before that, in 2003, he had been extradited from the UK to France
and convicted over multi-million-dollar kickbacks on Kuwaiti government asset sales. Martin Bright, a
reporter on the New Statesman, had, in 2008, drawn attention to the fact that the Guardian/Observer
had bowed to legal pressure from Auchi: [They had] been forced to pull down six articles about Nadhmi
Auchi, the Iraqi businessman convicted of fraud in France in 2003. Auchi has been on the warpath since
his name was connected with Tony Rezko, the Illinois fundraiser currently on trial in America, who was
one of Barack Obamas earliest backers. In the UK, the Times has been pursuing the story with
impressive tenacity. When Bright first posted these words, he was able to name the six articles
censored by Auchis legal efforts and removed from the online archive of the Guardian/Observer. Then,
in a bizarre twist straight out of Kafka, Brights New Statesman blog was itself subject to the
interference of Auchis long legal arm, and he was forced to remove the names of the censored articles
and amend his own piece. The story is one of those that points up the baroque nature of journalistic
fearfulness. When WikiLeaks reported the whole thing and the New Statesman tried to link to our
coverage, they received a letter from legal firm Carter-Ruck.
By the end of 2008 we were drowning in leaked documents from all over the world. Every day brought
new material, much of it requiring further research and commentary by us before publication. Had we
been a single newspaper or a single broadcaster, we wouldve had the busiest investigations team in the
world, turning out exclusive stories hand over fist. But WikiLeaks didnt see itself in the role of
proprietor, or commercial engine, even though, I have to admit, commercial motives are often the only
real metric with which to measure what a piece of information is worth. We didnt want to make
money, but we wanted to deal with media organisations that could fasten our stories to a bank of
journalists and a distribution network, and those organisations understood their work in commercial
terms to do with tight deadlines and exclusivity. At this period, we were trying to learn to work with that
while also keeping the website true to itself.
All sorts of stories were bursting over the dam: late in 2008 we released the membership list of the
British National Party. This is a neo-fascist organisation that believes in a white-only Britain; yet their
members included police officers, serving soldiers and government employees; people who have a
moral and professional obligation to serve all British people equally, regardless of race. Then, in
December, we put out a private report authored by the South African Competition Commission, which
told of cartel behaviour in the big South African banks. The most important sections had been redacted,
supposedly to protect commercially sensitive data, but we published the report in full. Heres an
example of a commercially sensitive sentence: It is evident that Absa failed to pass on these unit cost
savings to any significant extent to its customers by way of price reductions, choosing instead to retain
most of these savings as profits. Two months later, we came out with 6,700 reports written in private
for US Congressmen, which gave a detailed picture of their preoccupations and sources of information.
These reports are not classified, but they are only made available to Congressmen, who choose only to
release some of them when it serves their own political purposes, not when the information is
embarrassing or damaging to the government but important to the public. By publishing them we
wanted to give American voters the opportunity to measure the actions of their elected representatives
against the information with which they had been provided. We were releasing the reports on the basis
of public interest, not political calculation. We posted the private emails of Sarah Palin in an attempt to
highlight the fact that she was conducting political business via a private email address, arguably in
order to avoid having to comply with rules about retaining copies of messages on the public record.
Throughout this time we were attending conferences on journalism and free speech around the world
to seed our ideas and recruit support.
I had become a full-time spare-room guy. I didnt own a car or a house. I didnt see my family much. I
didnt have money and I had one pair of shoes. It was all perfectly reasonable and not an issue. I had
some books and a razor and a couple of laptops. Friends would cut my hair, often while I worked, and,
thankfully, when it came to equipment and costs, there always appeared to be someone willing to put
their credit card where their passion was. WikiLeaks has been hand-to-mouth from day one, and maybe
it has to be: it works from principle not profit, and the work, frankly, is obsessional, and was from the
moment we saw how much people wanted to reveal.
I felt 2009 was going to be the start of a big few years. We were getting better at what we did, and the
world was sitting up now and listening. We were refining our methods, pissing off bigger and more
fearsome giants, and I began to think it would be great to find a haven from which to work. Surely, the
world must possess a place that wanted to be an island of free speech, a world of anti-censorship within
the larger world. For a time it appeared the coup de grce would be to establish such a base in Africa,
but it was too complicated there and, in a purely practical sense, too hot to store the servers. What
about Sweden, Iceland, Ireland, or some other brand new Xanadu of the truth? I couldnt live out of a
rucksack for ever or maybe I would, or should, because the organisation depended on a hierarchy of
nothingness in order to work. In the same vein, at the beginning of this seismic period, I was already
becoming my own ghost, an author in charge, but barely, of my own fiction, as the world got busy trying
to turn me into something I was not.
10
ICELAND
The history of journalism is the history of leaks. Only in fiction is it the case that everything that happens
is witnessed, in some sense, by the author. In journalism, the witness is often absent, and we rely on
reports of the truth that use witness statements as part of the picture. In many cases, good journalism
will rely on an absent witness, who, either on or off the record, will leak what they know. We forget that
everyday journalism relies on the leak to an extraordinary degree. According to documents seen by the
Washington Post. According to an unnamed senior official speaking yesterday. Sources close to the
subject say. Information received by the Daily Telegraph suggests. The truth does not always come as
a single spy, but it often comes inadvertently, or covertly, or via a blind source, and this has always been
the case. We gather what we see, but also we gather what has been seen by people beyond the range of
our own eyes.
With a trusted colleague, Rop Gonggrijp founder of one of the first ISPs in the Netherlands and
organiser of a long-running hacking conference in Amsterdam I took up an invitation to attend the
Hack in the Box Conference in Malaysia in October 2009. A lot of those gathered there were politically-
minded and had been involved in the local reform movement. The government of Mahathir, leader of
the Barisan Nasional, had been subject to strong opposition and calls for reform, spearheaded by Anwar
Ibrahim of the Peoples Justice Party. Ibrahim had previously, as finance minister, steered Malaysia out
of financial crisis and was named Asian of the Year by Newsweek in 1998. But by the time we arrived
in Kuala Lumpur, things had long since changed for Ibrahim. After criticising the prime minister, he had
served six years in prison for corruption and was constantly smeared with sex allegations. When he got
out of prison, he spent time advising the World Bank and served as a professor at St Anthonys College,
Oxford, and at Johns Hopkins, among other institutions, before returning to Malaysia and winning a
landslide election to parliament in 2008.
The speech I gave at the Hack in the Box Conference focused on the history of unauthorised disclosure
in the media. This, as I say, seems to me to be the backbone of journalism. It always surprises me when
critics remark that WikiLeaks doesnt serve the interests of journalism because, whatever you might say
about us, much of our work is, in some very obvious way, quite traditionalist. We aim to bring things
into the light which certain powers would rather remain in the dark. That could have stood as a rubric of
the Times of London during the Crimea. It was the silent motto of the Washington Post during
Watergate. Coupled with this, I had always argued that WikiLeaks should be an organisation that
partnered the established media, not one that either replaced it or shunned it. At the Malaysian
conference, I made the point that, in the future, there might be a WikiLeaks button that could be
placed on the websites of major news organisations, to be used by people who had information. We
would take on the burden of protecting the source and dealing with legal issues our specialities, if you
like while the news organisation went about preparing stories and commentary around the leak. This
was always our central idea, and though our organisation would be distracted by much hysteria over the
coming two years, we return to this, notwithstanding that other organisations based on our work would
claim the idea is new. OpenLeaks.org now uses this idea as a way of slamming the set-up of WikiLeaks,
an unfortunate playground game that does no good to anybody. But let us be clear, I laid out the idea
for co-operation with the media in Malaysia in 2009.
It was interesting to see how these subcultures work in modern life. Where the hacking scene in Europe
or Australia is made up of middle-class or working-class kids, in Asia, typically, the people involved in this
kind of work were part of some societal elite. But Malaysias reforming groups are interested in
advancement, wishing to increase the countrys linguistic and ethnic diversity and break down the rigid
racialisation of Malaysian politics. Just before we arrived, something new seemed to be happening:
support for the old regime was waning. In the election of 2008 they gained less than the two-thirds
majority required by law to amend the constitution, the first time this had happened since 1969. A
number of by-elections throughout 2009 would, it was understood, act as a weather vane for the future
of the country, including one around the time of our visit, in Bagan Pinang, ninety kilometres south of
Kuala Lumpur. After the conference, in our WikiLeaks capacity, we toured to speak in different venues
and meet with politicians. One of the few ethnic Indian MPs in the mainly Chinese-Malaysian
Democratic Action Party took us to a former rubber plantation, where we met three generations of
Indian workers who had been born, educated and employed on the same land. They showed us
pamphlets that had been distributed by representatives of the governing party, along with money
intended as a vote-buying bribe. Despite this obvious evidence of the corruption endemic in the political
system and the unwillingness of the governing party to bring about change in their lives, these people
were not morose, not fatalistic, not beaten.
I met with Anwar Ibrahim, and quickly Rop and I found ourselves immersed in Malaysian political
dynamics. It was head-spinning how quickly the sand was moving under everybodys feet a foretaste,
you might say, of what would be happening in Cairo and Tunisia and Libya within two years, but well
come to that. Ibrahim seemed to have his finger on the pulse of change, but needed support and
information and publicity advice. WikiLeaks had helped to publicise a very sensitive document about the
death of a Mongolian woman, Altantuya Shaariibuu, who had been killed in an explosion near Kuala
Lumpur in 2006. The document made allegations of extraordinary seriousness surrounding her death.
The document itself was a statutory declaration signed by Raja Petra, the editor of a campaigning online
news site, Malaysia Today.
Petra had been so under threat from the authorities evading two arrest warrants that the website
had had to move its service to Singapore and the USA. Meanwhile, the subject of Shaariibuus murder
had become so incendiary that it could scarcely be mentioned in Malaysia. If it was mentioned at a
political rally, the riot squad were immediately sent in. I often want to tell this to people who feel that a
single document cant make a difference.
I told Ibrahim that this leak was a powerful lever. The reaction to it revealed an incredible weak spot in
the government: they feared reform more than they knew how to resist it. The reform movement was
being reactive in its press campaigns and our advice was to get off the back foot. They had to get ahead
of the governments media line the government had the stronger voice but the weaker heart and we
fed them material. By the way, Ibrahim was obviously representing a big, secular call for change. His
party was being backed by the Americans, which should close the mouths of people who imagine
WikiLeaks automatically takes up causes opposed to America. Like some of the Middle Eastern uprisings
to come, this was a clean fight, and America was backing the right horse (without having groomed the
favourite, which they did for years with Mubarak). Ibrahim was also likeable, having spent the six years
he was locked up in prison reading Shakespeare. You can probably trust a mans sense of human nature
if he has spent every day for that long studying Othello and Julius Caesar. We spent our time running
ideas past the opposition reformers and writing some papers. It was dangerous work. One night, coming
out of the headquarters and walking down a dark side-street, a place filled with shops and cafs, a man
jumped out and flashed his card at me. At first, I thought he was a hawker. Turns out he was secret
police. He asked me for ID, and I said Id get it from the car, and on the way got a message to my friends
from the opposition. I told him I was a journalist and wouldnt say anything more to him. The opposition
guys were round in no time, pulling me away from the agent.
In the end the governing party held on to their seat in Bagan Pinang, but the mood among Malaysias
opposition was that this was just one minor battle, part of a long war that the Barisan Nasional were
bound to lose. Our friends at Malaysia Today were certainly taking the long view rather than worrying
about one by-election: Ever since the epic 12th general elections, which saw a realignment of the
political landscape, the average Malaysian, normally apathetic to politics due to the boring regularity of
BNs sweeping victories, has started to take an interest in elections, especially the next general election.
We were doing so many kinds of work, and on so few resources, that I began to think of ways to steady
the organisation and give it a home. A home is not an easy thing to contemplate when it comes to
WikiLeaks: we have active servers operating at secret locations all over the world; we have a network of
staff and contacts, most of them wishing to remain nameless, who are never to be found in the same
place at the same time. WikiLeaks was different from any other kind of media organisation: we were
never going to have a reception desk and a coffee machine, never mind a research department and
annual holidays. People imagine I live out of a rucksack because Im some kind of weirdo. Well, theyre
right, I am some kind of weirdo, but Im also forced into a stressful, peripatetic lifestyle by the nature of
the work and the facts of the organisation. We have moved around to avoid legal constraints and find
stations to work from. Believe me, I feel theres nothing nicer than a set of clean towels and a dining
table covered with nice food and surrounded by friends. I love a coffee machine. But it just wasnt likely
to happen in a dependable way if we were doing our jobs properly and getting so far up the noses of the
powerful that we became hunted. The only hope was that we might find a place, somewhere,
sometime, that was disinclined to hunt people working for justice.
To my way of thinking, there was a connection between one side of our work and another, between
busting companies who hid money or assets and going after governments who hid people away in
places like Guantnamo. Both of these sets of perpetrators were criminals, often sanctioned by the
authorities, who were hiding money or people outside the rule of law, usually in a secret jurisdiction.
We could exhaust ourselves, and do, revealing evidence of what these people do; but, at some point, we
might wish to see that the whole operation, the whole jurisdiction, is intrinsically corrupt. This would
mean saying that the Cayman Islands, for example, must be subject to a wholesale inquiry into its
offshore banking activities, and it might mean examining Guantnamo Bay as a haven allowing for the
wholesale abuse of human rights as civil society understands them.
And what if you reversed this way of thinking? What if you decided there could be anti-secrecy havens
in the world? In every country we had worked in, we had become aware of people and organisations
living under legal or physical threat from the powerful. Whether it was Raja Petra, the editor in
Malaysia, who had to flee from the authorities, or the American Home Owners Association, which was
forced to move its operations onto an ISP in Sweden as a result of legal suits brought against it by
property developers, or reform groups out of Russia, or great swathes of individuals targeted by the
litigation-wielding malice of the Scientologists all of them could find peace, or a fair hearing, in a haven
devoted to transparency and fair play. In my understanding, a new kind of refugee had emerged in the
modern world: a person, or a group, on the run from rich or powerful authorities bent on destroying
them for telling the truth. We know from the work of Amnesty or PEN that these people are often
writers and publishers, but they can be civil rights groups, lawyers, freethinkers, or just the ordinary
people next door. I began to feel strongly that a haven not of secrecy but of openness would answer the
call.
Such a place would also serve as a journalism haven, a place where sources could be protected as part
of the law of the land. Free press legislation would be deeply embedded in such a place. Internet
freedoms would be part of the modern ether and liberty from prosecution would be standard. I began
to have a vision of this haven: a politically independent zone, a place where one could stop running,
where whistleblowers might be considered heroes not public enemies, where legal advice would be free
and plentiful and Internet access universal. It sounded like Nirvana to me, until I began to realise it might
actually be called Iceland.
In the summer of 2009 we were leaked a copy of the Kaupthing Bank Large Loan Book. This was a
document revealing every loan over 45 million made by the Icelandic bank. Kaupthing was the largest
of Icelands banks and had suffered a massive decline in the 2008 financial meltdown, eventually
becoming insolvent. The banks motto was Think Beyond, and, it appeared, many of the borrowers had
taken that motto to heart. Many were insiders, and even though the loans were for enormous sums,
many were unsecured. Kaupthing loaned 791.2 million to Exista hf., the company that owned
Kaupthing itself. According to the document we leaked, the bulk of the loans [to Exista hf.] are
unsecured and with no covenants. Money was lent to the fourth- largest shareholder in Kaupthing, in
order that he could buy even more shares in Kaupthing, and the only collateral that he had to provide
was those same shares in Kaupthing! A tiny number of individuals were enriching themselves with these
loans, money that only ever existed on paper, and the people of Iceland would have to pick up the tab.
Two brothers, gst and Lur Gumundsson, and companies owned by them, received loans totalling
ISK300 billion, which was equivalent to 1.6 billion. Robert Tchenguiz, a member of the board of Exista
hf., received loans of ISK330 billion. It wont surprise you to learn that a number of individuals have
been arrested, in Iceland and abroad, following the collapse of the Icelandic banking system.
Within twenty-four hours of releasing the document, WikiLeaks was on the receiving end of a legal
threat from Kaupthings lawyers. It stated that we, and our source, could face one year in prison under
the Icelandic Banking Secrecy Law. RUV, the Icelandic equivalent of the BBC, was set to go ahead with a
leading item on that nights Seven OClock News about our leak. And at 6.55p.m., like a scene in some
Hollywood movie, an injunction was slapped down on the RUV news desk. A last-minute injunction had
never been served on RUV during its entire history. The newsreader was very cool. Theyd just lost their
lead item, so he explained that they wouldnt be bringing the viewer all the news tonight, but that a
large loan book from Kaupthing Bank had been the subject of a leak. He said the report had been
compiled only three weeks before the bank collapsed. We cant bring you that story, he said, but heres
an organisation that can. At which point they just filled the screen with the WikiLeaks logo and let it sit
there for several minutes to fill up the time they had scheduled for the now injuncted story.
Overnight, the people of Iceland came over to WikiLeaks. They got the story from us and did what I
always would consider appropriate: they took the stimulus of our story and became investigative
reporters themselves, filling out the details and checking them subjectively. We had helped the country
see some of the corruption that had led to the collapse of their own economy and they valued the
opportunity. We are often called arrogant, or I am often called arrogant, and I suppose I must be you
might have to be arrogant in order to resist the persistent slings and arrows chucked at you, even on
those occasions when you dont deserve them. But there are actually few occasions in this work that
allow for smugness. No sooner have you revealed a bit of corruption, hammered a bank or dished on a
dictator than the whole weight of power comes down on you. But Iceland was a rare moment when
smugness could break out: people hated the idea of these corrupt bankers and people wanted to pelt
them with eggs. It was argued in the press that Icelandic people had historically been too passive, that
they had no history of rebellion, and that perhaps the time had come to stand up to cronyism and
nepotism as never before.
I was invited to Iceland to address a conference on Digital Freedom in December 2009, and began in
earnest to think of how it might be encouraged to become the openness haven the world so badly
needed. It had some pretty perfect conditions: it was ripe for change, having just come out of such a
devastating banking crisis; it had an educated workforce; it had the most Internet-connected population
in the Western world; it was equidistant between Europe and the United States; it had the cheapest
power in all of Europe (geothermal and hydropower, completely green), which is an important
consideration when youre running huge banks of computers; and it was cold, which would be good for
the air-conditioning required to keep the servers happy. It also had a fairly good free-speech tradition
and, just before the banking bubble burst, was rated equal first with Luxembourg and Norway on
Reporters Sans Frontires Press Freedom Index. Iceland also appealed to my sense of humour: like a
bizarre parody of a tax haven, it was far from the Caribbean, an icy island in the North Atlantic. I
mentioned to the conference that all of these things made it possible that Iceland could be the worlds
greatest openness haven and a natural home for publishers.
I was at the conference with Daniel Domscheit-Berg and a number of people from the Iceland Digital
Freedom Society. A group of parliamentarians turned up, including a woman called Birgitta Jnsdttir,
who was smart and friendly. She seemed immediately part of the spirit of our group and was interested
in the idea of the openness haven. She had been elected to parliament in early 2008, and immediately
on meeting her I spotted her for a potential ally. She could work for our idea of a safe haven through
parliament and help us develop it in the current climate. She was a long-term activist, a poet involved
with music, about forty-two, and from a famous family of Icelandic troubadours.
The seed had been planted and it grew in the minds of the conference attendees and other supporters
in Iceland. The end of 2009 was a busy time for me, and I returned to Berlin to speak once more at the
Chaos Communication Congress on 27 December, but I was keen to return to Iceland as soon as
possible. By 5 January 2010, we were back again, still filled with the idea that we could help create this
haven. There were about thirteen of us working on this Rop Gonggrijp, Jacob Applebaum, Daniel
Domscheit-Berg, Smri McCarthy, Kristinn Hrafnsson, Birgitta, and other journalists, activists and
academics who offered us their advice and expertise online from the UK, Netherlands, Belgium,
Germany, Hong Kong and the United States. The work meant preparing a legislative request, working
from a place called the Ideas House, a sort of start-up incubator for people with ideas but no money. We
worked all sorts of hours, researching, lobbying and making the thing ready so that there was a good
chance it could enter into law. Birgitta Jonsdottir worked hard to drive the voting numbers to get the
haven idea through parliament, and we did special presentations to some of the more conservative
members. Such a landmark development was perhaps more complex than I had originally imagined,
requiring that at least thirteen major pieces of Icelandic law be changed, but the Icelandic parliament
has now voted to task the civil service with preparing this legislation, a process which is continuing now.
I guess there was an issue with Icelandic dignity after the financial meltdown. Their eye was
understandably focused on local shocks and many believed the main benefit of the openness haven
would be that it would, in future, hold bankers to account, as well as other corrupt Icelandic forces.
Down the line, I hope, they will see that transparency could be a real growth industry for Iceland.
Strangely, though, for all our lobbying, the journalists were the main opposition: they feared that the
new legislation would somehow throw attention away from their own plight, as journalists facing cuts.
That was short-sighted, in my view, but you can forgive people for feeling they cant always afford to be
idealistic.
The idea of Iceland as a freedom jurisdiction is beautiful. It will raise the countrys reputation and a
general sense of self-worth. I wonder if Iceland doesnt need something like a prize for freedom of
expression, which might do for that little country what the Nobel does for Sweden. The fact that they
had the prize, and a society that knew how to live up to the prize, would prove exemplary, and bring the
country into focus on the international scene. We worked hard with the parliamentary lawyers and the
drafters. I was thinking about the transit towards justice it could bring, this move into scientific
journalism, allowing every aspect along the pipeline towards truth to be observed and protected. The
effect all over the world would be to have a new high standard to hold up, a standard that said that
people could not be prosecuted for seeking to tell the truth. It could be disputed, it could be argued
over, but no one would be criminalised for essentially disclosing the truth. I hope it all comes together
before too long.
Another issue appeared in spring 2010 that seemed, in the moment, even more pressing. In late 2008
the Icelandic banking system had disintegrated, as the reckless lending of all of Icelands major banks
finally caught up with them. Landsbanki went under in October, threatening 6 billion worth of savings
deposited in the bank via their Icesave online accounts by people in the UK and Netherlands. The
response of the Icelandic state was that it was not their responsibility, representatives of a tiny and now
bankrupt nation, to pay the foreign debts of utterly reckless, private sector banks. The response of the
British and Dutch was ruthless. The British chancellor, Alistair Darling, used the provisions of the Anti-
terrorism, Crime and Security Act to freeze the UK assets of Landsbanki, and the assets of the Central
Bank of Iceland and the Government of Iceland that related to Landsbanki. Although these laws were
supposed to function in order to keep funds out of the hands of terrorists, they were being used against
the government of another European power. It was shocking. There was a great deal of backroom
diplomacy on the part of the British real strong-arm stuff and the instincts of empire really emerged
in them. When it comes to such things, where there is a consuming public passion for the issue, as there
is in the banking debacle, the British could use naked power to get their own way. And they did. They
stated publicly that they would campaign against Icelands entry into the EU unless they got their money
and that they would leverage the IMF to refuse to give Iceland any loans. The Icelandic parliament
attempted to draw up a repayment plan, but, under pressure from public opinion, the president refused
to sign it through, triggering a public referendum under the Icelandic constitution. While some members
of the Icelandic political establishment frantically tried to find a deal that would satisfy the British, we
began to leak documents such as the UKNetherlands final offer and the Icelandic counter-proposal. I
also spoke at a rally in Reykjavik, and our efforts in general were devoted to providing the Icelandic
public with the information they needed to make an informed decision. In the end, about 95 per cent of
the voting population voted against succumbing to British pressure, a historic moment in Iceland as the
country was experiencing its first referendum since 1944. Our ability to act strategically in the face of a
dynamic story is part of our importance, forcing those in power to confront the truth at a point where
events are developing. We eventually published several cables showing the UK had been lobbying an
organisation called the Paris Club a creditor cartel of the major Western creditor nations to refuse to
give Iceland any further assistance.
We would have some deep and final business with Iceland during 2010, but that momentous year of
2009 the year we had hoped to found the worlds first openness haven there ended with a curious
reminder of how much WikiLeaks had become woven into the fabric of Icelandic self-consciousness.
There was a party at the US embassy in Reykjavik. They always invited the political elite to these parties,
and I crashed it under the guise of being Birgittas plus-one. (I was on my own: she didnt come at all.) I
was feeling perky that night: I had managed to secure a series of documents that revealed the rather
shady behaviour of Landsbanki in Russia in the 1990s and 2000s. Three people had died during the
transactions described in the dossier, and senior officials in Putins government seemed to be have been
involved in registering some of the various companies that had been created. I felt we were getting
closer and closer to the point where we could force real openness on this mighty issue of the
relationship between money and government. One of the first people I met there was the former CEO of
the Kaupthing Bank the one that had threated to imprison me for a year for revealing their loan book.
That didnt go particularly well. Then I spoke to the charg daffaire, who was surrounded by three of
those goons who seemed to have come direct from Central Casting. Looking at them, you had to wonder
precisely what they had done in El Salvador to end up marooned in Iceland, where they spent the day
monitoring the Chinese embassy. I showed some of the Russian Landsbanki documents to people I met
there why not? Openness is openness, right? and you could see their eyes widen and their
diplomatic hands reach out as if to snatch the documents away. Its amazing how stodgy those people
are and how little they know about the world theyre paid to interact with. Some months later, I
released a cable sent by that same Charges dAffaires Id been chatting to and they went nuts, thinking
that Id somehow acquired it at the party.
The experience of developing the haven taught us a great deal about how to advance the WikiLeaks
ethos into public policy. We did that not for reasons of ambition, as people say, but because it is the
natural extension of speaking truth to power. Eventually, it would be nice to find common ground for
the project and give it the apparatus of free states to support it. The Internet, in a sense, is a nation, but
a nation of the imagination, where one is free to enter and leave without a passport. But it has its
primitive aspects. While one is free to post on the Internet, one is not able to be protected by it: on a
bad day, the Internet is the biggest surveillance tool in the world. It encourages a free press, but it offers
the same encouragement to those who hate press freedom. That is the irony of the new technology,
and one that we aimed to circumvent, giving our ideas of justice a legislative support network on terra
firma. We learned much and met many people, including the aforementioned Kristinn Hrafnsson, an
Icelandic journalist and activist who is now an important staff member at WikiLeaks.
It had been a tonic to walk in Reykjavik and see people smile and wave and call themselves supporters,
but I was tired that season, feeling Id already travelled over so much territory, so many big stories and
so many changes that enhanced progress but threatened life and limb. I began to feel drained as the
legislation dragged on. It was just a parliamentary ill-chance, like many others, but I felt it personally as a
quiet condemnation to a life on the lam. In some very obvious way, I have been escaping from some
dark pursuer since I was a child and my mother took us across country to escape from her stalker. In
Iceland, you could barely tell the difference between night and day, which, I realised, had been my
regular position since I was thirteen. I was still up all night with a computer, and escaping by day to
some new set of possibilities. But my battery goes low shortly before it magically shows itself fully
charged.
A video had been sent to our drop-box. It showed grainy images of some men walking down a street in
Iraq. Two of them are journalists. In a minute they will all be dead, shot to pieces from a US helicopter
gunship. I watched it again and again, knowing we were about to enter into the full public glare of
something new.
11
COLLATERAL MURDER
After a brief time on the road, including a trip to Oslo to speak at a conference, we came back to Iceland
in March 2010 and rented a house. The people we rented from thought we were there to watch the
volcanoes: that was our cover, and it explained why we had so many computers and so much video
equipment. But the real reason was the Baghdad video. We had decided this was our most important
leak to date, and the video would have to be analysed, understood and made ready for presentation. I
wanted the whole world to see this video. It was that important, not only for an understanding of war in
general, but for an ethical comprehension of what the war in Iraq had become, and how it impacted on
daily lives.
The main house we rented became a den. It was full of coffee cups and computer wires and chocolate,
the debris of strung-out lives. A profile writer from the New Yorker came round and he caught pretty
well the chaos and the sleeplessness. I barely left my computer for weeks. I had my hair cut while sitting
at my terminal, working against the clock to edit the video so all the static noise, the crackle, was at a
minimum, and the final version was as clear as possible. People fluttered in and out of the room, full of
exclamations, ideas, tears. None of the crazy schedules and lunges across continents familiar from our
previous work could stand comparison with the preparation of the Collateral Murder video. I think my
reputation for workaholism and infrequent bathing must have started there; it was unavoidable, with
the amount we had to do, and the sense that this leak, above all, would change the publics perception
of a dreadful war and play a part in bringing that horrible invasion to an end.
The video has now had more than eleven million viewings on YouTube, as well as many more millions on
television. It is a famous document of our times. But when I first saw the footage, it wasnt at all clear
what was going on; the images were jagged and the sequence lacked drama and impact, though what it
depicted, eventually, was truly devastating. I did careful research as I went along, finding out who the
people in the video were, when it was shot, from which angles, and how it had all come together to tell
the story of this multiple murder in broad daylight. We broke the film into three parts, to better
understand the sequence of events. The work was slow, but sobering and mesmerising. When all was
said and done, the video, without doubt, showed twelve men two of them Reuters journalists, going
about their business being shot to ribbons by 35mm cannon-fire from a US Apache helicopter. It took
me some time to work out who was involved in the initial massacre, and then to see that the two men
who survived the initial attack, only to be taken out individually, were the men from Reuters. It was my
colleague Ingi Ragnar Ingason who noticed, on closer inspection, that the van that comes to pick up one
of the wounded men and is blown apart in a further round of cannon-fire, contained two children. The
footage later shows US ground troops carrying the wounded children away.
We had a full team working on it. Kristinn Hrafnsson took charge of research, finding out what had
happened to the children in the video. Birgitta was there throughout, giving advice and acting as a
sounding-board for what appeared. Ingi was editor, which involved shedding away a lot of the flak and
immaterial stuff on the rough cut, and Gudmundur Gudmudsson worked with the sound. We had Rop
Gonggrijp as executive producer, covering expenses and making it possible, and Smri McCarthy
organising the web-based material. Daniel Domscheit-Berg, unknown even to himself, perhaps, had
begun to marginalise himself from this working group by undermining our efforts. Its inevitable, I
suppose, in a group of people who are essentially volunteers, that questions of ambition and motivation
will go askew. Domscheit-Berg couldnt see the wood for the trees and became tremendously
obnoxious. We were involved in something very large and very scary, and his ill-will was exhausting.
One of the things that drove us was the knowledge of how inaccurate the contemporary press reports of
the incident had been. It was an example of history being manipulated for political purposes. It was even
suggested in some reports that the van had been shelled by insurgents, but the video shows very clearly
the order being given and the massacre occurring. Others suggested that there was a fire-fight and that
the Reuters journalists had been caught in the crossfire. All lies. We appended a quote from George
Orwell Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give
the appearance of solidity to pure wind in order to show how political language had been used to
justify a reckless incidence of murder. There was no other word for it, and although we knew it would be
controversial, the decision to call the video Collateral Murder was simply loyal to the evidence.
The storm that blew up about that title was depressing and surprising, even given what I knew about the
attitude of much of the Western media to the official US government line. So puffed up are they with a
sense of their own importance that, on seeing the video, the first debate they wanted to have was
about our title, not about the contents. Much of the press think pairing the truth with the official lie is
balance, and mistake a solemn delivery to camera for serious engagement with moral imperatives. Paul
Krugman once joked that if one party declared that the earth was flat, the headlines would read Views
Differ on Shape of Planet. Our edited version showed the first eleven minutes completely unedited, to
set the scene. We put it up on the website collateralmurder.net right next to the full 40-minute
version. Dear CNN, what exactly is your problem? Perhaps we should have called it Collateral Cover Up
and had done with it.
I must have seen the video hundreds of times, but, on each occasion, my blood ran cold when I saw
those children coming under attack. Unchecked power is such an evil thing and I came to feel a large
moral responsibility for exposing the bastards who did this. In a sense, the bastards were the US
military, but also those elements of the media who had seen fit to join them in covering the thing up.
The young men in the helicopter may be victims, too; victims of a brutal military culture gone out of
control, and you can hear the eagerness in their voices to make a kill. It was certainly the case that one
of the soon-to-be victims was carrying an RPG (a rocket-propelled grenade), but in their eagerness to
build a threatening picture the forces in the helicopter mistook the Reuters photographers camera for a
second one. The rush to judgement is obscene, especially if you listen to the frantic, beseeching voice of
the gunman, failing to understand why there would be any reason to show caution in such a situation.
Come on, buddy, all you gotta do is pick up a weapon one of them says of a guy on the ground. Gimme
something. And so we go from a situation of low enemy threat to a massacre in a matter of minutes.
The video gives a massive insight into the merciless need for contact that a war fosters in its
participants. It looks and sounds like a computer game, and thats because the morality of the attacking
soldiers has been framed that way. They behave as if they are shooting at digital bogeymen.
We decided to unveil the leaked video at a press conference in Washington on 5 April 2010. That gave
us ten more days to get Kristinn and Ingi to Baghdad, to find the families of the victims. Sometimes, in
the late hours, I would go outside the house for a breath in the cold night air, taking in that fresh scent
of sulphur that fills the air in Iceland, and I would wonder how on earth we were going to pull it together
in time. There were many campaigns and many miles, and now, many years, between me and the
teenage boy who used to stay up all night tramping through the computer systems of corporations
across the globe. With the bite of the air, and the Washington deadline snapping at our heels, it seemed
at the same time as if everything had changed and nothing had. At the last minute, Kristinn managed to
pull some favour with the Icelandic Ministry of Foreign Affairs and suddenly they were off to Baghdad. A
fixer they met through the local Reuters office got them into Al Amin, the area of the city run by the
Mahdi Army where the atrocity took place. The very day before I set off for Washington the news came
back from Iraq: Ingi and Kristinn had found the children and also the widower of a woman killed when
the helicopter unleashed Hellfire missiles into a block of flats directly after the attack on the men in the
street.
By the skin of our teeth, we got to America and down to the Washington Press Club. It was mid-morning
and the room was packed. We played the video and it had an immediate impact. A number of people in
the audience were crying. You could see this was no ordinary revelation; the people in there were
hardened, but they couldnt fail to respond to these hidden images of wars sanctioned brutalism.
However, when it came to questions, well, as usual they were disappointing. A lot of people who cover
world affairs from Washington are basically stupid. They often know absolutely nothing about the
subjects or the cultures they are reporting on; theres this kind of too-cool-for-school mentality among
the older ones, imagining theres nothing they havent seen before. These people are pretty desperate
and they should be ashamed, most probably, of how much complacency and ignorance they have
brought into the world. But thats that. Everyones so frightened of the national press corps in America
that pulling the rug from underneath their sorry, negligent arses hardly seems an option. They dont
listen and they would be insulted to have to question their own categories. Im not going to sugar-coat
this: the video moved those people, but hardly one of them knew how to follow his gut and add his
voice to the chorus of natural outrage that decency demanded. The nightly news was immoral. They had
Wolf Blitzer on CNN talking to some female anchor, with her saying war was dangerous and thats it.
They showed the first part of the video and then blotted out the film once the bullets were fired, out of
respect to the families. Nice touch. Shame about the Iraqi families. Fox News, of course, made it sound
like the US military were owed an apology.
We would come and go with the American media over the coming year, especially, of course, with the
New York Times, but it was difficult then and now to avoid the notion that a great many of them see
themselves as holding a torch for what they perceive to be the American national interest. They want to
put a curse on other peoples suffering, as if they had no right to expect sympathy in dangerous times.
They will manipulate their own role so as always to seem pious and basically true to the flag. I dont
dislike America. I dislike what the present crop of political and media elite are doing to insult its best
principles, its fine Constitution, and it will be our aim, as it is with other nations who behave as they do
at their worst, to bust them.
Within a day of showing the Collateral Murder video in Washington the backlash could be heard at all
levels. And the attacks did not just come from the Pentagon. They came from people in the gutters of
San Antonio to the former dreamers in the White House. Left- and right-wing commentators set out to
crucify us for showing the world a video, a piece of military footage that might have made any self-
respecting nation simply sad at the horrors capable of being enacted under its flag. There was no
humility, no apology, no explanation even; just the rage of those who imagine that anybody who reveals
the truth of such situations must be an enemy of the state. Such a poor and primitive response to
journalistic truth, and shameful to the founding principles they pretend to cross the world to protect. Of
course, they accused us of doctoring the video. Of editing it maliciously. Of erasing gunmen from the
tape and making it seem worse than it was. It became surreal the way people would express with
certainty all this nonsense. In fact, it was a military video given to us. All the angles were theirs, and the
basic production values were theirs, and the acts committed were theirs, and I cannot imagine how they
sleep at night while denying it.
There are certain traits that serve you badly in this work: being thin-skinned, certainly, self-pitying,
absolutely, and I have probably had to fight hard not to succumb to these. I have a strong sense of self-
command, but it vexes me when the world wont listen, and I can only hope to get better when it comes
to managing my mistakes. Were a young organisation, and the work weve done has thrown us into the
spotlight very quickly. Personally, Ive had to learn on the job and take pride in the effort. If were a
peoples bureau of investigation, then its the people we have to keep in mind, while the reaction from
left and right will often be hostile. Publishing the Baghdad video was the right thing to do and was not
only consistent with our sense of what we were set up to do, but the acme of our moral stance. Millions
of people in Iraq and Afghanistan have been living with these aerial attacks and we judged it imperative
that people get an insight into how they could go wrong. There will always be people lining up to say,
This is just war, no battle zone is a playground, innocent people get killed, and all that, but people
should not be forced or coerced into taking these judgements on trust. They should see the evidence for
themselves. There had been a cover-up, and, whether coming from a four-star general or a presenter on
Fox News, the call to hide such truths from the population is dastardly. War is always a manipulation,
but it serves the people amongst whom the war is being fought very badly, and does nothing for long-
term peace, when the people conducting those wars are so willing to prosecute them in a flurry of bad
faith. We called the US on that, as we would call any nation, and we did so not to make our lives easier
it begins a ghastly period of public renown for me but to pursue an ideal of openness and
accountability without which no true democracy can function. The fact that the US military refused to
open a public investigation is shaming to the notion of moral responsibility. But the video, like the
pictures from Abu Ghraib, was a crucial piece of the reality jigsaw in that conflict. And the picture
presented by these things would bring the war to an end.
We had already published the classified Rules of Engagement for Iraq in 2008, and we collected those
documents and posted them on the collateralmurder.net website we had created to host the video, and
encouraged people to read them as well as watch the video. The rules show that the behaviour of those
in Crazy Horse, the Apache helicopter that swooped so eagerly to end the lives of twelve men and injure
two children, was not permissible, under those same rules. Permission to engage was hotly sought by
those young men, and just as hotly granted, but the military later mangled the chronology in order to
present a rationale for firing. They said it came down to the fact that the cameraman from Reuters,
Noor Aldin, crouched at the corner and lifted his camera to take a picture, and they took the camera to
be an RPG. But if you watch the video, you see that permission to engage is asked for and granted
before that, as they are ambling down the street, and the requesting voice is agitated. The whole thing
was out of whack, and there wasnt a single broadcaster or print journalist in America who wanted to
ask the simple question Why? In a theatre of war of that sort, why is it the case that young men are
trigger-happy? What is it in the culture of the Iraq conflict in particular that made pilots so keen to jump
over rules of engagement and ordinary human rules of decency and carefulness to murder the
innocent? TV show after TV show went out, all fronted by those blank-eyed immoralists, not one of
whom chose to contradict the military opinion theyd marshalled for the viewing audience. Not one of
them was willing to be a journalist.
We would later find out, over the Afghan logs, just how close American editors are to official
government truth. They act pious and make a reckless bid for the high ground, pretending its all to do
with responsibility and propriety and balance, but in fact they are compromising their journalistic
independence at every other turn. We will come to that. In the meantime, the editors and their
correspondents in the US did nothing during this crucial moment that would compromise their
popularity at the annual White House Correspondents Dinner. They drank their cocktails with the guys
on the Hill, while the mothers and wives were still weeping in Iraq. A general blindness to the true
actions of the military that day was instantly endemic, as if Americas inherent good could not really be
questioned. But the video questions it in real time and via their own cameras. The journalists and the
government spokesmen merrily entered a revolving door, and pushed each other into a clear space, but
anyone who has watched Collateral Murder with an open mind will know what it says.
The snap view of people who dont understand our work who dont want to understand our work is
that we might endanger lives. But the great thrust of our work is to save lives. By making a contribution,
in the public interest, to the ending of wars, by supplying journalists with the means to keep a check on
the excesses of power, we aim to limit the hunger for killings, skirmishes and invasions, as well as to
limit the effectiveness of the lies that support them. With the banks, our work forced their practices into
the open and made a marked difference in their sense of public accountability. And so it has been with
military bodies as far apart as Kenya and the Pentagon. These actors depend on covert operations to
prosecute violent incursions: and we are the spanner in their works, fighting all the time to expose the
lies, end the conspiracy, hold up human rights and save lives.
As an example of this I give you Iran. For some time now, neoconservative elements in Washington,
along with their Israeli allies, have been keen to instigate a war with Iran. This is not a mysterious
matter. It has been well documented and well sourced by Seymour Hersh and others. Given that many
military conflicts begin as border disputes, we kept an eye on the traffic of information there, and
noticed that the British and the US military were literally sailing very close to the wind in the Gulf of
Persia. Iranian military captured some British navy personnel and an approach was made by the Iranian
navy to US vessels in their waters. We saw this early and I contacted Eric Schmitt of the New York Times
to draw his attention to how this matter was included in a document on the rules of engagement we
had leaked. In a section on crossing international borders, wrote Schmitt, in what turned out to be an
important article for the New York Times, the document said the permission of the American Defense
Secretary was required before American forces could cross into or fly over Iranian or Syrian territory.
Such actions, the document suggested, would probably also require the approval of President George
W. Bush. But the document said there were cases in which such approval was not required: when
American forces were in hot pursuit of former members of Saddams government or terrorists.
The Iranian government then responded: The US forces in Iraq have no right to chase any suspect into
Iranian territory. Any entrance to the Iranian soil by any US military force to trail suspects would be
against international laws and could be legally pursuable. It stressed that Iran would give proper
response to any move in this connection in order to defend its security and national sovereignty. If you
look at the next set of the Rules of Engagement published after this exchange, you will see that the
officials changed them to make this kind of dispute less likely. Thats an example of a little document
contributing to a change in policy, a change that potentially makes a vast difference to an ongoing chain
of events. Im not saying we stopped a war with Iran, saving countless lives, but I am saying we set out in
that direction and achieved a smaller goal. There has not been a war with Iran, and that is partly
because covert operations in that region have been interrupted and dangerous incursions along those
borders have been prevented; and we were instrumental in that. We dont want the credit; we merely
want the outcome. But its appropriate to note that no news organisation in the world, no TV station
baying for our blood, would ever focus on this aspect of what we do every day.
The Iraq video set the tone for many, especially among the US establishment, who wished to see us a
certain way. It was obvious to us, and perhaps to a whole generation of people, that they were railing
against the technology as much as against WikiLeaks. We couldnt help them with that: we are not a
public relations firm and dont do well in that area but our work has been various and consistent and
without partisan interests or state sponsorship, and that is how it will always be. We published the video
and woke up infamous, though we take no pleasure in infamy. Rather, we find it odd to exist in a world
where attempts to advance justice and the freedom of the press can cause one to be regarded as an
enemy. Still, we left Washington with a sense of having done our work. No more than that. Neither
triumphalism nor sense of defeat, for both were possible, given first the impact of the video and the
scorn it had brought down on us.
We were galvanised, though. It was a pleasure to get to Berkeley in California, where we may no longer
see students pushing flowers down military gun barrels but there is always a sense of change, or of
progress, moving over the Bay. I was reminded of childhood days in the warm atmosphere of gentle
protest there and felt we had a good audience not a captive one but a free one when Birgitta and
Gavin MacFadyen of the Centre for Investigative Journalism joined me in speaking about developments
in the freedom of the press. We went from there, soon after, to the Oslo Peace Forum, where I felt an
uplifting sense of clarity after the video. Our goal is to have a just civilisation, I said, and the message is
transparency. Given the flak we were taking, and were about to take, I knew it was important to
underscore our commitment as existing outside of ideology. We are neither left nor right, I said, and I
meant it. It would cause a certain amount of wailing on either side, but we are not consistent with the
old categories, and have never felt pressed to curry favour with a party. History teaches us of cover-ups
and brutalities on both sides, no less in China or Russia or Libya than in France, Britain and America. But
some of those cultures couldnt believe they could be subject to scrutiny. Some day, it will be
understood why those cultures felt so immune from legal investigation.
I would not see America again. It was made clear to me that the Pentagon were trying to determine my
whereabouts, and I had to cancel several appearances in the States. The reasons for this may already
have been set in train by a narrow and paranoid understanding of our work, but then, on 26 May 2010,
a serving soldier in Iraq, Private Bradley Manning, was arrested on suspicion of supplying secret
information. Our deniability structures, invented all those years ago back in Australia, made it
impossible to know if Manning was the source for any of our material. Our servers do not supply that
kind of information, even to me. But I was certain of one thing: if he had supplied such information, then
he was a hero of democracy and justice who had taken a role in saving lives. I went to sleep that night
hoping the free world would be kind to him.
12
ALL THE EDITORS MEN
Vanity in a newspaper man is like perfume on a whore: they use it to fend off a dark whiff of
themselves. I say that as an editor who loves what journalists can do. But I would be failing to give a true
account of things in this book if I did not bear witness sore witness at times to the way senior
journalists from the English-speaking world have serially loved WikiLeaks and then mugged us, almost
without missing a beat, and then justified their actions with articles and books that must make them
ridiculous in their own eyes. I bear them no deep resentment, but only mourn, as they must, the failing
light of their principles in this last attempt to shine.
Everybody who likes a cause likes the Guardian, and I am no different, finding the paper to be a beacon
sometimes, especially since it increased its global presence online. After the events of 9/11, the
Guardian was the only truthful newspaper available in America, and I think I always admired its attempt
to see the world, rather than just to see itself in the world, which is a trait you cant take for granted.
The Guardian had gone after corrupt politicians and reported the horror of war with a consistency that
wont diminish as a result of their infamous venality over me. The Guardian is basically twelve angry
men, and they function well and morally to the same extent that they sometimes behave selfishly and
appallingly. There is no mystery there, and I have always been happy to see what they can achieve on a
good day. They seemed a natural ally, but, as Shakespeare tells it, there is nothing in nature to match an
allys fierce intent.
There was a hullabaloo when we came into partnership in 2010 over the Afghan war logs, but we had
actually worked together before, in 2007, when I supplied them with a leak about the corruption of
Daniel Arap Moi in Kenya. It ran as a front-page story at the end of August and beginning of September
of that year and had a massive effect in Nairobi, where newspapers suddenly felt able to write about
what was happening under their noses. After the arrest of Private Manning, it became obvious that,
even with no evidence of a connection between us, the US authorities were acting as if there were, and
they had me under surveillance. Under those conditions, I realised it wasnt safe for me to be at home in
Australia, where I was visiting. The priority for me, quite honestly, was not my own safety I recognised,
even then, that forces would always be after me, and they would trap me in some way or another
before long. My concern was for the work that WikiLeaks had been focusing on: we had a number of
large releases being prepared, and I was afraid we were approaching a publish or perish situation. We
have always had a mechanism at WikiLeaks that ensures that if we are unable to continue, then all the
material will be released at once. But I wanted to avoid that: the cache of documents we hold is so large
and so deserving of individual assessment and discrete publication that I wanted to feed the material
out with due carefulness.
It was obvious I had to come back to Europe, so I arranged to be invited to give a talk on censorship at
the European Parliament, and I travelled there via Hong Kong, avoiding Singapore or Thailand, where
there would have been a greater willingness to respond to US calls to have me seized. (Ive found its
always wise to travel on a political invitation, guaranteeing a fuss if you dont reach your destination.)
There were a number of MPs there, as well as friends from Iceland, talking about the Iceland Modern
Media Initiative, the movement behind our attempt to found an openness haven. I spoke about the
increasing business of newspapers removing material from online archives, responding to gag orders,
and so on. And I bumped into the Guardians man in Brussels, an affable sort who was receptive to
what I was saying. I told him there were a number of upcoming publications that might be of interest to
the paper. He went off, and I soon heard from a special investigations reporter on the paper, who said
he wished to come from London to meet and discuss the proposal.
We had always envisaged the material we had on Afghanistan and Iraq being divulged through several
established publications. That seemed the right way. It wasnt about single documents and single
stories, but a whole slew of stories and hundreds of thousands of documents. We judged it would have
the necessary impact only if they were published in an ambitious way, by people who could attach their
own researchers and journalists to make sense of the material. We never pretended to understand, or
even be in a position to read, every document in these massive caches, which is why we needed the
newspapers. We couldnt deal with it ourselves: we were talking about 90,000 Afghan war logs and
400,00 Iraq documents. Traditionally, we had analysed leaked documents ourselves and written the
appropriate commentary with them, before feeding the whole thing to a single journalist or
broadcaster. But this was different, and I spoke to the Guardians investigations guy about how to
honour the material, and the source, and put together a package that would serve it and truly get it out
there, as wed promised. By that stage, I had already spoken to a reporter at the New York Times and
was in contact with journalists at Der Spiegel.
I spoke to him for about six hours. He seemed professional and nervy and a little tired, but so did I, no
doubt, and we seemed to agree on the importance of the documents and that it would be a smart move
to involve the other news organisations. I wasnt grandiose about my participation, simply highly
protective of the material, and experienced, for that matter, in dealing with these kinds of sources and
this kind of surveillance. The later suggestion that I was simply a source myself was just ludicrous: I was
the architect of the plan, and for the good reason that I was the only one of the group who knew how
the material was stored and how it could be disseminated. I also planned the leak from beginning to
end, so as protect it and enhance it, and, though it might offend the famous vanity of my erstwhile
collaborators, they could take it or leave it. I wasnt asking them for money and I wasnt asking them for
glory: WikiLeaks should be credited in order to advance its work, but they would have to go all-in with
the plan to make it work, so readers could check the accuracy of the stories against the raw material. Of
course, each partner behaved at the time as if this were a no-brainer. Only later, when theyd got what
they wanted, would they unpick the relationship in such a way as to enlarge themselves and reduce us,
an old-style government trick I should have seen coming.
The Guardians investigations reporter said he would speak to the papers editor, Alan Rusbridger, who
would speak, in turn, to Bill Keller, the editor of the New York Times. I then wrote a code on a napkin
and passed it to the reporter in a bar. The idea was that he would be able to use this to gain access to an
encrypted version of the material sent to him through an open channel. He now had the key and we set
up a fake correspondence, saying something like It was nice to meet you but sorry the deal didnt work
out. This would throw any surveillance off the scent, making out that there would be no subsequent
transfer of the Afghan material. The reporter himself didnt care about exclusivity, but was aware,
understandably, that his bosses would. We agreed that we would control the embargo date and ensure,
for legal reasons as well as the commercial ones they would have in mind, that the material would come
out at the same time. We also agreed that each paper would have editorial control over its own content.
Television might be brought in at the last minute but not before, as the nature of television production
would make it impossible to keep the impending leak secret. We had no dispute over this: it was my
plan and I laid it out, and he nodded it through with contained excitement. The reporter deserves credit
for how he managed things at that point: he acted like an activist, which was close to his roots, and
strategised about how to give the material its best platforms.
I was seeking to set up a WikiLeaks production unit for this massive project in Stockholm. That was
proving difficult after Collateral Murder, the level of heat on me as the main public face of WikiLeaks
was intense, and some personnel shied away but the investigations guy and I met in Stockholm and
continued to talk over the plan. At this point another Guardian reporter came into the picture. Id met
him before, in Oslo, I think, where he had seen the Baghdad video in a rough form and had wanted to
buy it for his paper. We were being too heavily monitored then, so nothing came of it, but it probably
fed into my notion that the Guardian would be a natural collaborator when the time came. Suddenly,
this reporter a news guy took a role on behalf of the Guardian, the Afghan material was transferred
to him and he proceeded to share it with the New York Times, as agreed by myself and his colleague.
Youve got to imagine this stuff in its raw form. There were around 90,000 discrete entries in the
Afghanistan field logs (we eventually released about 75,000), and they had been made on the spot, after
every skirmish or battle or IED explosion. They were full of acronyms and army-speak. One entry, picked
entirely at random, begins: (M) KAF PRT reports finding rocket IVO KAF PRT Site. The New York Times,
in its literal-mindedness and impatience, couldnt see the narrative, and took a while to understand the
forces at work in the material, the sheer statistical and human horde it represented; they were at first
disappointed not to see the stories. The Guardians news reporter, a senior guy, at this point showed
his first manipulative little impulse: he said the New York Times, in order to stay on board, would need a
sweetener, and so would the Guardian for that matter. He understood that neither paper found the
material to be that compelling and they wanted a little sugar on their porridge: namely, they wanted the
entire cache of Iraq documents, too. I should have withdrawn at that point, seeing what was obvious:
that these people were not gentlemen and did not know how to value significant data and human
complexity for what it was. I should have spotted the self-serving glint in the news reporters eyes and
walked away. The world was full of media organisations who would have moved mountains to join us in
the work we had been doing. But these papers, even at the earliest stage, were on a fault-finding
mission, looking to exploit us as best they could. This Guardian reporter was stimulated, you could see,
not by principle, but by the chance to please his bosses and score one last scoop before he retired.
But we marched on. I liked the Guardian and wanted to believe it would come good. It knew what
these leaks represented and I saw no real problem with the sweetener, other than the manner of its
being asked for. In any event, I supplied them and the New York Times with the Iraq logs. It was all to
the good, I kept saying, were not in this for gratitude. If they put their resources behind both sets of
logs, then the basic cause of openness and freedom of information will have been served. My only real
job now was to work with them to get the best out of the material. Well, not my only job: I also had to
keep them honest, which quickly proved to be a full-time occupation. Its really an unsavoury tale and I
wish I didnt have to tell it, but they have at length, and in gross personal terms, so we must go on. What
I can tell you is that I was under the greatest pressure of my life. I was being surveilled; I was living out
of a rucksack; when I was sleeping at all, I was sleeping on sofas; people beyond my reach were being
arrested; and I was fighting to keep the whole vast dreadnought on an even keel. I was tired. I wasnt
always accommodating. I wasnt always conventional. Not always nice. But I thought these were men of
action and principle, not weaklings with a crush, and it was difficult to see the way they moved around
me so gingerly and sometimes full of hurt, like I wasnt giving them enough attention or showing my
best side.
My best side was in the work. I had brought them into a partnership that was about to give them the
best scoops of those successive wars. And people had risked their lives, we had to suppose, in order to
get that news to the world. In London I spent weeks at the Guardians offices in Kings Cross. There was
a moment when it was all working well: we were in a kind of bunker and it looked like a spirit of co-
operation had taken hold, although it was sterile when compared to how we put together the Baghdad
video. My methods were probably odd to some of them, but we got down to it, myself teaching them to
understand the material and clean up the copy, with the Guardian people, the New York Times in full
attendance and Der Spiegel coming occasionally. I stayed at the homes of both of the Guardian
reporters for a while. I was tense and I had to keep moving. But we were getting there, and I wasnt
really thinking about the relationships I thought the material was our relationship and for a time a
spirit of sharing and exploration took over.
I had hoped all along that the papers would share their research with each other, and they honoured
that. For instance, one of the early stories I found was on Task Force 373, a US Special Forces
assassination squad that was working with a list of 2,000 people. It might sound reasonable enough to
people who have watched too many episodes of Generation Kill, but this JPL (or Joint Party List) is
actually a totally barbaric, extra-judicial nightmare. You saw how people could just get on the list, no
judicial review, nothing. Some governor in Afghanistan could just not like you, and nominate you for the
JPL, and next minute a drone comes in and bombs your house. With patience and care, you could follow
the repercussions of the task forces work through the logs. An entry from 2 May 2007 looked ahead to
a meeting with the deputy governor scheduled for the next day. The first item on the agenda was
discuss repercussions of recent TF 373 ops and address village grievances and the next item was
provide relief to the district and the school that was bombed. Task Force 373 was a secret squad until
we named it, and the story made the front page of Der Spiegel. Interestingly, according to a source the
story about it in the Guardian was partly written by Eric Schmitt of the New York Times. His own paper
were alleged not to have had the stomach to publish it.
I was keen, as were others, that the publications should be in sync but that the New York Times should
steal a march. We felt this would best protect the sources: that the US government were less likely to go
for the New York Times, and that the paper could effectively use its prestige for strong journalistic ends,
on behalf of all the participating bodies. But, true to form, another gleam appeared in the eye of our
collaborators: the New York Times would prefer that we went first. This was nothing but a piece of
strategic cowardice on their part, a piece of work, indeed, and one that is so ingrained in that papers
self-protective sense of itself that they likely cant even see it. They dressed it up as caution and
responsibility: they wanted the stories, had been working for weeks on the stories, but didnt have the
balls to go out there and run it first. They wanted WikiLeaks to go first, which, we now see, was part of
their strategy to hide behind this maverick outfit whose story they were just reflecting. Bill Keller,
the editor, could puff himself up with self-belief, but in fact he did not have the courage of his
journalistic convictions, was fearful of the Pentagon, and he did what a six-year-old playground swot
would be decried for doing, and hid behind the coat-tails of the schools bad boy while scoffing the
spoils of the tuckshop. It would be painful to watch them, once the material was bagged, to stray and
spew their guts up, never ready to stand up for the part they had played in partnering us. The cock
crowed three times, and Bill Keller shamelessly denied us, throwing in a few volleys of personal abuse to
keep himself clean.
Disgusting. But a smarter media player than me would certainly have seen it coming. Being first is
everything in journalism, but here was the biggest newspaper in the world asking point-blank to go
second. Kellers cowardice will be his lasting legacy: for these cables reveal terrible events in
Afghanistan, and a stronger man, a better journalist, would have leapt to add his papers imprimatur to
the truth they revealed. Instead, he played it safe and let us take it on the chin, which, of course, we are
always ready to do, anyway. But by that point I was a bag-lady and a smelly old nutcase, according to
him, while he was Bill Keller, the weakest and most self-protecting man ever to edit the New York
Times. Infamy comes in many guises, and sometimes, even, it comes wearing a sports jacket and an old
school tie, asking us to forgive him what he does, for he only does it in the name of propriety. Next to
Ben Bradlee, who stood by his two maverick reporters during Watergate, or Robert West and Gobin
Stair of Beacon Press, who were subpoenaed and would have gone to jail rather than sell out Daniel
Ellsberg over the Pentagon Papers, this man is a moral pygmy with a self-justifying streak the size of the
San Andreas Fault. WikiLeaks, a small, not-for-profit Web start-up, would be standing alone as usual at
the last post.
Coincidentally (or not), all the ducks we had spent months lining up began to quack with self-interest
when the hour came. Thirty-six hours before publishing, I agreed to let Channel 4 News send round an
interviewer to the Guardian, who would be going live with the story on their website at 9.30 p.m.
Channel 4 would go out with a story on their late bulletin at 10.30p.m. But by now the Guardian, too,
were bellowing their own tune, not thinking This is all to the greater good, but What about our
exclusivity!?, What about our credit!? The television people were not just television people, they were
led by Stephen Grey, a journalist with vast experience in the area who had written a much-admired
book about Afghanistan and who the Guardian had wished to work for them. Grey had always been on
the periphery of our plans, though the Guardian later claimed we brought in Grey as a competitor to
them. This was nonsense, but for some reason it galled the Guardian. They had got themselves into a
position of worrying about their credit and their slice of the pie, and this was not only inappropriate, it
was troubling, given that my whole relationship with the special investigations reporter was based on
the idea that he was an activist who really cared about the material. The Guardian would say I was
difficult and obstructive, but this was merely part of the bitching and hissyness that make Britains
premier liberal paper the thing we know and love.
Still, the results were impressive. Seventeen pages in Der Spiegel, some thirteen in the Guardian and
eight in the New York Times. The reaction was instant and massive: each of these papers found
themselves, for the first time in a long while, at the forefront of a discussion as to the real nature of
modern warfare. I was thrown into a maelstrom of publicity and I attended to it as best I could, keeping
to the plan, citing the material, pointing all the while to the larger issues of press freedom. You can
always tell, however, when youre working with people hungry for more than the upholding of the
principle will supply. The Guardian people couldnt stop themselves from yacking at their dinner
parties, and the senior news reporter, especially, couldnt keep his mouth shut, endlessly wanting to tell
everyone his how we did it story. I dont think he ever quite understood the security implications, and
he was always looking to big himself up with his colleagues, which is presumably why he blabbed to the
New York Times about the cables we were holding. As part of his showing off, he let it be known that I
had stayed at his house and at the other reporters house, even though that was a dangerous thing to
reveal.
You could see the sun shifting off our patch as soon as they knew theyd had what they came for. At
first, they held off on this, because they realised it would be in their interest to have the cables, but it
was evident to me. As Orwell would have understood all too well, these things appear in the language.
The Guardian, along with the New York Times, increasingly wanted to characterise me as a hacker, as
an unstable source, but in this they were only revealing their own anxiety. You should always be careful
of questioning peoples motives: you only reveal your own. And this slow deracination of me and of
WikiLeaks was merely a way for these organisations both to protect themselves against prosecution and
claim more credit. Children behave with more grace under pressure, and although I must often have
been high-handed in my protectiveness and in my steering of this project, it could possibly be
considered part of their job to understand why. Instead, they went to war with me and totally forgot
what the opposition was.
There was a very personal element, too. The special investigations reporter and I had got on well when
it was just us. In Brussels and Stockholm, and initially in London, we were friends, and he made me feel
that I was some younger version of himself. He sort of fell for my idealism, if youll allow the possibility,
and before I knew it he was behaving erratically and needily, like a besotted person, claiming he had
done the most work and everything was his idea. To use some of those mixed metaphors the Guardian
is so fond of, he wanted to be the star who brought home the big fish. It was somehow a matter of
honour for this man with his colleagues. I didnt particularly care who got the gong, but the twelve angry
men were not looking at the evidence. They were looking to themselves, their positions, their late
careers, and while this is all very human, it got in the way of our work.
The real test of journalistic mettle comes with the counterattack. You always know its coming. People
wanted to drink champagne the night of the big leak, but I was thinking, Hold the corks. The White
House and the Pentagon are coming back at us and it wont be nice. Their first move was to say the
material was insignificant. There is not a lot new here for those who have been following developments
closely, said the first (unnamed) government rent-a-quote on the Washington Posts speed dial. Thats
standard. And the next wave, led by Rupert Murdochs rival British daily The Times, suggested that the
material we had published had already led to the death of a Taliban defector. It turned out the man they
named had been killed two years earlier. But as soon as the first criticism arrived, the Guardian
reporters began to panic.
With hindsight, I cant fault the Guardian for the initial work they did in making the documents ready. It
was an excellent job, done in the best traditions of their paper, and I felt that some of them Ian Katz,
the deputy editor, and Harold Frayman, the systems editor brought a level of normality and hard graft
to the proceedings. The senior news reporter, of course, scuppered some of that easiness by telling me
some of the workers on the Guardian had asked for danger money because they were being followed.
Over the years I had worked with journalists all over the world, but I had never before encountered a
group with so little coolness in the face of threat, so little confidence in the manner of working with
people who werent exactly like them, and so little evident experience in handling basic issues of
security. When Alan Rusbridger called Bill Keller to ask if he knew how to set up a secure telephone line,
the New Yorker was not fit for purpose. He had no idea. And despite the efforts of some of their
respective staffs to enjoy the moment and make the collaboration work at all costs, there were others,
the twelve angry men, who were embroiled at every turn in their own careerist dramas, which naturally
turned on me as the supposed figurehead of the operation.
I felt I had a clear strategy in going with the Afghan war logs first and following with those from Iraq. The
Afghan stuff was less voluminous, and I wanted to see if we meaning WikiLeaks in collaboration with
the media partners could set up systems for reading and publishing the data, training the journalists
and graphics people in how to do it before bringing that experience to the more complicated job of
dealing with the hundreds of thousands of documents from Iraq. The two main papers, as I said, had
asked for the Iraq material as a sweetener: they had gone after it with almost sinister levels of zeal,
which caused me to think they would go all-out and make a good job of unwrapping the cache for the
public. I can be mono-minded and fixed on an objective, so I was sure the next big push would be
happening over the following three weeks. What I hadnt factored into the thing was a high level of
journalistic ennui: Iraq wasnt as sexy as Afghanistan, a present and ongoing war. I had thought the
various staff would do a better job on the Iraq material, having learned how to do it, but they were
burnt out, and many of them went on holiday immediately. You cant, of course, blame people for
feeling exhausted, but there was a strong sense, at least to me, that the momentum had gone. They
were not doing a good job with the new material yet they wouldnt hand it over to other journalists to
get on with it. They were stuck.
In time, our disagreements would take on a darker hue, and this was especially true with the New York
Times. Bill Keller would wish to characterise me as a source, which bodes badly, by the way, for anyone
who might see him or herself as a potential future source for the New York Times. It used to be a matter
of honour, if not merely journalistic and legal good sense, not only to protect sources but to look after
them at every turn as we speak, journalists all over the world are on their way to jail to protect their
sources. Bill Kellers treatment of this source has been undignified and aggressive to a degree that
shames him and embarrasses his former office. In what world, you might ask, is it okay to work closely
with a source, allow him to organise an international syndicate, of which you are part, for the
publication of the years biggest story, only to turn on that source as soon as the party is over, and write
of him in terms of personal abuse he smelled as if he hadnt bathed in days. Thats right, I wasnt at
the bathroom mirror much that week, since I was up all night for three days straight, preparing the
material his paper would soon be splashing under their famous rubric, All the news thats fit to print.
Even more ungracious, not to say psychotic, was Kellers decision then to characterise me as a person
from a Stieg Larsson thriller, a man who is half-hacker, half-conspiracy theorist, using sex as both
recreation and violation.
Ladies and gentleman, that last statement is actionable. It is a malicious libel, and one intended
bizarrely to inflict maximum damage to a person then facing, as I was, allegations of sexual
misconduct. He must have known as he wrote and published that line that it constituted the most
heinous assault on my wellbeing, my legal standing and my reputation. But he did it anyway. Ill never
understand why and I wont speculate. I simply wished to unpack this example for you, so that you could
see how they work, how the whole system works with such men, to occasionally destroy the thing they
temporarily proclaimed to love. Kellers sordid disavowal is 8,000 words long and it contains many such
fallacies. Let this paragraph stand as reply to them all: I would only exhaust myself, and you, and the
courts if it came to that, trying to answer each one specifically. They are not the work of a sober,
responsible man. We have met these people in literature conscientious on the top, stagnant at the
middle and sociopathic underneath, who will do anything to glorify themselves in the eyes of an
unsuspecting public. So, you ask, what sort of man does this? A desperate one, we might say, or a small
one, indeed, or an archdeacon who had spent the night on the streets, sleeping with panthers, as Oscar
Wilde said, only to arrive at his office in the morning and issue a brutal diktat against panthers. The
young staff on his paper might blush at his methods, seeing how fast Mr Keller could turn from hungry
collaborator to ungrateful avenger in the time it takes to speed-dial the White House.
But you know how it is: part of you is loath to face the fact that a promising working relationship is
dead. Its dead now, but at the time I was still, however inexpertly, trying to keep the cartel together to
work on as-yet-unpublished documents. Again, I was focused on the work itself: it seemed imperative to
get the material out and make it available to researchers and readers. I hadnt gone into this game to
store up papers. I wanted to release them, however gradually, so that they would make the impact they
ought to have had. In the event, we just muddled through, and I worked with some TV people at the
same time on shaping a couple of documentaries to stoke public interest.
The relationship with the newspapers would get more explosive in the coming weeks, and Ill come to
that. But lets not lose sight, in all of this, of the leaks themselves. Together, the Afghan and Iraq war
logs are a major historical record, and they will not be bossed off the page by squabbling tribes. In some
ways, they were the culmination of years of thinking, on my part and on the part of my colleagues,
about how to open up the secret worlds that so define our lives and our global politics. For some
people, they were just a passing story. But they will live with us now for as long as we are interested in
the vicissitudes of human conflict. Let us enter into them and see what is there, before returning to the
indignant soap opera of the modern media.
13
BLOOD
On 28 July 2010, Major General Campbell, a US commander in Afghanistan, said that anytime theres
any sort of leak of classified material, it has the potential to harm the military folks that are working out
here every day. Major Campbell also admitted that he had not read any of the leaked documents. The
following day, at a Pentagon press conference, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Admiral Mike
Mullen ramped up this strategic piece of mythmaking. Mr Assange can say whatever he likes about the
greater good he thinks he and his source are doing, said Mullen, but the truth is they might already
have on their hands the blood of some young soldier or that of an Afghan family.
A member of the press corps asked a question.
Journalist: Admiral Mullen, you have mentioned that the founder of WikiLeaks may have blood on his
hands. Do you know, have people been killed over this information?
Mullen: Theyre still . . . what Im concerned about with this is I think individuals who are not involved in
this kind of warfare and expose this kind of information cant . . . from my perspective . . . cant
appreciate how this kind of information is routinely networked together inside the classified channels
we use specifically. And its very difficult, if you dont do this and understand this, to understand the
impact, and very specifically the potential that is there . . . that is there to risk lives of our soldiers and
sailors, airmen and Marines, coalition warfighters, as well . . . as well as Afghan citizens. And theres no
doubt in my mind about that.
Secretary Gates: I would add . . . I would just add one other thing. The thing to remember here is that
this is a huge amount of raw data . . . There is no accountability. There is no sense of responsibility. It is
sort of thrown out there for take as you will and damn the consequences.
Journalist: With all due respect, you didnt answer the question.
Within hours of these statements, the expression Julian Assange has blood on his hands had entered
the language. If you Google the words Assange and blood you will see, by the number of hits, that
those two words together suggest that, at least in the media consciousness, I am associated with the
concept of blood on hands to a greater extent than Richard Nixon, Suharto and Pontius Pilate put
together. That is how the modern world of communications works. Without any evidence any
evidence at all of casualties resulting from our attempt to let people see what was happening in that
war, I was able to be dubbed as a person with blood on his hands. It is one of those statements
careless people enjoy, and it has blunt currency, but there is no basis for it in fact. The very sinister thing
is how it is then taken up by other commentators, not only as a statement of fact, but as a true
reflection of the original statement. It is neither. Look again at Admiral Mullens statement. He said,
They might already have on their hands the blood . . . The words they and might are quickly shaved
off by the wider media and suddenly Julian Assange has blood on his hands. And so, something that
wasnt true in the first place breeds even sharper untruths, until, by the end, one is forced to embody
not only a fiction, but a fictionalisation of a previous fiction, without recourse.
Weve become so used to these procedures weve begun to think them entirely normal. But they are
heinous. And every day now, if I wanted to, I could spend my time rebuffing the fictions of foes and
friends alike, none of whom, it turns out, can be immune from the contaminating force of lies. This is
not only a problem for me, of course, and I begin to feel sorry for anybody who was ever stupid or vain
enough to think they might do well to live their lives in the public eye. Its a losing battle. One is forced
to become like a cypher in the work of Charles Dickens, living out an endless Jarndyce versus Jarndyce of
the self, in which evidence can only mount and convolute and breed, without the possibility of a clear
true verdict ever being heard or respected. This is my life now, and I bring it to you neither with a shrug
nor a whimper. You can only set the record straight where you can and get on with the job of forgetting
yourself in the name of bigger causes.
A large part of my job, when not harrying the banks, has been to reveal exactly where the blood has
been spilled in modern wars and state-sponsored invasions. It is a large task, and one that can only
really be completed by the public at large. We dont splash stories, we convey information, and it is the
task a task that will take years of individuals, researchers, journalists and lawyers, to look into the
data and see what it means. Our work with the newspapers was intended to be a stimulus: the material
was vast and was being offered to the public. How it can be us, or the enquiring public, that has blood
on their hands, as opposed to the generals and governors who prosecute these wars, is a matter for
clairvoyant abstraction. But let us just say that the Afghan logs and the Iraqi diaries cannot be owned by
either would-be conquering armies or by evil dictators. They are not theirs to own; they are part of the
fabric of the worlds reality. Gates and others may not like the fact that they cannot be in possession of
that reality, but indeed they cannot, unless they, and their opposite numbers, wish to be known as Big
Brother. When forced to tell the truth, in a letter to the Senate a fortnight later, on 16 August 2010,
Defense Secretary Gates informed members that the review to date has not revealed any sensitive
intelligence sources and methods compromised by this disclosure; the link that was originally inferred
between me and blood on hands was falsified from the horses mouth.
Red herrings and smears aside, the logs make a crucial contribution towards the understanding of the
war. They reveal the way the real incidents on the ground unfolded, while also alerting the public to
how these incidents were often downplayed in statements about them, whether coming from the
military or reported in the media. Again and again, civilian casualties are minimised or misreported. The
moral thing to do, and this is moral work for everyone, is to examine the actual field report and compare
it with what was said later, and what you find, too often for any kind of comfort, are situations where
innocent people were killed and not acknowledged. If a building, for instance, was suspected of being a
hideout for Taliban leaders, targeted and bombed, and it later turned out to be a school where a
number of children were killed, then this could be gleaned from the logs. And that, Ill maintain to the
grave, is a crucial piece of information in the public interest.
Let me give you an example from Iraq. In November 2005 US Marines launched operation Steel Curtain
in and around the city of Husaybah, near the border with Syria. After seventeen days of fighting, the
Pentagon put out a press release under the headline Operation Steel Curtain concludes along IraqSyria
border. Have a look, its still there on their website. After a brief rundown of the objectives of the
mission, the report stated officials reported that 10 marines were killed in fighting during Steel Curtain.
A total of 139 terrorists were killed and 256 were processed for detention during the operation. There
was no mention of civilian casualties. That press release is dated 22 November 2005. Now how about
this entry from the Iraq diaries we leaked, dated 11 November 2005: [Patrol] in support of Steel Curtain
reported finding civilian bodies buried in three (3) separate locations in Husaybah. At [first location] 3
females, 3 males and 1 child were recovered. At [second location] 7 females and 10 children were
recovered. At [third location] 1 child was unable to be recovered . . . Neighbors positively identified all
the remains and the father identified the remains of the child that was unable to be recovered. All
casualties were recovered from areas attacked by coalition aircraft on 7th Nov 2005.
You had to avoid bringing your own bias to the data and just let it speak to you. This was increasingly
difficult for the journalists to do, and was one of the reasons that the issue of redactions became
fraught. WikiLeaks, you must remember, was learning on the job, and Im sure we improved, especially
when it came to having a better focus on redactions. The data was giant and we might have failed to
redact brilliantly at first, but the supposed concern of the United States government for a risk that
remains merely hypothetical and unproven is a dishonest attempt to distract the public from the real
truth about the Afghan war that the logs revealed.
Another erroneous report emerged at this time that had me saying we werent responsible for the
welfare of informants and that they deserved to die. This is just nonsense: I said some people held that
view, but that we would edit the documents to preserve their essential content and not throw harm in
peoples way if we could avoid it.
Throughout the logs publication, I was aware that the redaction issue should not become an excuse for
censorship. As we saw with Defense Secretary Gates, interested parties, by which I mean Western
governments, will often use the redaction issue or the bogus issue of blood on hands to justify their
calls for the documents to remain secret altogether. Against the grain of modern developments, they
are essentially demanding censorship of these documents for political reasons. And my unwillingness to
serve in that propaganda war allowed them to dub me as someone who was against redactions. In
actual fact, we had been burning the midnight oil on redactions from early on. We didnt prove as
squeamish as the governments, naturally, or indeed as squeamish as the Guardian or the New York
Times, but we were judicious, I believe, and to date no one has come to harm as a result of what we
published.
Although my view of all this had not changed, I could see ahead of the Iraq release that the myth of
WikiLeaks recklessness was threatening to damage our organisation and our future work. If you are to
achieve anything significant in the world, you sometimes have to acknowledge expediencies, and I
therefore decided to redact the Iraq diaries much more thoroughly than anything previously. Without
the resources to do these redactions manually especially since our media partners refused to help
because they were scared of taking on the responsibility we wrote a program to remove all names and
all other identifying information automatically from the documents. I know that unthinking minds will
condemn me for saying this, but I actually believe that our redactions of the Iraq material were too
extensive. After the diaries revealed the collusion of American troops in the torture of hundreds of Iraqi
prisoners by local forces, the Danish Ministry of Defence started an investigation into the behaviour of
their own troops. At first they approached the Pentagon, asking for an unredacted copy of those
sections of the diaries that referred to Danish soldiers. The Pentagon flatly refused, so instead the Danes
asked us for the material, which we provided. Though some people may refuse to see this, open
government is only worthy of the name when it is a real, lived value, not an empty branding exercise,
and my attitude to redaction is coloured by this fact.
We had to prepare the Iraq diaries to some extent in an atmosphere of hysteria after the fallout from
the earlier leak. The newspaper partners were working at a low energy level, as I said, and they had
been slightly rocked by the scale of the response to the previous work. Ive seen this before with media
organisations: they want big stories, but they cant handle the heat they generate. A lot of these people
are just middle-class guys who want to go home to their wives and talk about schools for their kids, and
suddenly theyre coming to work and its surveillance and court cases, and the majority just dont have
the character for that. But the Iraq material was tremendously important, and I had a fight on, especially
after the Swedish sex allegations, in keeping the partners to their agreements and their honour. There
were signs. WikiLeaks began organising a joint press conference to announce the leaks. The Bureau of
Investigative Journalism, who were also going creepy, were to be involved along with an organisation
called Iraq Body Count and various others, including the media partners. The bell tolled, somewhere in
my head betrayal often comes not as a surprise but as a recognition when the senior news reporter
contact at the Guardian told my assistant, Sarah Harrison, that the paper did not want to be referred to
as a media partner. He said he didnt want the Guardians logo on the banner behind us, and that he
would be there, in the audience, as a reporter only.
Ding dong. Here he comes, holding his ears and claiming he only climbed into the cathedrals belltower
so as to get a better view of the man in the street. He told us the New York Times and Der Spiegel felt
the same way: no logos. We rented the Riverbank Hotel down near Vauxhall Bridge, in London, and we
had hundreds of press people there. I brought Daniel Ellsberg over from the States to join me on the
dais and we released the data and did a great number of interviews afterwards. Despite many irritations
that would only really flare up later on, such as with the media partners and various exploiters, we had
set about the release of the Iraq documents with as much precision as WikiLeaks could muster. It was
important that we attached an NGO to the release, and Iraq Body Count were right on the nose,
ethically speaking, keeping an impressively thorough record of civilian casualties since early in that war.
They helped us to create an automatic redactions system for the 400,000 documents. It was also right to
bring in Le Monde, as we did, as the French had rejected the war in 2003 and suffered as a result. The
Spanish daily newspaper El Pas came on board, too. We worked with the Bureau of Investigative
Journalism in London to produce documentaries on the diaries for Channel 4 and Al Jazeera. We, and
our partners, had a sense that the data would augment (and add detail to) the publics perception that
the war in Iraq was a failure and a threat to openness. American troops had already started to leave
Iraq, while many other Western nations had already withdrawn their forces more than a year before,
and this left the field open politically for a number of NGOs such as Reporters Sans Frontires, Amnesty
and Human Rights Watch to examine the material and begin drawing conclusions from it.
The documents consisted of the reports made by American soldiers in Iraq of every incident that they
thought noteworthy. All the details were there: the precise location, the time, the military units
involved, the number of killed, wounded and detained, the status of the victims, US, Allied, Iraqi
military, insurgent, civilian. In short, this was the most significant and detailed history to be recorded,
not only of the Iraq war, but of any war.
All of the problems of warfare were there, both at the minute-by-minute field level and, taken as a
whole, in grand perspective. Reading through the diaries with our partners, Iraq Body Count, we found
15,000 civilian casualties that had never previously been reported. Modern warfare is not the white heat
of technological wizardry and otherworldly precision the Pentagon would have you believe, its the
same old mess of blood and tragedy and injustice. A drone might be able to precisely target a dwelling,
but it cant check whos inside, or who just got home from school.
The Iraq documents, and there are still many of them awaiting analysis, reveal the legacy of US human
rights abuses, as well as the sad state of the country under Saddam. Some day, historians will be able to
piece together an amazing sense of the day-to-day hostilities that made up that war, and these diaries
will be the primary source for that. I was proud of the work we had done to make them possible and
phoned my mother in Australia. We spoke regularly, but it was good, at a moment like this, to make the
connection back to where it all started for me.
In the following days Larry King wanted to interview Daniel Ellsberg and me. The idea was that I would
talk about the diaries, and Dan would give his historical perspective. We had to be at the CNN
international studio in London at 2 a.m. to sync with Larry King, who, of course, was live in New York,
and we watched the rest of his show while we waited. One of his guests was a former girlfriend of the
Supreme Court judge Clarence Thomas, who had some unflattering memories of her time with him. The
thing that seemed to strike her the most was how ambitious and careerist he had been; he even, she
told King, went to do a press interview at two oclock in the morning! Dan and I looked at each other,
and at the clock, and smiled.
But something was on my mind. It was on the mind, indeed, of everyone we worked with. It was to
become the main preoccupation of my life at this point, and though we would continue to publish and
do the work of WikiLeaks, never halting publication even for a day, the Swedish case would overwhelm
the medias interest in our every move, feed a frenzy of speculation and disquiet about me, and see me
in prison. I have kept my own counsel about the matter until now. It will be difficult to keep anger out of
this account, owing to the sheer level of malice and opportunism that have driven the case against me,
but I want to make this argument as much as possible in a spirit of understanding. I have been denied
the same toleration by my suddenly multiplying enemies, and, if I cannot beat them, I can surely reserve
the right not to join them.
I went to Sweden in August 2010 with the words of the Pentagon still ringing in my ears. Geoff Morell,
the press secretary, had given a briefing in which he implied that WikiLeaks, and I specifically, should
begin worrying. If doing the right thing is not good enough for them, he said, then we will figure out
what alternatives we have to compel them to do the right thing. Let me leave it at that. When asked at
the same press conference whether our partners, the New York Times, would be similarly compelled, he
said, I dont know the New York Times would describe themselves as their partner . . . I dont know
that the New York Times or the other publications are in possession of the documents. This showed
that the Pentagon and Bill Keller were thinking along similar lines: let WikiLeaks be blamed and possibly
burned, while our partners who published the same material are shown to be somehow immune from
the same draconian laws. It wasnt going to play well with First Amendment fans, but what Morells
words proved was that what was freedom of the press for one organisation was not freedom for
another. Unlike our partners, WikiLeaks was not to be treated as a publisher but as a spy, and this
absurd position came ribboned in threat.
At the same time it was revealed that there was a 90-man Pentagon task force, later increased to 120
men, dedicated to WikiLeaks and working 24 hours a day and seven days a week. The FBI and Defense
Intelligence Agency were part of this group. The pot had boiled over and a number of American
politicians had called for my assassination. Sarah Palin said I should be hunted down like a dog and one
paper even printed a graphic of me with a target painted on my face.
I had not given up on the idea of finding a haven where we might do our work in peace. Sweden looked
possible. It was regarded as an independent, liberal country, with a Freedom of Information Act going
back to the 1780s and a Constitution that makes special and lengthy provision for the protection of
press freedom. Sources are better off in Sweden than in most places in the world: there is a right to
anonymity and penalties for journalists who promise but fail to protect the people who privately give
them information. To gain protection from prior restraint, it is necessary in Sweden to have both a
publishing certificate and to be working for a listed, responsible editor. I went to Sweden with that in
mind, hoping to gain a certificate and also to put myself in the position of becoming an accredited
editor. You need to have an income for this, so I agreed to become a columnist for Expressen, the
largest Swedish newspaper.
I hoped we might be able to open a journalistic office for WikiLeaks in Stockholm and began moving
towards this. So, Sweden represented two things to me at that point, a future working environment and
a safe haven, which makes what happened next taste all the more bitter. Before going, I arranged as
usual an invitation to speak, this time for the political party known as the Brotherhood, who are part of
the Christian Social Democrats. I arrived on 11 August. And, just at the point of arrival, I received some
news from one of our contacts in a Western intelligence agency, confirming what had already been
hinted at by the Pentagon press office. The word was that the US government acknowledged privately
that I would be difficult to prosecute but were already talking about dealing with you illegally, as my
source put it. The source specified what that would mean: gaining evidence about what we had in the
way of information; unearthing, by whatever means, some sort of link between Private Manning and
WikiLeaks; and, if all else failed, deploying other illegal means, such as planting drugs on me, finding
child pornography on my hardware, or seeking to embroil me in allegations of immoral conduct.
The message was that I would not be threatened physically. I told Frank Rieger, a supporter in Berlin
who is the chief technology officer at CryptoPhone, a company that makes telephones for encrypted
secure communication, and he said he would prepare a press release making this information public. He
then did so, and I had it with me on a laptop, ready to edit it. The intention was to get it out as soon as
possible, as it did no good to put these things out after some damage had been done, or material had
been planted. It remains one of my regrets that I didnt turn to it immediately. The same day, my
Australian bank card suddenly stopped working. I was being extra careful with mobile phones, only
turning them on to receive messages, so the situation was particularly chaotic; but I put it out of my
mind and got on with the Swedish tasks, which were towards establishing my editorial position there.
One evening I went to dinner with a few friends and their associates. The Swedish journalist Donald
Bstrom, a friend and very experienced news man of about fifty, was there, along with another Swedish
journalist and an American investigative journalist and his girlfriend. The American had possibly murky
connections, but the girl was nice, and I was chatting her up with Donald frowning across from me.
Donald later said I should watch what I was doing: he said the threat of a honeytrap was high at that
moment, and I remember he went into detail about how Mossad had captured Vanunu. I guess I must
have been up for affection, to put it coyly, because I didnt think very seriously about what Donald was
saying. I just made out like I knew how to take care of myself and felt I was so hyper-aware of security
that the sort of thing he was describing could only happen to naive people who hadnt had the kind of
experience I had. I wouldnt have to wait long to see how massively my hubris would backfire.
The parliamentary duty that had guaranteed me safe passage to Stockholm meant that I was under the
care of a group of Social Democrats, many of whom had functions with other political groupings. I was
told Id be able to stay at the flat of a political worker called A, who was away from her apartment. I
went there, and after a few days she returned early. Ms A was a political spokesperson for the party
and was involved in the arrangements to bring me over. I had no reason not to trust her, and no reason,
when she pointed out that there was only one bed and would I be cool sleeping with her, to believe that
this was naught but a friendly suggestion. I said yes, anyhow, and we went to bed together that night.
These political engagements are stressful and I was glad of the attention, when it came, of these smiling
and affectionate women. Its embarrassing to say so, given that even a single man, as I was, is liable to
be thought ungallant even for mentioning what went on with a woman in private. Or more than one
woman. But the situation seemed not at all unusual and felt like part of something nice in an otherwise
dark time. The Pentagon was calling for my head and many of my friends, and possibly sources, for all I
know, were scared or under surveillance. I wanted desperately to protect them and hoped that
Stockholm might prove to be the haven I had long envisaged for our work. Speaking honestly, I would
have to say I thought A was a little neurotic. But our night together was unremarkable. We had sex
several times and the next day everything seemed fine between us.
A was in charge of the microphone at a press conference a day or two later and there was a lunch
afterwards, which she attended, along with other journalists and a woman called W, who appeared
to have assisted at the press conference and who I remember was wearing a nice pink sweater. I wont
be winning any prizes for clairvoyant of the year, or, indeed, for gentleman of the year, when it comes
to these women, but the situation seemed relaxed and I was not aware of any threat to anybody or any
wrongdoing. W said she worked at the Natural History Museum and offered to show me some of
the private rooms there. I agreed, so after lunch and a quick shopping trip to buy computer parts she
and I broke off to go to the museum. Some of the staff in there seemed to know her and we looked
around before going to see a movie about life beneath the sea, then going our separate ways.
That night, A had arranged a crayfish party, a traditional occasion at that time of year in Sweden,
and I went along to meet up with her. This was the day after the day she later claimed I had raped her.
A was there at the party and seemed totally happy, laughing and drinking with me and my friends
and her friends until late. We were sitting outside the party and she sent a Tweet saying she was with
the coolest people in the world. It became obvious she had told people about us sleeping together and
it emerged, later, that she had taken a picture of me when I was asleep in her bed and pasted it on her
Facebook page. I was now supposed to be moving to stay with other people, a couple of guys from the
Pirate Party a Swedish political party that campaigns for copyright reform, among other things but
A insisted I come back and continue to stay with her. The arrangement had always been that I
would move to the guys flat after A got back to her apartment from her trip, but she said it was
cool to stay at hers and I went back with her. And that was how the situation remained for the next five
nights.
Some other evenings I spent with W. But A was still working with me on political meetings and
so on, including a dinner we went to with Rick Falkvinge, head of the Pirate Party. He was offering to
house a server for WikiLeaks, an interesting offer because that meant it would have political protection
by being under the custody of the Pirate Party. Another night, after an awards party, I met up with
W and went back with her to her house in Enkopping, which is about fifty miles outside Stockholm.
My behaviour sounds cold, and no doubt was, which is a failing of mine, but not a crime. Id spent long
enough at As and could see that it would be a bad idea to stay longer. Remember, I was feeling
especially paranoid: I didnt like being in one place for too long and the affair with A was becoming
public, which appeared to be something she wanted.
The thing with W was going nowhere, either. She was a little vague, but the night in Enkopping was
fun and I thought wed had a perfectly nice time, albeit one that probably wouldnt be repeated. She
didnt seem too fussed herself, as we had breakfast together the next morning and then rode together
on her bicycle to the railway station. She kindly paid my ticket my bank card was still on the blink,
though Im always skint and she kissed me goodbye and asked me to call her from the train. I didnt do
that, and it has already turned out to be the most expensive call I didnt make. I went on to a meeting at
the Journalists Union, to see about getting membership: remember, despite all my shenanigans, I was in
Stockholm in an attempt to shore up various legal protections that would allow WikiLeaks to conduct its
business from there, and, with any luck, for me to live without fear of being extradited to the United
States.
As I said, I wasnt really using the phones. (I always carry several at once.) At one point, I did have a
short conversation with W, when she called me, but the phone was low on charge and it ran out
while we were still talking. The international situation had me in its grip, and although I had spent time
with these women, I wasnt paying enough attention to them, or ringing them back, or able to step out
of the zone that came down with all these threats and statements against me in America. One of my
mistakes was to expect them to understand this: they knew, because wed talked about it over the
week, that there were said to be 120 people working against WikiLeaks in the Pentagon. So I wasnt a
reliable boyfriend, or even a very courteous sleeping partner, and this began to figure. Unless, of course,
the agenda had been rigged from the start.
One of the nights I was staying with A, she didnt come home and said she had slept with a
journalist who was writing a piece about me. This was odd, I thought, and who was this guy? But I hadnt
exactly been Mr Loyalty, and the whole thing was pretty obviously casual, though I did notice as I left on
the Friday morning that she was a little strange. Later that day, I got a call from Donald Bstrom, telling
me hed just spoken to A, who had just spoken to W, who told her she was in hospital. I must
say I was completely baffled. These girls were talking to each other and one of them was in the hospital?
My phones were hopeless, but on one of them I got another call from Donald, quoting A again, who
was saying something about W and the police and DNA testing. I said, What on earth is going on?
So I called W and she totally denied these things, saying she had only mentioned police in relation
to perhaps asking them for advice about tests you could get for sexually transmitted diseases.
W said she wanted me to come down immediately and have an STD test. I said I couldnt that day, I
was dealing with heavy stuff, but Id come the next day, and she said that was fine. She then asked me if
Id called her off my own bat, or because Id been speaking to A? It just became too ludicrous at this
point. Donald was ringing me again and again, saying that A was trying to look out for me with this
W situation, and I was saying, No, its fine, Ive spoken to W and were meeting tomorrow. The
whole thing was zany, if anything, and deeply suspicious as the hours passed and the gossip flew. I spoke
to A and asked her what was all this nonsense about police. She told me I didnt understand how it
was in Sweden: you could just ask police for advice like that, about STDs and such like, and theres
nothing in it and no formal complaint. Perhaps I should have been more suspicious about what was
going on at this point, but, of course, I knew I had done nothing wrong and it therefore didnt occur to
me what might happen next with the police.
I wanted to double-check things with W, so I topped up one of my phones and called her several
times that afternoon, with no reply. I needed some time and space to myself, so I then booked into a
hotel for the night where I began writing what was to be the first of my Swedish newspaper columns. I
had just written that line about the first casualty of war being truth when, about 6.30 p.m., I checked on
Twitter and saw there was an arrest warrant out for me for double rape. At first, I thought this must be
some tabloid garbage. Completely made up. I just thought, how low can they go, these papers? How far
are they willing to go to smear a person? Then I saw, on the website of a more serious newspaper, that
the arrest rumour was correct, and my entire belief system temporarily collapsed.
Recovering, I realised that Id signed into the hotel with a credit card and that several people had seen
me. I had to get out of there fast and assess the situation properly and understand what was going on.
You mustnt forget how paranoid I was in general at that point, and how conspiratorial. I couldnt
believe A and W were actually doing this, and couldnt for the life of me work out how it could
come about. So I got out of the hotel and went on a train to a friends house in the north of Sweden. It
didnt seem possible to go to the police because I just couldnt trust that there wasnt some general
effort afoot to capture me. It seemed so surreal and so unexpected. And it was impossible to say, at that
point, whether this had been some kind of set-up, or whether the women were jealous, because,
frankly, after pausing for thought and discussing it with friends, I saw that both things were possible,
though I understand it had to be one or the other.
I did not rape those women and cannot imagine anything that happened between us that would make
them think so, except malice after the fact, a joint plan to entrap me, or a terrible misunderstanding
that was stoked up between them. I may be a chauvinist pig of some sort but I am no rapist, and only a
distorted version of sexual politics could attempt to turn me into one. They each had sex with me
willingly and were happy to hang out with me afterwards. That is all.
But, in modern Sweden, that is not all. In some ways, it might be fair to see Sweden as a place that is
isolated from the rest of Europe. It has traditionally had an inclination towards neutrality and is
something of an enclosed world, with a population of less than ten million dominated by a few powerful
institutions in Stockholm. Sweden has a reputation for political stability and consensus, partly as a result
of the Social Democratic Partys dominance of national politics for most of the twentieth century. But
things have been changing, and not clearly for the better. In 2001, Sweden, under the SDP, sent troops
to Afghanistan, which was the first deployment of troops in an overseas military operation for almost
two hundred years. This reflects a turn away from their previous policy of neutrality in foreign relations,
and a growing orientation towards the United States. In Cable 09-141, which we later released as part of
Cablegate, the American ambassador in Stockholm made clear the extent of American pressure and
Swedish compliance over the issue of computer file-sharing and government monitoring of computer
traffic. Worse still, a Human Rights Watch report published in 2006 detailed Swedish complicity and co-
operation in the illegal rendition of two asylum seekers by the CIA. Perhaps I shouldnt be surprised that
the day after I was arrested in London in December 2010, the British newspaper The Independent
reported that the Swedish government had already participated in informal talks with the Americans
about extraditing me onwards from Sweden to the USA.
Claes Borgstrm, the lawyer for the two women, is spokesman for the SDP on gender equality, and
youd have to say, with the best will in the world, that Sweden is one of the few countries in the world
where hardcore feminism has entered the mainstream. Indeed, the decision to go to Afghanistan was
mainly based on feminist principles: despite the womens movements traditional anti-war stance, they
deplored, understandably, the Talibans treatment of women and sanctioned, less understandably,
bombing as a way of opposing it. The older generation of Swedish feminists can often be heard referring
to something called State Feminism, and only recently, around February 2011, has the Swedish press
begun to look at my case with a fresh eye for what it says about their own system and their own
struggles.
A is an aspiring political figure in Sweden, and has been for several years, which makes her case
especially newsworthy. She is a well-connected figure within the feminist movement, as well as with the
Social Democrats, where she was a prominent figure in Broderskapsrorelsen, the organisation that
hosted my visit in August. Whatever whirlwind was whipped up, it led immediately to sinister events. I
have been informed that A has deleted Tweets relating to me. In her last public one, on 12
December 2010, she wrote:
Am sick and tired of all thats going on, will it ever end? Anyway, I want to send a message to the
[conspiracy] theorists that the other one [W] was as insistent [as A].
Expressen revealed, on 10 March 2011, that the police officer who first interviewed W was a friend
of As. The day after the women went to the police, in fact, A had given an interview to the
same paper, in which she refuted any suggestion that she and W had been afraid of me. She said I
was not violent and that, in both cases, the sex was consensual. From a police dossier, it appears that
the women had not intended to file complaints and were simply seeking advice about STDs. They had
said they had threatened me, in the telephone conversations, that they would go to the police if I did
not immediately submit to an SDT test. The complainants lawyer, Claes Borgstrm, stated in an article
in the daily tabloid Aftonbladet that the women did not go to the police with the intention of reporting
me; they just wanted me to get tested.
But there are other issues. In a 2006 blog entry called Rape?, A presents a scenario and finishes
with a question: Is there any case in which a man has been convicted of rape even if the woman willingly
started having sex? Against recommended protocol, neither of the womens interviews with police
officers were recorded. Even prosecutor Marianne Ny believes such recordings should be made, as she
stated in her comments to the judicial authority on the new sex offences law. According to police
testimony from her friends, W only intended to find out whether the police could compel me to
take an HIV test. According to one of the witnesses, who had been in constant contact with W
throughout the time leading up to the police complaint, W felt as though she was being pushed
around by others who had their own agenda. This conflicts with As story in the Expressen article of
21 August 2010, where she is cited, and which claims she was contacted by W because W
wanted to file a report for rape against me, and that A gave her support because she had had a
similar experience. In the leaked report, which has not been approved by W, the interviewing
officer interrupted the interview because she could no longer concentrate when she found out that an
order for arrest had been issued against me, shortly after the interview had started. According to her
friend (M T), who was also interviewed by police in connection with the case, W felt
railroaded by the police and by others around her.
I could go on, but wont. This is not the place to rehearse the entire case for the defence. Suffice to say
the accusations were, from my perspective, both ludicrous and sinister. I have prepared a 46-page
report on the case, on statements and inconsistencies. It is an exercise in scientific journalism,
examining how untruths can feed through a whole pipeline of communication, resulting in an absolute
falsehood threatening an individual.
As I said earlier, I claim no prizes for good behaviour during that week in Stockholm, but the rape
allegations represent a smear that has already ruined a year of my life and done untold damage to my
public standing. Given that the work I have been moving towards all my life has been founded on
probity and ethical activism, this campaign against me has only proved useful to my enemies. At the
time of writing, I am in the house of one of my bail sureties, under curfew in the English countryside
with an electronic manacle on my leg. The use of such electronic monitoring in law enforcement dates
back to 1983, when a judge in New Mexico called Jack Love read a cartoon in which a villain attaches an
electronic tracking device to Spider-Man. Just like Old Bluey, my life is stranger than any fiction. I have
not been charged with any crime, but, in an echo of the blood on his hands manipulation, if you put the
words Julian Assange rape into a search engine it will return almost four million hits. The rape
allegation was made, withdrawn and then made again, in the course of which I was already criminalised
for the horrendous feat of having had consensual sex with two women in Stockholm in August 2010.
They aimed to draw blood, and did. I will not burrow down for you into any more detail: you have the
picture. In autobiographical terms, it is strange to have to spend so much time on something so odd. All
this happened, and has to be discussed, but it is just not me. It could have been a train crash, or a
sudden conversion to Mormonism, or some other gratuitous unlikelihood that came to grab my
attention in the middle of the best working year of my life; but it wasnt, it was a double rape allegation,
and I have given it all the description I can.
Elsewhere, what passes for normal activity in my life was going on regardless. I remained in Sweden for
more than a month after the allegations were first raised, but nothing was happening, and the Swedish
prosecutor didnt seem to need to talk to me, so I caught a plane to England and went back to work. A
European Arrest Warrant would soon follow hard on my heels, but for now it was time to prepare, along
with our jumpy media partners, for Cablegate, the biggest unauthorised disclosure in history.
14
CABLEGATE
Disclosure is not merely an action; it is a way of life. To my mind it carries both sense and sensibility: you
are what you know, and no state has the right to make you less than you are. Many modern states
forget that they were founded on the principles of the Enlightenment, that knowledge is a guarantor of
liberty, and that no state has the right to dispense justice as if it were merely a favour of power. Justice,
in fact, rightly upheld, is a check on power, and we can only look after the people by making sure that
politics never controls information absolutely.
This is common sense. It used to be the first principle of journalism in every country with a free press.
The Internet has made it easier to censor writing, removing the existence of truth at the flick of a mouse
(Stalin wouldve loved it) and monitoring peoples private data in ways that would have proved
delightful to the demon paper-shufflers of the Third Reich. Secrecy is too often the sole preserve of the
powerful, and anyone who says so, these days, is not just taken to be underscoring an old liberal
standard and a canard of democracy, but to be revealing themselves as an exotic anarchist bent on
compromising national security. The principles laid down in the American Constitution would, if
properly examined, look radical to the mindset of a vast number of people living in America today.
Jefferson would seem like an enemy of the state and Madison a pinko guerrilla. Likewise, to the modern
Chinese, those studious little economists Marx and Engels would appear like madmen who little
understood the deep human value of a Gucci handbag and the new iPad.
Information sets us free. And it does so by allowing us to question the actions of those who would
sooner we had no means to question them, no right to reply. WikiLeaks, for all its modernism and all its
software, is a force for the upholding of liberty that would have seemed quite traditional and quite
sensible to the mind of an eighteenth-century figure such as John Wilkes. We come under fire, very
often, for upholding those principles that many of the governments that criticise us are elected to
uphold. We are a peoples bureau of checks and balances, working internationally, and knowing that the
things governments and diplomats do behind closed doors is entirely our business. The people elect
them, pay for them, trust them, and are bosses of them. And governments who allow themselves to
forget that will hear the voice of the people in every chatroom, on every blog, on every Twitter feed
and, eventually, from every square, rising from Tiananmen Square to Tahrir Square, from Trafalgar to
Times, with ripples through every letter of the alphabet. And governments who stand against this truth
are done for.
Early on in our relationship with the media partners, I knew I would, at some point, offer them the
chance to join us in publishing a giant cache of diplomatic cables that had been leaked to us and were
being prepared. I was holding off, to let the Afghan and Iraq war logs see the light of day in as measured
and careful a way as possible. There was a lot of material, and it takes time to read and sift, organise and
present, with legal and other considerations always impinging on the judgements we make. Our chief
concern is to keep the promise we make to our sources: if the material fulfils our editorial policy, is
important, new, and suffering some form of suppression, we will release it as soon as we can and with
all manner of support and fanfare. These latest cables detailed the activities of embassies all over the
world; they lifted the lid on secret operations, deep-seated prejudices, national embarrassments and
human affairs at every level of government. Like the previous leaks, they would bring the world into
focus despite the efforts of those who would prefer it blurred. And they would make a change in our
understanding of what our governments were doing, and why.
As a result of the surveillance, and the aggressive attitude of the Pentagon towards me personally, I
wanted to make copies of the cables to ensure their safekeeping. I was not happy with how things had
developed with the Guardian, and thought the New York Times were behaving despicably, but my
attitude to the former was rather better the devil you know. The New York Times had shown
themselves to be cowards, however, and I was not ready to work with them again. It felt like there was a
massive strike coming down on us, so I copied the 250,000 documents and stashed them first with
contacts in Eastern Europe and Cambodia. I also put them on an encrypted laptop and had it delivered
to Daniel Ellsberg, the hero of the Pentagon Papers. Giving it to Dan had symbolic value for us. We also
knew he could be trusted to publish the whole lot during a crisis.
You have to realise, the material did not only have great value philosophically. If we had wanted to, we
could probably have sold the cables for millions of dollars indeed, I have been offered money for them
even after we started to publish but we do not operate like that. Still, I wanted to impress upon our
partners the value of this material, so that they would appreciate what they were dealing with when we
negotiated the conditions under which it might be released. The Guardian was still the right paper to
work with on this material and I put my worries aside. I asked for a signed letter from the papers editor,
Alan Rusbridger, guaranteeing that the material would be kept strictly confidential, that nothing would
be published from it until we were ready to go, and that it would not be stored on a computer that was
connected to the Internet or any internal network. Rusbridger agreed and we signed the letter. In
return, I produced an encrypted disk with a password and they had the material. At which point the
senior news reporter went off on holiday to Scotland, all bonhomie and jollity, ready to read the
material and keep in touch about the future plan.
With the Swedish case now in the air, there was a definite sense of gossiping schoolgirls among the
media partners. It amazed me, because many of them are investigative reporters, and youd imagine
they knew something about smears and hysteria when it came to political outcasts. A man, for example,
who worked for the Bureau of Investigative Journalism suddenly told his colleagues he wouldnt appear
on stage with a rapist, and the fact that the papers didnt want their logo on the banner at the press
conference well, it was the same old credulousness and suspicion. Some of those men have more
skeletons in their closets than Highgate Cemetery but they dived on my troubles with an unmistakeable
glee. None of them asked me how it came about, or how I was, or whether I needed anything: they
simply responded as if the creepy allegations were smoke that could not possibly exist, despite
everything their experience told them, without fire. Such people sit in judgement all their lives, hoping
against hope that no one will ever turn the lamp on them. And of course no one ever does, by and large,
because these men are the media, and no Fleet Street editor was ever known to dish on another.
Having schmoozed their way to several scoops off the back of our organisation, two of these media
partners began to behave as if I represented a moral risk. Nothing had changed in the material, nothing
had changed in our passion to reveal it, but false allegations had been made against me that caused
these men to increase their bad behaviour and their stereotyping of me to the point where it was crazy.
I might have rescued it, and I certainly tried to do so, but, beyond a certain point, one needs talents I
dont have in order to negotiate with people who are that insane with self-interest. They were going to
do whatever they wanted to do and I had made several mistakes, the latest of which was to have given
them a copy of the cables.
There were some incredible stories in the cables: $25 million worth of bribes to politicians in India, given
with the knowledge of apparently sanguine US diplomats; signs of continued American interference in
Haitian politics; revelations that a Peruvian presidential candidate had taken money from an alleged
drug trafficker; unprecedented levels of lobbying of foreign governments by diplomats on behalf of
American corporations; politicians in Lithuania paying journalists for positive coverage; and even spying
by American diplomats on their colleagues at the United Nations.
The cables were going to be sensational, but at that point they were not quite ready. Our systems were
not yet there with the presentation of the documents, and not ready to cope with the traffic that was
bound to follow. We had legal considerations and unresolved sensitivities to do with protecting our
source, whoever that was, and this was why I had lodged the material with our partner but demanded
an agreement that the material not be published until the green light was clearly given. Any decent
publisher would have understood this: it was more important than any scoop that the material be
properly ready and that the sources be protected. This was priority number one. But not to the
Guardian. No sooner had the senior reporter got back to London from his holiday than he began
harassing me about publication. He said that a rival journalist, a woman attached to the Independent,
had a copy of the cables and was a clear threat to their exclusivity.
I investigated that matter. It turned out that our Icelandic colleague, Smri McCarthy, had indeed shared
the material with the Independent journalist during an anxious moment. He had been asked to work on
the cables for a short time to help format them, but, stressed at the workload, he had misguidedly
shared them with her to get some help with the burden of the work involved under certain strict
conditions. He then hacked into the computer remotely and wiped the cables, though it would never be
clear whether she had copied them or not. The Guardian reporters argument is that she was shopping
them around. I cant tell you how many times we have come across people people who think of
themselves as campaigners behaving like stock exchange bullies when it comes to a commodity they
are interested in. You can hear the snap of their red braces as they go in for the kill. Although we had
sorted out the Independent thing, the Guardians senior reporter said it was all very threatening and
that a rogue copy of the data might be out there. He wanted to rush towards publication. I told him we
werent ready and we had a written agreement. He went off in a fluster and we didnt hear from him.
It became clear later that he had already copied the material for the New York Times. They were moving
towards publication with no regard for any of the important issues matters of life and death that
stood behind the documents. Like greedy, reckless, damn-them-all bandits, they were going to shoot up
the town no matter who was standing in the way. The Guardians reporter had behaved cravenly and
lawlessly, and was quite happy to please his newspaper, and his heroes across the Atlantic, while
dumping the whole thing on our heads without warning. There isnt a student journalist who would
behave in so unprincipled a way, having no care for the story itself, or the people who supplied it, before
the onrush of his own dirty plan to stab us in the back. Given how poorly the New York Times had
supported the earlier leaks, and given how hostile they had become to me, it just didnt make any sense
for us to collaborate further with them. It was our work, after all. But the Guardian didnt care about
any of that: they wanted the New York Times to help shore up their own defences, and WikiLeaks could
go and hang itself from the nearest tree.
We simply had to have some time. It was deeper than any of them could understand, in their juvenile
deadline-mania, but we had to have time to prepare for this. I called Rusbridger and he agreed I should
come in for talks. The New York Times involvement which was illegal, remember, given my signed
agreement with Rusbridger was not something anyone would yet admit to, but I came into the
Guardian offices in high dudgeon. I knew they were double-crossing us, without even having the balls to
say that is what they were doing. We came into the building with my lawyer, Mark Stephens, and, as
chance would have it, we came face to face with the senior news reporter beside the stairs.
Hello, I said.
Oh-oh, he said. He looked surprised.
Well come down and see you later, I said. We just want to clarify a few things that Alan Rusbridger
showed us.
Ive never in my life seen anyones face collapse like that. He went white. As we walked away, our group
said the news reporter looked like a person who had just been caught with a murder weapon.
We went upstairs to see Alan Rusbridger. Der Spiegels editor came in. I was shouting, almost certainly,
and I asked him point-blank if they had given the material to the New York Times. Rusbridger just
dodged the question. The first thing we need to do, I said, is establish whos got a copy of the material.
Who does not have a copy of the material, and who does? Because were not ready to publish. His eyes
rolled around the room. He didnt know where to look. Did you give a copy of the cables to the New
York Times?
All this business with the Independent journalist had given them a bit of script to warble on, but it
didnt hold, and I just kept pressing them. We need to understand what sort of people were dealing
with, I said. Are we dealing with people whose word we can trust or are we not? Because if were not
dealing with people whose written word we can trust, then . . . It now looked like all their eyes were
rolling round the room. It was like a cartoon, all these grown men finding themselves unable to face the
truth of what they had done, or to put forward some argument to try to defend themselves. I would
later be characterised as some sort of nutcase for shouting at them. But who wouldnt shout, when the
stakes were so high? Who wouldnt lose their temper with such lily-livered gits hiding in their glass
offices? It was soon clear to everyone that Alans refusal to answer the question was as good as an
admission. It was only for legal reasons that he wasnt saying yes or no. My respect for the man
plummeted to nothing. I mean, heres this guy, the editor of an important newspaper, an institution,
indeed, a man older than me and with a crucial issue in front of him, and what we get is eyes rolling
around the room like marbles on a pogo stick. It was just the most incredible thing and I couldnt believe
I was witnessing it.
Im sure I must have given them some lengthy harangue about honour and so on. You do, in those
circumstances. Anyway, we ended up being there debating it for seven hours, then we went downstairs
to come up with a plan. The Guardian had known all along what it wanted to do it wanted to publish
right away. Der Spiegel meanwhile was trying to be friends with everyone. The truth is, we werent
ready to go, as I said, and we were being strong-armed by these people who had been niggling away at
us for weeks, and were now ready with the coup de grce. At the centre of their colossal, stained
vanity, they had forgotten who we were and how we had got to this room. They now thought of us as a
bunch of weird hackers and sexual delinquents. But we knew our material and we knew our technology;
these guys were playing by the oldest rules in the business. I implied that I would immediately give the
entire cache of material to the Associated Press, Al Jazeera and News Corp. I didnt want to do it, but I
would if they didnt play ball.
They sobered up and began to speak more reasonably about how the publication might be handled. I
continued my counterattack, pointing out that I would sue them for breach of contract. My organisation
was not-for-profit; we depended on donations to pay our costs, and the fact that our systems were not
ready for publication when the news hit would mean that our own revenue would take a beating. They
had to realise what they were doing to us: we were not a theoretical grouping but a flesh-and-blood
organisation who had worked for years to achieve great goals. What they were doing would threaten to
destroy us and I would use everything in our power to prevent it. So we began negotiating. They
wouldnt budge at first from imminent publication, but eventually we agreed that a months delay
would give us just enough time to prepare. I insisted at that point that El Pas and Le Monde join the
mix of media partners, that phrase so hated by the New York Times. We now knew, more than they,
how grubby partnership could be, and, on the spot, I was making ready for a future in which lessons had
been learned.
I stressed that the leak should not be the story we were in the business of leaking stories themselves,
and therefore, to keep the heat off us and on the actual material, I insisted we let the stories out one by
one. Top stories first, none about Israel, none about Cuba, allowing the possibility that the US wouldnt
simply overreact to Cablegate as a whole. They would attend, as they should, and as we all should, to
one leak at a time. I also insisted, as part of this enforced repackaging of our relationship, that the New
York Times agree to stop their rubbishy, self-serving campaign of writing stories against me and against
Bradley Manning, a young man they had characterised as a mad, bad and sad little fag. This no doubt
kept the Pentagon off their backs, but it was disgraceful by any other yardstick. Thankfully, Keller came
back the next day with an agreement to lay off that sort of thing and they did for a while.
It later emerged, via the guys at Der Spiegel, that the Guardian had been ready to fuck us all along.
They were working with the New York Times and were willing to go without even telling us, and
without giving us a chance to prepare the data properly or prepare ourselves for attack. Thats how
much the Guardian actually cared for the principles involved. Openness? You must be joking. A new
generation of libertarians? They couldnt have cared less. A new mood of popular uprisings in the world
and a new spirit of speaking truth to power? The Guardian the most ill-named paper in the world
may carry picture after picture from Tahrir Square, but they were willing to sell all the principles that
movement stood for, and that we stood for in helping them, straight down the river. The senior news
reporters attempt to give his paper one last leg-up before retirement left his paper gasping for its
liberal breath. When American right-wingers were calling for me to be killed, the Guardian didnt run a
single article in my defence. Instead, they got my old friend, the special investigations reporter, to write
a dirty little attack on me.
Strewth, as we used to say. Life was easier when it was just sugar ants running up my legs and biting
me to death. At least in those days I had the sun on my side. But in our new kind of business, you soon
get over the old guard kicking you when youre down. We had a month to get the cables in good order,
and doing so would be the most exhilarating month of my life. The cables would show the modern world
what it really thought of itself, and we worked through the nights in an English country house to meet
the deadline. The snow had begun to fall and it lay evenly over the Norfolk countryside. There was no
way to know back then that the house was soon to become my prison for the foreseeable future.
AFTERWORD
Julians autobiography ends here, but the work of WikiLeaks continues.
*
14 January 2011 President Sine al-Abidine Ben Ali dissolves the Tunisian government and declares a
state of emergency, then flees to Saudi Arabia. In Libya, his ally Colonel Gaddafi makes a speech
condemning the uprising in Tunisia and claiming that protestors were led astray by WikiLeaks
disclosures that had detailed corruption in Ben Alis family and government.
22 January The Peruvian newspaper El Comercio receives a phone call from WikiLeaks offering them
around 4,000 cables from the Lima embassy. Similar deals are made with media organisations around
the world, as Cablegate goes global.
28 January As protestors begin a Day of Rage in Cairo, Mubaraks beseiged government cuts off
cellphone, satellite and Internet connections across Egypt. The eyes of the world are firmly upon the
Middle East, as WikiLeaks continues to release cables from the region.
15 February In a speech at George Washington University, Hillary Clinton proclaims that Internet
freedom is a foreign policy priority for Barack Obamas government. She adds that, in order to be
meaningful, online freedoms must carry over into real-world activism. On the same day, the US
government goes to court to try to force Twitter to reveal the account details of three WikiLeaks
employees.
16 February After the resignation of Mubarak on 11 February, WikiLeaks continue to support the
protestors in Egypt, releasing more than 450 cables from the Cairo embassy in one day.
25 February Former President George W. Bush cancels his forthcoming appearance at a Global
Leadership Summit in Denver when he learns that Julian Assange who has wilfully and repeatedly
done great harm to the interests of the United States will appear.
4 March WikiLeaks employee, Kristinn Hrafnsson, wins 2010 Journalist of the Year award in Iceland.
15 March Coverage of Cablegate begins in the Indian newspaper The Hindu. Over several weeks The
Hindu reveals stories of bribery in the Indian parliament, the use by America of arms sales for political
leverage, alleged links between the Pakistani intelligence services and the Taliban, and many more.
20 March The US ambassador to Mexico, Carlos Pascual, resigns after clashing with President Felipe
Caldern over his criticisms of Mexican security forces in leaked cables.
7 April The Israeli paper Yediot begins the latest staggered release of cables, shedding light on familiar
topics such as the close links between Israeli intelligence and the CIA, as well as more surprising stories
such as the close relationship between Mossad and the King of Bahrain, and negotiations over arms-
smuggling into Gaza with members of the former Egyptian regime.
8 April Cables concerning the Middle East continue to be released, while protests continue across much
of the region. A number of cables from 2009 and 2010 show that the US embassy in Yemen was
repeatedly informed by local contacts about the weakness and unpopularity of their ally President
Saleh, who now faces angry protests.
21 April A cable from Dubai details claims that Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is grooming
his chief-of-staff Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei as a future replacement. Mashaei is seen as a rival to Iranian
hardliners, opposing greater clerical involvement in politics.
25 April WikiLeaks and nine other media organisations begin to release the Guantnamo files a
dossier of Detainee Assessment Briefs kept by the Joint Task Force Guantnamo. The documents,
which cover 765 out of 779 prisoners, reveal records of health assessment, the story of how they came
to be detained, the reasons for their continued detention, and the evidence against them.
Dozens, perhaps hundreds, of prisoners, are detained on extraordinarily flimsy evidence, and sometimes
no evidence at all. One man is detained because he worked for the news channel Al Jazeera, and
therefore thought to have useful information about the channel or people he had met in the course of
his work; another man because he might know about terrorist activities in a certain region as a result of
his work as a taxi-driver. Other detainee assessments speak to deeper issues with American strategy
having a link to Pakistani intelligence services is listed on the matrix of threat indicators, despite the
fact that Pakistan is a key American ally in the War on Terror.
As American journalist Glenn Greenwald writes, How oppressive is this American detention system,
how unreliable the evidence is on which the accusations are based . . . the idea of trusting the
government to imprison people for life based on secret, untested evidence never reviewed by a court
should repel any decent or minimally rational person, but these newly released files demonstrate how
warped is this indefinite detention policy specifically.
11 May The US government opens a Grand Jury hearing in Alexandria, Virginia. The hearing, which will
sit in secret, is to decide whether to prosecute WikiLeaks.org and its founder under the Espionage Act.
On the same day, Julian is awarded the Sydney Peace Foundations gold medal for exceptional courage
in pursuit of human rights.
13 May Amnesty International singles out WikiLeaks and its media partners for praise in its annual
report, as catalysts for a series of uprisings against oppressive regimes across the Arab world: The year
2010 may well be remembered as a watershed year when activists and journalists used new technology
to speak truth to power and, in so doing, pushed for greater respect for human rights.
23 May Cable coverage begins in the El Salvadorean paper El Faro. Their coverage sheds light on
negotiations over the Central American Free Trade Agreement, on deportation of El Salvadorean
migrants from the US, on the attempts of left-wing former guerilla group FMLN to improve relations
with America, and on American opinions of local political figures. El Faros coverage begins: In El
Salvador there are dozens of diplomatic missions, but only one Embassy, or at least only one that does
not need to be named, the flag need not be named . . . For years, prominent public officials, party
leaders and businessmen have visited the embassy to share their concerns and personal opinions with
US diplomats, their hidden political strategies which they would not confess in public to the citizens of El
Salvador.
31 May Coverage of cables concerning Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland begins in the Irish
Independent. Several stories concern the IRA, with a cable from Honduras claiming that they operate
there, and another from Dublin quoting former Irish justice ministers as saying that a Sinn Fin politician
outed as a British spy, and then later murdered in an apparent revenge attack, had in fact been outed by
the British. Other cables give details of how US diplomats are involved in monitoring Irish Muslims and
claims that Ireland is being used by the CIA to secretly render terror suspects.
1 June WikiLeaks continues to draw the media into new partnership arrangements, this time setting up
a deal between the American magazine The Nation and the Haitian newspaper Hati Libert to publish
cables concerning US relations with the Caribbean island. Cables reveal how Haitis wealthy elite armed
and deployed police in pro-Aristide neigbourhoods after the 2004 coup, effectively using the police as a
private army; another suggests that American diplomats lobbied to keep Haitis minimum wage as low
as possible, opposing a move to raise it to $5 a day, while yet another confirms that the US, like other
Western governments, were well aware that the 2010 Haitian elections were fraudulent.
2 June Julian wins the 2011 Martha Gellhorn prize for journalism. The judges describe Julian as brave,
determined, independent: a true agent of people not power . . . WikiLeaks has been portrayed as a
phenomenon of the hi-tech age, which it is. But its much more. Its goal of justice through transparency
is in the oldest tradition of journalism. WikiLeaks has given the public more scoops than most journalists
can imagine: a truth-telling that has empowered people all over the world.
21 June A November 2002 cable from the Vatican indicates that Venezuelan Catholic bishops were an
integral part of the April 2002 attempted coup against President Hugo Chvez, even defying the Pope
himself, who had asked the bishops to cool it on political activism.
2 July Julian appears in London with the Slovenian philosopher Slavoj iek and the American journalist
Amy Goodman. iek compares the impact of Cablegate to the story of the Emperors new clothes: the
power of the leaks comes not only or not even from the information they reveal, but from the fact that
the information is confirmed for the first time from the horses mouth and can no longer be denied. We
all know that the emperor is naked, but the moment somebody says the emperor is naked; everything
changes.
13 July, Julians biological father, John Shipton, travels to London to support his son at his latest
extradition hearing. He describes Julian as a great dissident . . . There are many intelligent people in the
world, but most seem to be wicked, while Julian seems to have the moral courage and ability to carry his
vision through. He seems to have an immense desire for justice in the world.
As this book went to press, Julian remained under house arrest at Ellingham Hall, Norfolk.
*
You can follow the work of WikiLeaks at
wikileaks.org
or
twitter.com/wikileaks
You can make a donation at
wikileaks.org/donate
APPENDIX
THE LEAKS
The following pages show examples of the most noteworthy leaks, as mentioned in the autobiography.
I: SOMALIA AND THE UNION OF ISLAMIC COURTS
In 2006, when this document was leaked, the Union of Islamic Courts was the dominant political force in
Somalia. The Union evolved out of the local courts that developed to administer Sharia law in the 1990s.
These courts, each of which was supported by its own militia, formed a loose alliance in early 2006 and
began to take control of much of the country, including the capital Mogadishu. Given that Somalia had
been without an effective government since 1991, the rise of the Union seemed to be an interesting
development. This secret order, purportedly written by the most important man in the Union, Sheik
Aweys, came to WikiLeaks from a Chinese source who had received it from the UN-sponsored
Transitional Federal Government of Somalia, who are effectively the Unions opposition. When releasing
the document on 28 December 2006, WikiLeaks drew attention to their doubts about its provenance and
authenticity. The Union has since been broken up and many of its leaders exiled after an invasion by
Ethiopian troops that took place around the time of this leak.
ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF SOMALIA
Islamic Courts Administration, Office of the Chief of the Imams
Dhusamareb, November 09, 2005
In the Name of Allah, The Most Gracious and The Most Merciful
To: The representatives of the Islamic Courts in Northwest Somalia
: The Representatives of the Islamic Courts in Northeast Somalia
Cc: The Committee of the Somali Religious Leaders, Mogadishu
Subject: Secret Decision
Brothers in Islam,
Right from the sixties, when Somalia realized civilian government and the military regime led by Siyad
Barre which was defined by injustice, the practice of the Sharia law was undermined and grossly
violated. The Sharia law ordains the path of righteousness and warns against bad deeds.
In the same vein, the over 10 years of disintegration marked gross violation on the teaching of Islam.
The population was divided by the warlords who caused pouring of the human blood in large numbers
and weakened the belief of the people.
As you are all aware, the so-called Transitional government formed for Somalia is hunting the Somali
religious leaders and the Muslims in general. They have influenced the International Community to
believe that the Somali religious leaders are Al-Qaeda. You very well know that its agenda is to bring the
Ethiopian troops in order to use them and kill the Somali population. As you are aware, there are faction
leaders who are fighting this government without subscribing to our vision but would be vital in using as
a bridge.
In order to react to the threats posed by the plan of this government, which is aimed to inflict sufferings
on the people of Somalia who are Muslims, we have decided the following agenda points as shown the
on the next pages for your implementation.
Following the tangible progress made by the Islamic Courts in expanding its political programmes that
restored just administration founded on Sharia law.
In view of the findings on the programme contents used in the awareness campaigns, and the reception
hailed by the population on plans to establish Islamic State that would herald justice and unity.
In view of the findings on the dire need for expansion of the Islamic Courts Administration to all parts of
Somalia to refocus public attention on justice.
In view of the findings on the need to derail the so-called Transitional Federal Government and the
Regional Administrations who are holding the population as a hostage.
The following decision was made:
I.To open Islamic Courts in all districts of Puntland and Somaliland in collaboration with the clan elders
and the Traditional leaders
II.That the representatives of the Islamic Courts in Puntlan have to obstruct Militias and arms flowing to
the TFG from Puntland and the Ethiopia border
III.Plots to mar the existing relationship between the TFG, Puntland, Somaliland and Ethiopia have to
be employed
IV.Penetration into the armed forces of Puntland and Somaliland has to be made and clan used as an
instrument to unfasten the cohesion
V.The heavy and the light weapons used by Puntland and Somaliland armed forces have to be
purchased with hard currency in secret deals.
VI.If that fails, the custodian of the heavy weapons should be approached with an offer.
VII.Cooperation has to be made with criminals and hard currency provided as motivations to
assassinate the officials of the administrations (TFG, Somaliland & Puntland)
VIII.A traditional leader has to be crowned for each and every Sub-clan and the required financial
support extended.
IX.Religious lectures indirectly influencing the public should be put in full gear
X.Friction with these administrations should be avoided and instead the taxes paid as required
XI.Strong allies should be identified within the cabinet of each of the administrations using clan elders
and the traditional leaders as an entry point while flexibility is maintained and support provided.
XII.Generous support should be given to the Oromos and the ONLF to weaken the capability of
Ethiopia which is our primary enemy as well as the administrations they are using to pursue their
agendas.
XIII.The minority clans who are marginalized by those administrations should be welcomed and
influenced.
XIV.The Wagerdhaa sub-clan of the Marehan should to be supported and hostilities promoted within
other sub-clans of the Marehan.
XV.Fully fledged support should be extended to Gen. Morgan as a tool to destroy and disconnect the
clan powerbase of the Key leaders who wield significant power within Somalia.
XVI.The political animosity with the Religious leaders who are in support of those administrations
should be minimized.
XVII.The representatives in Puntland and Somaliland should furnish ideas on how best to restore the
Islamic Courts and implements the enlisted decisions.
(U) Other Sunni cells and groups escalated their attacks in areas outside Fallujah, especially in Ramadi.
Twelve Marines were killed in Ar Ramadi on 6 April alone.
(U) The Abu Ghurayb prisoner abuse scandal became public knowledge in late April and further
enflamed Arab and Muslim anger at the United States.
(U) Al Jazeera was claiming that up to 600 Iraqi civilians had been killed by the U.S. offensive. Images
of dead children were being displayed repeatedly on televisions around the world.
(U) The Iraqi Governing Council (IGC) began to unravel. Three members quit and 5 others threatened
to quit, prompting CPA head Paul Bremer to agree to meet with the IGC on 8 April to discuss their
concern over VIGILANT RESOLVE. The Sunni politicians considered the operation collective
punishment. The IGC argued that mass demonstrations were about to occur.
(U) By 9 April, the CPA prevailed upon General Abizaid to order a halt to offensive ground operations in
Fallujah.
(U) Siege Continues for Three Weeks
(U) The cease-fire was a bit of a misnomer. Despite the unilateral ceasefire by the Americans, fighting
continued, punctuated by rest periods. Although the insurgents maintained an operational defensive
posture and chose not to attack entrenched Marines with a direct ground assault, they did continue to
launch standoff attacks. Mortar attacks remained common. U.S. forces countered with minor
maneuvers to strengthen their defensive positions. Coalition air strikes continued. Snipers on both sides
made movement hazardous.
(U) Over the next few weeks, Fallujan sheiks and leaders met with representatives from the CPA, IGC, or
I MEF to negotiate the conditions for a permanent cease-fire. The American National Command
Authority pressed for other options besides finishing the clearing of Fallujah. Given few options, on 30
April I MEF and CJTF-7 terminated the operation and formally turned over their responsibility for
Fallujah to a newly stood up Fallujah Brigade, a Sunni militia unit led by former Iraqi Army officers. Many
insurgents were incorporated into this unit, and its affect on the security situation in the city was
negligible.
(U) Casualties
(S//REL TO USA, MCFI) After 26 days of fighting, 18 Marines were killed in Fallujah with approximately
another 96 wounded. In the entire I MEF area of operations (AO) in April, there were 62 KIA and 565
WIA.
(S//REL TO USA, MCFI) I MEF estimates 600 to 700 insurgents were killed and an unknown number
wounded. Approximately 150 air strikes destroyed 75 buildings, including two mosques.
(U) Enemy Forces
(U) Strategy
(S//REL TO USA, MCFI) The insurgent strategy to defend Fallujah was designed to accomplish two things:
1) to gain media attention and sympathy and 2) to inflict maximum Coalition casualties by forcing a
close-quarters infantry fight in urban terrain. Those cells that remained in Fallujah to fight were intent
on dragging the combat out as long as possible to enable political and IO pressure to build to a boiling
point.
(U) Operational Plan
(S//REL TO USA, MCFI) The Fallujah insurgents could count on cooperation and support from other
networks in the surrounding towns of Saqlawiyah, Ar Ramadi, Amariyah, and Karmah. As a result,
VIGILANT RESOLVE stirred up a hornets nest across the Al Anbar Province, especially in Ar Ramadi, as
insurgent cells surged their activity to stretch Coalition forces thin during the operation. They emplaced
numerous roadblocks, IEDs, and complex ambushes on the key lines of communication (LOCs) in the
area to interdict Coalition supply convoys and patrols. MSRs Mobile and Michigan were especially
targeted. Insurgents attempted to damage and destroy key bridges, such as the one crossing the Thar
Thar Canal.
(S//REL TO USA, MCFI) Throughout the fight insurgents demonstrated operational freedom of
movement. Fighters and supplies were infiltrated through the Marine cordon and into Fallujah in various
ways:
(U) Insurgent local knowledge facilitated using a variety of back roads and hidden trails not blocked by
entry control points (ECPs).
(U) Some contraband was smuggled through Marine checkpoints by civilians.
(U) It is likely that Iraqi police voluntarily collaborated or were bribed.
V: KROLL REPORT ON CORRUPTION IN KENYA
This report, more than 100 pages long, details allegations of corruption by former Kenyan President
Daniel Arap Moi, his family and associates. It was commissioned by Mwai Kibaki after he replaced Moi as
president in 2002, but never released. These extracts give examples of the nature, tone and severity of
the allegations.
MOVEMENT OF FUNDS
A marked flurry of activity has been reported among ex-President Mois family and their close associates
to pre-empt any possibility of losing their wealth to the government.
In November 2003, ex-President Moi met at his home in Kabarak with his sons Phillip, Gideon, his long-
term aide Kulie and his well-trusted household lawyer, Dr Kiplagat. During this meeting, the key topic of
discussion was the family wealth, both local and international.
Ex-President Mois lawyer advised them to secure their assets in overseas countries. He stated that
there is no court ruling adjudging their wealth as illegal or corruptly obtained. As such, this would be a
prerequisite for the government of Kenya to approach any foreign government to freeze any of their
assets. The family was also advised to use proven trusts that are experienced at hiding pursued assets
among select jurisdictions with relaxed laundering policies.
It was agreed that Kulei should relinquish all the assets held in trust by him on behalf of ex-President
Moi and that this transfer be made in favour of companies controlled by ex-President Mois children.
This matter has brought serious friction between Kulei on one hand and Gideon and Phillip on the other.
Physical threats were issued to Kulei during a meeting held at Phillips house, following which Kulei
approached Mr Tum, associated with Kenya Seed Company, to seek his intervention with ex-President
Moi. Kulei feels that he is being asked to give more than he holds for and on behalf of ex-President Moi
and that the sons are failing to distinguish between his personal wealth and that of their father. It has
been reported that Gideon may transfer his assets from South Africa to Namibia where ex-President
Moi, whose assets are presonally protected by President Sam Nujoma, has invested heavily.
Following the closure of the Kabarak meeting, each party made various moves, all geared towards
securing their wealth as agreed. On the surface, it would appear that their individual plans are
unrelated, but on the contrary a very well coordinated plan is being executed.
JOSHUA KULEI
Modus Operandi
It has been reported that over the years, Kulei has represented ex-President Moi in over 50 companies
operating in Kenya, across all sectors of the economy.
The local companies in which Kulei has presided as director could not have generated enough dividends
to account for liquid cash and assets that he is believed to control. Going by the dividend payout and
based on the profits declared for tax purposes, his actual wealth does not relate in any way to his source
of income.
Kulei is a very wealthy person in his own right. About three years ago, Kulei encountered serious
problems with the Mois when Gideon kept convincing his father that Kulei may have more money than
him as a result of using ex-President Mois name. It is understood that this was during the time that
Kulei contemplated leaving Kenya to live in London.
Kulei was warned after December 2003 by the DPP that the Moi brothers had a contract out to have him
killed. According to client information, he was nearly arrested in relation to the Kenya Pipeline fraud.
GIDEON MOI
Modus Operandi
In November 2004, Gideon travelled from Kenya through a circuitous route that took him to South
Africa, Namibia, the United Kingdom and eventually Luxembourg.
Gideon spent a night in Namibia. Ex-President Moi enjoys a private and very cordial relationship with
President Nujoma. During his visit, Gideon was meant to meet Nujoma privately under intervention of
his father. It is not known whether the meeting actually took place.
Ex-President Moi has invested heavily in Namibia and Nujoma personally protects his investments. It is
understood that Gideon is not comfortable with South Africa and all his actions are aimed at transferring
his assets from there. There are indications that such a transfer is most likely to be to Namibia.
Gideon has been known to frequently visit the Grand Cayman and Cayman Brac in the past, travelling via
Miami, USA.
VI: CRY OF BLOOD REPORT INTO EXTRA-JUDICIAL MURDER IN KENYA (EXTRACTS)
This report outlined, at great length and with supporting detail, allegations that the police in Kenya had
engaged in the extra-judicial murder of hundreds of men on the suspicion that they were members of the
Mungiki, a local criminal organisation. These extracts give the background to the report and its findings,
and the reaction of the Kenyan police and government, as well as some examples of the personal stories
told in the report.
BACKGROUND TO THE INVESTIGATIONS
1. The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR) has, since July 2007, been investigating
complaints in respect of alleged executions and disappearance of persons attributed to the Kenya
Police.
2. Pursuant thereto, on 5/11/07, the KNCHR released a preliminary report indicating that the Kenya
Police could have been complicit in extra-judicial executions of close to 500 people between June and
October 2007 and the bodies deposited in various mortuaries in the country, some left in the wild and
others dumped in various locations such as forests, desolate farms, rivers and dams.
3. This report was transmitted to the President of the Republic of Kenya H.E. Mwai Kibaki and made
available to all the relevant Government departments asking that the concerned authorities act on its
findings. The KNCHR was therefore surprised that instead of acknowledging the gravity of the issues
raised in the report, the Police Commissioner, Maj. General Hussein Ali reacted by calling the KNCHR a
meaningless busybody which had engaged in baseless accusations against the police and further
accused the KNCHR of lacking expertise in carrying out investigations. The Police Commissioner also
challenged the KNCHR to provide any evidence to these rather infantile accusations. Subsequently,
the Kenya Police issued its official rejoinder to the KNCHR report. The Police rejoinder does not deny the
fact of the deaths but merely states that inquest files have been opened.
4. Be that as it may, the KNCHR proceeded with further investigations to complete its report and the
ensuing findings confirm the substance of the preliminary report and reveal egregious violations of the
law and fundamental human rights by the Kenya police in dealing with suspected Mungiki members and
other alleged criminals.
5. While the KNCHR in no way condones the atrocities attributed to Mungiki and other illegal gangs (see
Annex 1 for a background on the Mungiki Movement), it condemns the use of extra-judicial killing of
suspected members as a strategy to deal with the illegal group. Methods attributed to the Police and
chronicled in this report amount to a serious violation of human rights especially the right to life and the
right to a fair trial before a court of law.
6. The KNCHR continues to receive an alarming number of complaints of ongoing disappearances and
extra-judicial killings attributed to the police and urges the government to urgently intervene to stop
these human rights violations.
DETAILS OF FINDINGS OF ALLEGED EXECUTIONS, TORTURE AND OTHER VIOLATIONS
EYEWITNESS ACCOUNTS
The KNCHR has since July 2007, received witness testimonies where relatives, friends of the victims as
well as independent witnesses gave accounts of arrests by police officers known to them or others seen
driving police vehicles. Witness accounts indicate that soon after the arrests, some the victims disappear
without a trace while others are found dead in mortuaries. The KNCHR has documented these accounts
from the witnesses as enumerated below:
Benson Mwangi Waraga(55 years) a tailor along River Road, Nairobi was found dead at City mortuary
on 19/5/07, two days after he was arrested by police after a shoot-out near his workplace. The shoot-
out between the police and gangsters occurred on 17/5/07 at around 1.00 pm during which three
alleged gangsters and a police officer were killed. The incident was prominently covered in both
electronic and print media and Mwangi was captured being bundled into the police vehicle (see below).
Two eyewitnesses to the incident recorded their statements with KNCHR. They gave an account of how,
while working in the deceased tailoring shop in River Road, Githaku House, policemen raided their
building at around 2.30pm on 1/5/07.The said police were allegedly looking for thieves in the building.
One of the police officers ordered the two eyewitnesses and the deceased to lie down and after about
15 minutes, the three were bundled in a police Land Rover where 15 other suspects had already been
bundled. The group was taken to Kamukunji Police Station and was counted to be 18 in number. The
eyewitnesses further report that while awaiting to be booked at the Occurrence Book, (which they
eventually were not), Waraga was ordered by one of the policemen to report to the Crime Office
upstairs. The rest were released the following day,18/5/07. The KNCHR further received reports from
Waragas family that upon receiving the report of his arrest, Waragas brother went to Kamukunj Police
Station on 19/5/07 to see him but he was denied access since it was after 6.00 pm. The next day at 9.00
am, he went back to Kamukunji police station but could not trace Waraga. Together with other family
members, they fruitlessly searched for him in all police stations within Nairobi. The following day
(19/5/07), they went to City Mortuary where they found Mwangis body. Attendants at the mortuary
told the relatives that the deceased was brought by officers from Parklands police station having been
shot as he was running away at City Park. A postmortem conducted by Dr. Peter Ndegwa revealed that
Mwangi died of multiple organ injuries due to multiple gunshot wounds. According to the pathologist,
the fatal bullets were shot from behind. The victim must have been about 20 cm from his attacker. He
also seems to have been on the move (e.g. the bullet traveling parallel to the femur). The other gunshot
on the leg seems to have been shot at a closer range and from the front. Could he have been shot once
and asked to run?
Geoffrey Kunguwho sold shoes for a living disappeared on 8/10/07 at around 11.00 am after he had
met his wife at the Country Bus Station, Nairobi. According to the wife, Kungu was going to buy shoes
then leave for upcountry (Muranga) on the same day. A few minutes later, the wife tried calling him
severally but the phone went unanswered. At around 5:00 pm, she called again but the phone was
switched off. The next day, the wife went to several police stations including Kamukunji, Shauri Moyo,
Makongeni and Central to no avail. On Wednesday, she went to the Industrial Area prison with no
success. On Thursday and Friday she went to search for him in Langata and Ruai police stations still with
no success. On Friday the 12th of October 2007, while watching news on KTN at 7:00 pm, she identified
all the items and clothing belonging to her husband, more specifically his green jacket with patches of
white and orange (see below) which had been discovered earlier in the day by officers of the KNCHR
who were accompanied by the media to Kiserian after some bodies had been spotted by area residents.
She told the KNCHR that Kungu had previously been arrested twice by the Kwekwe police squad on
accusation of being a member of the illegal Mungiki sect. Upon the first arrest, Kungu paid Kshs 2,000
to secure his release after the arresting officers threatened to kill him. He was reportedly arrested for
the second time on 7/9/07 and taken to Makongeni Police station. When she went to visit him, a Kamba
officer identified only as a Mr. Muli and another one called Peter asked for Kshs. 10,000 in exchange for
his release or else they would kill him. She pleaded with the police to give her time to mobilize the
money, which she brought on 9/9/07 securing his release. A postmortem on the remains of Kungu was
conducted on 24/10/07 at the City Mortuary. The body had significantly been gnawed by predators. The
whole left leg was missing from the hip-joint. All the muscle and tissue of the right lower limb and all
abdominal organs were missing leaving bare bones and some ligaments. According to the pathologist,
the cause of death was severe head injury due to double gunshots to the head. These gunshots were
fired at very close range suggesting execution.
Patrick Mwangi, a conductor of a Matatu along Route 45 Githurai, disappeared on 17/10/07. On the day
he went missing, he was standing at Githurai 44 stage waiting for his driver to come pick him as he was
from lunch. Suddenly persons who identified themselves as policemen arrested him together with
another man known as Daniel Mutahi (see profile above) and took them away in a small white personal
vehicle registration number KAM 294R. The driver together with his father fruitlessly searched for him in
several police stations and mortuaries. The matter was reported to Kasarani police station. He was still
missing at the time of compiling this report on 11/7/08.
VII: BANK OF JULIUS BAER
Bank Julius Baer is part of the Julius Baer Group, a private banking group with its headquarters in Zurich.
WikiLeaks published a number of documents relating to accounts held in Baers Cayman Islands branch,
resulting in a legal suit against WikiLeaks in the USA, which it successfully defended.
The extracts quoted here include part of a statement given by Rudolf Elmer, the former Baer employee
who leaked the information, as well as a document relating to an individual bank account.
From Rudolf Elmers statement:
Bank Julius Baer is systematically moving taxable funds to the offshore-island Cayman Islands (as well as
Luxemburg or the tax-haven Guernsey), to minimize or reduce to zero their tax burden and that of their
customers. I call such entities bellevue-griten (little whores). I sometimes felt like the guard of those
ladies who essentially are being abused. The story is about the following limited liability companies of
the Julius Baer Holding AG, which offer their services as offshore-entities of Julius Baer Holding AG in the
Caymans Islands:
Julius Baer Bank and Trust Co. Ltd, Cayman Islands (the bank)
reduce the taxable revenues of the Julius Baer groups in Switzerland and other countries for itself and
its customers,
offer vehicles to Swiss and foreign customers for tax evasion or even tax fraud,
offer the ability to Swiss and foreign trustees to found companies on the Caymans (as well as Guernsey
and Luxemburg) in order to profit from this situation,
protect investors,
Only the mother company Julius Baer Bank and Trust Co Ltd, Cayman Islands (the bank) is owned
directly by Julius Baer Holding AG, Zurich. All other companies are owned by Julius Baer Bank and Trust
Ltd, (directly or indirectly) and therefore only Julius Baer Bank and Trust Co Ltd., Cayman Islands (the
bank) appears to the outside. This is effective, as all other companies stay hidden. Neither the
Eidgenoessische Banken Kommision (Swiss federal banking commission) nor the tax administration are
ever shown the balances or profit calculations of these companies due to the Confidentiality Law on the
Caymans (similar to the Swiss banking law), under which there is no right for examination.
The estimated quantum of the tax reduction can be determined from the calculations at the end of this
document. This is not about an exact figure of the loss of tax revenue in Switzerland but an order of
magnitude and especially the methodology of offshore entities. The numbers presented represent the
beginning of this decade and are very likely much higher today in light of the growth of the group.
The following letter relates to an American residents account in the Cayman Islands. Rudolf Elmer
claimed that it represents one example of customers using Baer accounts for the purposes of tax fraud,
with the collusion of Baer. (Note highlighted text.)
2. DATE/TIME AND LOCATION WHERE ALLEGED ABUSE TOOK PLACE: APPROXIMATELY 1200 ON 1 2
MARCH 2006 AT THE HURRICANE POINT THA IN AR RAMADI.
3. UNIT AND PERSONNEL ACCUSED OF COMMITING THE ABUSE: [xxxxx] OF THE 2-1-2 PUBLIC ORDER
BATTALION
6. BASIS FOR OPINION: (NAME WITHHELD) IS AN HONEST MARINE WITH WHOM I HAVE WORKED FOR 7
MONTHS. HE HAS NO MOTIVE TO FABRICATE. IN ADDITION, THERE WERE 2 OTHER MARINES WHO
WITNESSED THE ASSAULT.
Comment
-------
8. (SBU) Controversy over the minimum wage issue continues to ramp up. Some members of
Parliament, notably Benoit, demand that the President sign the law as currently written while they
entertain private sector pleas for a reconsidered or phased-in minimum wage even if only to show that
they did confer.
9. (C) Despite Prevals meetings with Parliament and the private sector on how to manage the minimum
wage legislation without killing investment and job creation, he has said little in the face of continuing
student demonstrations. Haitian National Police (HNP) and Ministry of Justice officials are convinced
these students are being funded and mobilized by interests that go far beyond the university; it
remains unclear who is fomenting the disturbances.
10. (SBU) Although the numbers of protestors remain relatively small, numbering 500 to 1,500, the HNP
has had to use tear gas frequently to control the crowds and the police appears stretched then. While
the demonstrations could peter out as the academic year ends and students leave campus, there are
worrying signs that the demonstrations may be picking up steam.
11. (C) With the expected return of the body of former priest and close collaborator of former President
Aristide, Gerard Jean-Juste, on June 16 and planned Senate election run-offs on June 21, Haiti is
approaching a politically sensitive period. A more visible and active engagement by Preval may be
critical to resolving the issue of the minimum wage and its protest spin-off or risk the political
environment spiraling out of control.
09PORTAUPRINCE881
Created: Oct 15, 2009 11:49
SUBJECT: A MORE EFFECTIVE PARLIAMENT IS SIGN OF DEMOCRATIC (Extracts)
1. (SBU) SUMMARY: A historically discredited legislature greatly improved its performance in the current
parliamentary session by passing a record number of laws. For the first time in many years, many
parliamentarians are considering presenting their candidacies for a second term. The professionalization
of Parliament comes against the backdrop of emerging populism and increasing influence over the
legislature. Popular confidence in Parliament has improved in 2009 as the legislative has shown signs of
seriousness and maturity. END SUMMARY.
NOT SO FAST
-----------
7. (SBU) However as the media and observers pay more attention to the legislative, parliamentarians are
tempted to promote increasingly relevant populist proposals as launching pads for creating a national
image for themselves (whether for future senatorial or presidential campaigns). Deputy Steven Benoit
garnered popularity when he proposed a minimum wage law that did not take economic reality into
account but that appealed to the unemployed and underpaid masses. Senator Rudy Heriveaux,
seemingly in the footsteps of Benoit, has proposed a law capping both commercial and residential rent
at an unprofitable rate. Both proposals have drawn negative feedback from foreign investors and the
private sector alike, but have served their proponents populist political image well.
8. (SBU) COMMENT: The increased productivity and the interest in returning on second terms are signs
of democratic maturity. They contribute to legitimizing an institution long deemed irrelevant by the
population and the political class. The same Greenberg survey mentioned above noted an improved
perception of Parliaments performance between June 2008 and June 2009. Nonetheless, much remains
to be done, given that the changes described above are characteristic of a core group only, and the
attitudes prevalent in the majority in Parliament remain counter-productive. The next elections will
determine to what extent this positive trend in Haitis institutional development continues. With
November elections almost certainly delayed, the credibility Parliament is slowly building with voters
may be eroded.
Extract Five:The following cable was written shortly after a devastating earthquake in Haiti, in early
2010.
10PORTAUPRINCE206
Created: Feb 26, 2010 18:34
SUBJECT: APPAREL SECTOR HIGHLIGHTS HAITIS ECONOMIC RESILIENCE AND POTENTIAL
1. (SBU) Within two weeks of the January 12 earthquake, Haitis garment manufacturing sector resumed
exports to the US, re-routing shipments through Dominican ports. Prior to the earthquake, apparel
assembled in Haiti accounted for three-quarters of the countrys exports, employing one-fifth of the
formal sector. Of the eighteen garment manufacturers in Port au Prince, two must relocate and rebuild
from the ground up; one factory that completely collapsed crushed hundreds of workers inside, at least
300 of whom did not survive. Despite the loss of workers and limited access to basic resources, including
electricity, many factories have reopened, simultaneously undertaking minor to moderate repairs,
clean-up, and reconstruction. Shipping from Haiti resumed in less than a month, meeting customers
expectations of having their orders filled on time. Logistics constraints, while not wholly solved, have
been overcome more quickly than expected, and increased international support for the industry aims
to create more jobs and bolster the Haitian economy.
2. (SBU) International investors, brands, and manufacturers who expressed interest in expanding
production in Haiti before the earthquake renewed their commitment to support the Haitian apparel
industry, taking advantage of the trade preferences of the HOPE II Act for duty-free export to the US
(reftel A). At the apparel industrys largest trade show in Las Vegas in February, the US Trade
Representative (USTR), along with Gap Inc., Hanes Brands, and the US Association of Importers of
Textiles and Apparels announced the Plus One for Haiti initiative, urging clothing retailers to buy
Haitian and source at least one percent of their total apparel production from Haiti. Representatives
from the GOH Presidential Commission for the Implementation of HOPE (CTMO-HOPE) are currently in
Washington working with USTR on an additional HOPE extension.
3. (SBU) Given the increased attention to Haiti, investors are giving consideration not only to build more
factories but also to create more jobs by supporting infrastructure, such as electricity and water, needed
to sustain the industrial parks and free trade zones that would house these factories in Port-au-Prince,
as well as other potential industrial hubs, including Cap Haitien in the north. Representatives from high-
volume customers, such as Gap Inc. in Korea, are visiting Haiti to explore expansion plans that originated
before the earthquake. The World Bank and IMF are conducting port assessments specifically with
respect to capacity to handle shipping containers for garments.
4. (SBU) Comment: The apparel manufacturers in Haiti operate on a high volume, thin margin, low
capitalization basis where cash flow is extremely important for the business to survive. Industry
representatives have told us that the garment sector would greatly benefit from a soft loan fund of
USD 20 million for their immediate working capital cash needs, granting concessionary loans with an
extended grace period and affordable interest rates to enable manufacturers to operate at full capacity
as soon as possible, retain the 28,000 workers already employed, and expand production to benefit
under the special trade provisions of the HOPE II Act. Combined with other USG initiatives bolstering the
garment sector, such a loan would send a positive signal to U.S. retailers and producers in Haiti and the
Caribbean, and should also send an encouraging message to the more than 25,000 Haitian factory
workers who rely on garment factory jobs to provide for themselves and their families. End comment.
Julian Assange is the editor in chief of WikiLeaks. In 2010 he won Time magazines Readers Choice
Person of the Year poll and the Sydney Peace Prize, and was named Le Mondes Man of the Year. He
has also been awarded the Amnesty International UK Media Award and the Sam Adams Award for
Integrity in Intelligence. In February 2011, his organisation, WikiLeaks, was nominated for a Nobel
Peace Prize after publishing three of the biggest leaks of classified information in history: the Afghan
War Diaries, the Iraq War Logs and Cablegate. He is the co-author, with Suelette Dreyfus, of one
previous book, Underground: Tales of Hacking, Madness and Obsession from the Electronic Frontier.
Table of Contents
A Note from the Publisher
1Solitary
2Magnetic Island
3Flight
4My First Computer
5Cypherpunk
6The Accused
7The Mathematical Road to the Future
8The Birth of WikiLeaks
9The World That Came in From the Cold
10Iceland
11Collateral Murder
12All the Editors Men
13Blood
14Cablegate
Afterword
Appendix: The Leaks