domingo, 25 de julho de 2010

Las filtraciones de WikiLeaks, el temor del Pentágono

El Gobierno de Estados Unidos ha tenido que hacer frente finalmente a uno de sus mayores temores: WikiLeaks, la web que ha puesto en jaque al Pentágono y que ha revolucionado el periodismo de investigación alrevelar información confidencial que le llega a través de personas que filtran contenidos oficiales en todo el mundo.
En esta ocasión, la página se encuentra detrás de la mayor filtración de la historia militar de EEUU, 90.000 folios que recogen un listado de incidentes y actuaciones, en muchos casos desconocidas, de la guerra de Afganistán.
Según publica 'The Guardian', las autoridades estadounidenses saben desde hace semanas que han sido víctimas del 'pirateo' de una parte de su valiosa información secreta que ahora podría pasar a ser de dominio público.
Estos datos podrían formar parte del "material de alta calidad" que Julian Assange, fundador de WikiLeaks, asegura haber recibido en los últimos dos meses procedente de fuentes militares.
Por este motivo y por el temor a que haga públicos los datos que, según sospechan, puede tener en su poder, Assange se ha convertido en los últimos tiempos en uno de los objetivos de las agencias de seguridad e inteligencia estadounidenses .
No en vano, Assange fue el responsable último de otras informaciones 'incómodas' para Washington que ya vieron la luz. Una de las más recordadas es el vídeo que muestra la matanza del fotógrafo de Reuters Namir Noor-Eldeen y de otros once civiles en Bagdad, que fue reproducido por más de cuatro millones de usuarios en el mundo.
En el vídeo puede contemplarse la masacre desde el helicóptero Apache, aderezada por los comentarios despectivos de los soldados -"¡Mira a esos muertos bastardos!"- mientras acribillan sin escrúpulos a un grupo de hombres que camina en plena calle y a una furgoneta donde viajan dos niños y que intenta socorrer a los heridos.
Los soldados se mofan también del conductor y empleado de Reuters mientras agoniza e intenta gatear en el suelo.
Las nuevas revelaciones de WikiLeaks vuelven a cuestionar la actuación del Ejército estadounidense, esta vez en Afganistán. Entre los 90.000 folios a los que han accedido los diarios 'The Guardian', 'The Washington Post' y la revista alemana 'Der Spiegel', se asegura que existe una unidad secreta, denominada unidad "negra", que tiene como objetivo la búsqueda vivos o muertos a los líderes taliban.
También se ha sabido que la coalición en Afganistán está usando cada vez más las mortales armas 'Reaper' para fulminar objetivos taliban de manera teledirigida desde una base de Nevada.
Estas informaciones, que apuntan incluso a que se falsearon las cifras de víctimas civiles, parecen ser sólo el principio de una serie de filtraciones que prometen hacer temblar los cimientos de la Casa Blanca.
El Mundo

'Hidden US Afghan war details' revealed by Wikileaks


More than 90,000 leaked US military records have been published on the website Wikileaks, reportedly revealing hidden details of the Afghanistan war.
Three major news publications which have been shown the documents say they include unreported killings of Afghan civilians.
The huge cache of classified papers is described as one of the biggest leaks in US military history.
The White House has condemned the leaks as "irresponsible".
Reports by the UK daily The Guardian, the New York Times and the German weekly Der Spiegel say the leaked papers reveal Nato concerns that neighbouring Pakistan and Iran are helping Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan.
The Pakistani ambassador in Washington said the "unprocessed" reports did "not reflect the current onground realities".
"The United States, Afghanistan and Pakistan are strategic partners and are jointly endeavoring to defeat Al-Qaeda and its Taliban allies militarily and politically," said Husain Haqqani.
The reports also suggest:
  • The Taliban has had access to portable heat-seeking missiles to shoot at aircraft.
  • A secret US unit of army and navy special forces has been engaged on missions to "capture or kill" top insurgents.
  • Many civilian casualties have gone unreported, both as a result of Taliban roadside bombs and Nato missions that went wrong.
The BBC's diplomatic correspondent Bridget Kendall says that although the documents reveal no dramatic new insights, they show the difficulties of the war and the civilan death toll.
The reports offer an unvarnished and grim picture of the Afghan war, she adds.
In a statement, US National Security Adviser Gen James Jones said such classified information "could put the lives of Americans and our partners at risk, and threaten our national security".
He said the documents covered the period from 2004 to 2009, before President Obama "announced a new strategy with a substantial increase in resources for Afghanistan".
BBC News

WikiLeaks posting Afghan war reports

WASHINGTON, July 25 (UPI) -- The Web site WikiLeaks said Sunday it was posting 91,000 secret Afghan war reports by military personnel and intelligence officers.

WikiLeaks says the documents it calls the "Afghan War Diary" cover "lethal military actions" by the U.S. military in Afghanistan from 2004 to 2010. They also include logs of meetings with political figures, the Web site said.

WikiLeaks said the reports, obtained from an undisclosed source, do not generally cover top-secret operations, or those of European or other international coalition members.

WikiLeaks said it has delayed the release of about 15,000 reports "as part of a harm minimization process demanded" by its source.

"After further review, these reports will be released, with occasional redactions, and eventually, in full, as the security situation in Afghanistan permits," the whistle-blower organization said.

The New York Times, The Guardian newspaper in Britain and the German magazine Der Spiegel published portions of the reports Sunday.

The Guardian said a team of investigative reporters, regional specialists and database experts spent weeks authenticating and reviewing the materials for matters of public interest.

The British newspaper said the team dismissed some intelligence reports as unfounded and determined some aspects of the coalition's recording of civilian deaths to be unreliable.

UPI

Police officer murdered in Russia's Dagestan

A police officer was killed in an attack by unknown assailants in Russia's North Caucasus republic of Dagestan, a local police spokesman said on Monday.
"Unknown assailants opened fire on the head of criminal investigation department Maj. Alishab Magomedov while he was on his dacha in the town of Kaspiisk," the spokesman said.
He added that investigators are working at the scene of the crime.
Russia's mainly Muslim North Caucasus republics, especially Chechnya, Dagestan and Ingushetia, have seen an upsurge of militant violence lately, with frequent attacks on police and officials.
The Kremlin has pledged to wage "a ruthless fight" against militant groups but also acknowledged a need to tackle unemployment, organized crime, clan rivalry and corruption as causes of the ongoing violence.
RIA Novosti

Russia's Chakvetadze wins tennis tournament in Slovenia

Russia's Anna Chakvetadze took her first tennis title in almost two and a half years after she won the Banka Koper Slovenia open in Portoroz.
In a final match that lasted 61 minutes the unseeded Russian defeated Johanna Larsson of Sweden in straight sets 6-1, 6-2.
Chakvetadze who reached her career high of World No. 5 in 2007 began the tennis tournament in Portoroz in the Women Tennis Association (WTA) rank of 103rd.
The victories in Slovenia will see Chakvetadze returning back to top 75.
RIA Novosti

Mexican officials: Prison inmates released to commit killings


(CNN) -- Top officials in Mexico said Sunday that authorities at a prison released and armed several inmates to attack a group of people during a birthday celebration last week in a killing spree that left 17 dead.
Ricardo Najera, a spokesman for Mexico's Interior Ministry said authorities allowed a group of inmates to leave the Cereso prison in Gomez Palacio, in Mexico's Durango state, in police vehicles to launch an attack on revelers at a farm in Torreon in the neighboring state of Coahuila.
"The delinquents were committing their executions as part of a debt-settling scheme against members of rivaling groups from organized crime," Najera said Sunday of the July 18 attack.
"Unfortunately, in these executions, these delinquents also cowardly murdered innocent civilians," he said, adding that the inmates returned to the prison after the attack.
Four top Cereso Gomez Palacio prison workers -- including the prison's director -- were named as suspects in the investigation, Najera said.
CNN

1 killed, 10 wounded in Bangkok explosion


(CNN) -- A bomb exploded Sunday in front of a busy shopping area in Bangkok, Thailand, killing at least one man, authorities said.
Ten others were wounded an taken to three hospitals, according to a government emergency center. The 51-year-old man died while hospitalized for his injuries, authorities said.
CNN

Tens of thousands of alleged Afghan war documents go online


(CNN) -- A whistle-blower website has published what it says are more than 90,000 United States military and diplomatic reports about Afghanistan filed between 2004 and January of this year.
The first-hand accounts are the military's own raw data on the war, including numbers killed, casualties, threat reports and the like, according to Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks.org, which published the material Sunday.
"It is the total history of the Afghan war from 2004 to 2010, with some important exceptions -- U.S. Special Forces, CIA activity and most of the activity of other non-U.S. groups," Assange said.
CNN has not independently confirmed the authenticity of the documents. The Department of Defense will not comment on them until the Pentagon has had a chance to look at them, a Defense official told CNN.
Assange declined to tell CNN where he got the documents. He claims the documents reveal the "squalor" of war, uncovering how many relatively small incidents have added up to huge numbers of dead civilians.
CNN

Uganda bombings overshadow African Union summit


Munyonyo, Uganda (CNN) -- Heads of 35 African nations observed two minutes of silence Sunday to honor more than 70 people killed in terrorist bomb blasts in Uganda earlier this month as the African Union summit opened.
"Our condolences go to the people of Uganda for the tragic loss of lives following that tragic incident," said Bingu Wa Mutharika, AU chairman and Malawian president.
"Terrorism has no place in Africa; it has no place in the developing world," he said. "Let us all condemn these acts".
The summit, which formally opened Sunday following a week of conferences, is being held at a resort hotel in Munyonyo, about 12 kilometers south of the Ugandan capital of Kampala on the shore of Lake Victoria. On July 11, three bombs at two sites in Kampala killed 74 people and injured more than 80. Many of the victims had gathered to watch the World Cup finals.
The Al-Shabaab militant group, which is currently battling the weak transitional government in war-torn Somalia, claimed responsibility for the bombings, saying they were in retaliation for Uganda's contribution of troops for peacekeeping operations in Somalia. About 6,000 Ugandan and Burundian troops were deployed for the peacekeeping mission more than two years ago in the Horn of Africa nation, which has been at war for more than a decade.
Mutharika, in his remarks, stopped short of making any commitment toward AU peacekeeping missions in Somali and the Darfur region of Sudan. However, AU Commission Chairman Jean Ping said on Friday that Guinea and Djibouti have battalions of soldiers ready to be be deployed to Somalia.
CNN

Afghanistan war logs: Secret CIA paramilitaries' role in civilian deaths

Innocent Afghan men, women and children have paid the price of the Americans' rules of engagement


Shum Khan was a deaf and dumb man who lived in the remote border hamlet of Malekshay, 7,000ft up in the mountains. When a heavily armed squad from the CIA barrelled into his village in March 2007, the war logs record that he "ran at the sight of the approaching coalition forces … out of fear and confusion".
The secret CIA paramilitaries, (the euphemism here is OGA, for "other government agency") shouted at him to stop. Khan could not hear them. He carried on running. So they shot him, saying they were entitled to do so under the carefully graded "escalation of force" provisions of the US rules of engagement.
Khan was wounded but survived. The Americans' error was explained to them by village elders, so they fetched out what they term "solatia", or compensation. The classified intelligence report ends briskly: "Solatia was made in the form of supplies and the Element mission progressed".
Behind the military jargon, the war logs are littered with accounts of civilian tragedies. The 144 entries in the logs recording some of these so-called "blue on white" events, cover a wide spectrum of day-by-day assaults on Afghans, with hundreds of casualties.
They range from the shootings of individual innocents to the often massive loss of life from air strikes, which eventually led President Hamid Karzai to protest publicly that the US was treating Afghan lives as "cheap". When civilian family members are actually killed in Afghanistan, their relatives do, in fairness, get greater solatia payments than cans of beans and Hershey bars. The logs refer to sums paid of 100,000 Afghani per corpse, equivalent to about £1,500.
US and allied commanders frequently deny allegations of mass civilian casualties, claiming they are Taliban propaganda or ploys to get compensation, which are contradicted by facts known to the military.
But the logs demonstrate how much of the contemporaneous US internal reporting of air strikes is simply false.
Last September there was a major scandal at Kunduz in the north of Afghanistan when a German commander ordered the bombing of a crowd looting two hijacked fuel tankers. The contemporaneous archive circulated to Nato allies records him authorising the airstrike by a US F-15 jet "after ensuring that no civilians were in the vicinity". The "battle damage assessment" confirmed, it claims, that 56 purely "enemy insurgents" had died.
Media reports followed by official inquiries, however, established something closer to the real death toll. It included 30 to 70 civilians.
In another case the logs show that on the night of 30 August 2008, a US special forces squad called Scorpion 26 blasted Helmand positions with multiple rockets, and called in an airstrike to drop a 500lb bomb. All that was officially logged was that 24 Taliban had been killed.
But writer Patrick Bishop was embedded in the valley nearby with British paratroops at their Sangin bases. He recorded independently: "Overnight, the question of civilian casualties took on an extra urgency. An American team had been inserted on to Black Mountain … From there, they launched a series of offensive operations. On 30 August, wounded civilians, some of them badly injured, turned up at Sangin and FOB Inkerman saying they had been attacked by foreign troops. Such incidents gave a hollow ring to ISAF claims that their presence would bring security to the local population".
Some of the more notorious civilian calamities did become public at the time. The logs confirm that an entirely truthful official announcement was made regretting the guidance system failure of one "smart bomb". On 9 September 2008 it unintentionally landed on a village causing 26 civilian casualties.
The US also realised very quickly that a Polish squad had committed what appeared to have been a possible war crime. On 16 August 2007the Poles mortared a wedding party in the village of Nangar Khel in an apparent revenge attack shortly after experiencing an IED explosion.
It is recorded under the heading: "Any incident that may cause negative media". The report disclosed that three women victims had "numerous shrapnel wounds … One was pregnant and an emergency C-section was performed but the baby died". In all, six were killed. The Polish troops were shipped home and some eventually put on trial for the atrocity. After protests in their support from a Polish general, the trial has apparently so far failed to reach a conclusion.
But most of the assaults on civilians recorded here, do not appear to have been investigated. French troops "opened fire on a bus that came too close to convoy" near the village of Tangi Kalay outside Kabul on 2 October 2008, according to the logs. They wounded eight children who were in the bus.
Two months later, US troops gunned down a group of bus passengers even more peremptorily, as the logs record.
Patrolling on foot, a Kentucky-based squad from 1st Battalion, 506th Infantry Regiment, known as "Red Currahee", decided to flag down the approaching bus, so their patrol could cross the road. Before sunrise, a soldier stepped out on to Afghanistan's main highway and raised both hands in the air.
When the bus failed to slow – travellers are often wary of being flagged down in Afghanistan's bandit lands – a trooper raked it with machine-gun fire. They killed four passengers and wounded 11 others.
Some of the civilian deaths in the list stem from violent actions by US special forces attempting to hunt down Taliban leaders or al-Qaida incomers. In a typical case, last November, the army files record ademonstration by 80 angry villagers who broke an armoured car window in the village of Lewani. A woman from the village had been killed in an assault by the shadowy Task Force 373.
The influence of the then new commander, General Stanley McChrystal, can be seen, however. Brought in last year with a mission to try to cut the number of civilian casualties, he clearly demanded more detailed reporting of such incidents.
The Lewani file is marked with a new "information requirement" to record each "credible allegation of Isaf [the occupying forces] … causing non-combatant injury/death".
McChrystal was replaced last month, however, by General David Petraeus, amid reports that restraints aimed at cutting civilian deaths would be loosened once again.
The bulk of the "blue-white" file consists of a relentless catalogue of civilian shootings on nearly 100 occasions by jumpy troops at checkpoints, near bases or on convoys. Unco-operative drivers and motorcyclists are frequent targets.
Each incident almost without exception is described as a meticulous "escalation of force" conducted strictly by the book, against a threatening vehicle.
US and UK rules require shouts, waves, flares, warning shots and shots into the engine block, before using lethal force. Each time it is claimed that this procedure is followed. Yet "warning shots" often seem to cause death or injury, generally ascribed to ricochets.
Sometimes, it seems as though civilian drivers merely failed to get off the road fast enough. On 9 July 2006 mechanic Mohamad Baluch was test-driving a car in Ghazni, when the Americans rolled into town on an anti-IED "route clearance patrol".
The log records: "LN [local national] vehicle did not yield to US convoy … Gunner on lead truck shot into the vehicle and convoy kept going out of the area". The townspeople threw rocks at the eight departing armoured Humvees. Baluch ended up in hospital with machine-gun bullets in his shoulder.
The Guardian

Afghanistan war logs: Massive leak of secret files exposes truth of occupation


A huge cache of secret US military files today provides a devastating portrait of the failing war in Afghanistan, revealing how coalition forces have killed hundreds of civilians in unreported incidents, Taliban attacks have soared and Nato commanders fear neighbouring Pakistan and Iran are fuelling the insurgency.
The disclosures come from more than 90,000 records of incidents and intelligence reports about the conflict obtained by the whistleblowers' website Wikileaks in one of the biggest leaks in US military history. The files, which were made available to the Guardian, the New York Times and the German weekly Der Spiegel, give a blow-by-blow account of the fighting over the last six years, which has so far cost the lives of more than 320 British and over 1,000 US troops.
Their publication comes amid mounting concern that Barack Obama's "surge" strategy is failing and as coalition troops hunt for two US navy sailors captured by the Taliban south of Kabul on Friday.
The war logs also detail:
• How a secret "black" unit of special forces hunts down Taliban leaders for "kill or capture" without trial.
• How the US covered up evidence that the Taliban have acquired deadly surface-to-air missiles.
• How the coalition is increasingly using deadly Reaper drones to hunt and kill Taliban targets by remote control from a base in Nevada.
• How the Taliban have caused growing carnage with a massive escalation of its roadside bombing campaign, which has killed more than 2,000 civilians to date.
In a statement, the White House said the chaotic picture painted by the logs was the result of "under-resourcing" under Obama's predecessor, saying: "It is important to note that the time period reflected in the documents is January 2004 to December 2009".
The White House also criticised the publication of the files by Wikileaks: "We strongly condemn the disclosure of classified information by individuals and organisations, which puts the lives of the US and partner service members at risk and threatens our national security. Wikileaks made no effort to contact the US government about these documents, which may contain information that endanger the lives of Americans, our partners, and local populations who co-operate with us".
The logs detail, in sometimes harrowing vignettes, the toll on civilians exacted by coalition forces: events termed "blue on white" in military jargon. The logs reveal 144 such incidents. Some of these casualties come from the controversial air strikes that have led to Afghan government protests in the past, but a large number of previously unknown incidents also appear to be the result of troops shooting unarmed drivers or motorcyclists out of a determination to protect themselves from suicide bombers. At least 195 civilians are admitted to have been killed and 174 wounded in total, although this is likely to be an underestimate because many disputed incidents are omitted from the daily snapshots reported by troops on the ground and then collated, sometimes erratically, by military intelligence analysts.
Bloody errors at civilians' expense, as recorded in the logs, include the day French troops strafed a bus full of children in 2008, wounding eight. A US patrol similarly machine-gunned a bus, wounding or killing 15 of its passengers, and in 2007 Polish troops mortared a village, killing a wedding party including a pregnant woman, in an apparent revenge attack.
Questionable shootings of civilians by British troops also figure. The American compilers detail an unusual cluster of four British shootings in the streets of Kabul within the space of barely a single month, in October/November 2007, culminating in the killing of the son of an Afghan general. Of one shooting, they wrote: "Investigation is controlled by the British. We not able [sic] to get the complete story".
A second cluster of similar shootings, all involving Royal Marine commandos in the ferociously contested Helmand province, took place in a six-month period at the end of 2008. Asked by the Guardian about these allegations, the Ministry of Defence said: "We have been unable to corroborate these claims in the short time available and it would be inappropriate to speculate on specific cases without further verification of the alleged actions".
Rachel Reid, who investigates civilian casualty incidents in Afghanistan for Human Rights Watch, said: "These files bring to light what's been a consistent trend by US and NATO forces: the concealment of civilian casualties. Despite numerous tactical directives ordering transparent investigations when civilians are killed, there have been incidents I've investigated in recent months where this is still not happening. Accountability is not just something you do when you are caught. It should be part of the way US and NATO do business in Afghanistan every time they kill or harm civilians".
The reports, many of which the Guardian is publishing in full online, present an unvarnished and often compelling account of the reality of modern war. Most of the material, although classified "secret" at the time, is no longer militarily sensitive. A small amount of information has been withheld from publication in the Guardian because it might endanger local informants or give away genuine military secrets. Wikileaks, whose founder, Julian Assange, obtained the material in circumstances he will not discuss, also says it redacted harmful material before posting the bulk of the data on its own "uncensorable" series of global servers.
Wikileaks published in April this year a previously suppressed classified video of US Apache helicopters killing two Reuters cameramen on the streets of Baghdad, which gained international attention. A 22-year-old intelligence analyst, Bradley Manning, was arrested in Iraq and charged with leaking the video, but not with leaking the latest material. The Pentagon's criminal investigations department continues to try to trace the leaks and recently unsuccessfully asked Assange, he says, to meet them outside the US to help them.
The Guardian

Crash victims in identification mix-up

PHOENIX, July 25 (UPI) -- Two women involved in an Arizona car crash, one dead and one hospitalized in critical condition, were misidentified, authorities said.

Abby Guerra, 19, was thought to have died at the scene 50 miles west of Glendale, Ariz., when a sport utility vehicle carrying five friends back from a trip to Disneyland blew a tire and crashed, The Arizona Republic reported Thursday.

A woman thought to be Marlena Cantu, 21, was in critical condition in St. Joseph's Hospital in Phoenix with a brain injury, broken back and a collapsed lung, the newspaper said.

After nearly a week, it was determined it was Cantu who died in the crash and Guerra who remained in critical condition in the hospital.

Another passenger, Tyler Parker, 20, died a day after the accident and the remaining two passengers were also taken to a hospital with severe head injuries.

Friends of Cantu kept vigil outside the hospital room unaware the woman laying there was Guerra.

UPI

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