US scrambles to assess Wikileaks damage as site says it has 15,000 documents ready

THE US Defence Department said today it was trying to assess the damage caused by the leak of some 91,000 classified documents on the Afghanistan war.

The documents are described as battlefield reports compiled by various military units that provide an unvarnished look at combat in the past six years, including US frustration over reports Pakistan secretly aided insurgents and civilian casualties at the hand of US troops.

Wikileaks.org, a self-described whistleblower organisation, posted 76,000 of the reports to its website on Sunday night. The group said it is vetting another 15,000 documents for future release.

Colonel Dave Lapan, a Defence Department spokesman, said the military would probably need “days, if not weeks” to review all the documents and determine “the potential damage to the lives of our service members and coalition partners.”

The White House says it didn’t try to stop news organisations who had access to secret US military documents from publishing reports about the leaks. However, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said it did ask Wikileaks – through reporters who were given advanced copies of the documents – to redact information in the documents that could harm US military personnel.

It was not clear whether Wikileaks decision to withhold 15,000 of its files was related.  The Pentagon declined to respond to specifics detailed in the documents, including reports of the Taliban’s use of heat-seeking anti-aircraft missiles.  Just because they are posted on the internet, doesn’t make them unclassified,” Colonel Lapan said.

The Pentagon says it is still investigating the source of the documents. The military has detained Bradley Manning, a former Army intelligence analyst in Baghdad, for allegedly transmitting classified information. But the latest documents could have come from anyone with a secret-level clearance, Colonel Lapan said.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange promised yoday that the release of documents – one of the largest unauthorised disclosures in military history – was just the beginning.

Mr Assange said in London that he believed that “thousands” of US attacks in Afghanistan could be investigated for evidence of war crimes, although he acknowledged that such claims would have to be tested in court.

Mr Assange pointed in particular to a deadly missile strike ordered by Taskforce 373, a unit allegedly charged with hunting down and killing senior Taliban targets. He said there was also evidence of cover-ups when civilians were killed, including what he called a suspiciously high number of casualties that US forces attributed to ricochet wounds.

The Defence Department declined to respond to specifics contained in the documents, citing security reasons.  But Colonel Lapan said that coalition forces have made great strides in reducing the number of civilian deaths in Afghanistan.

White House national security adviser General Jim Jones said the release of the documents “put the lives of Americans and our partners at risk,” while Pakistan dismissed the documents as malicious and unsubstantiated.

Pakistan Ambassador Husain Haqqani said the documents “do not reflect the current on-ground realities.”  Islamabad’s ministry of foreign affairs issued a similar statement, defending Pakistan’s intelligence agency, the ISI, against allegations it has supported insurgent networks.

“The people of Pakistan and its security forces, including the ISI, have rendered enormous sacrifices against militancy and terrorism,” the ministry wrote.  NATO refused to comment on the leak, but individual nations said they hoped it wouldn’t harm current operations in Afghanistan.   British Foreign Secretary William Hague said there has been significant progress recently in building up the Afghan state “so I hope any such leaks will not poison that atmosphere.”

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle warned about possible “backlashes” and urged all sides in Afghanistan to work toward national reconciliation.

Ike Skelton, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said the documents reflect his view that US war strategy was adrift last year, before President Barack Obama’s decision to retool the war plan and add tens of thousands of US forces.

Mr Skelton warned today that the documents are outdated and “should not be used as a measure of success or a determining factor in our continued mission there.”

US government agencies have been bracing for the deluge of classified documents since the leak of helicopter cockpit video of a 2007 fire fight in Baghdad. That was blamed on Bradley Manning, the 22-year-old Army intelligence analyst who was charged with releasing classified information earlier this month.

Mr Manning had bragged online that he downloaded 260,000 classified US cables and transmitted them to Wikileaks.org. Mr Assange today compared the impact of the released material to the opening of East Germany’s secret police files. “This is the equivalent of opening the Stasi archives,” he said.

He also said his group had many more documents on other subjects, including files on countries from across the globe.  “We have built up an enormous backlog of whistleblower disclosures,” he said.  Mr Assange said he believed more whistle-blowing material will flood in after the publicity about the Afghan files.

“It is our experience that courage is contagious,” he said.

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