Free Novel Read

WikiLeaks




  About the Book

  It was the biggest leak in history. WikiLeaks infuriated the world’s greatest superpower, embarrassed the British royal family and helped cause a revolution in Africa. The man behind it was Julian Assange, one of the strangest figures ever to become a worldwide celebrity. Was he an internet messiah or a cyber-terrorist? Information freedom fighter or sex criminal? The debate would echo around the globe as US politicians called for his assassination.

  Award-winning Guardian journalists David Leigh and Luke Harding have been at the centre of a unique publishing drama that involved the release of some 250,000 secret diplomatic cables and classified files from the Afghan and Iraq wars. At one point the platinum-haired hacker was hiding from the CIA in David Leigh’s London house. Now, together with the paper’s investigative reporting team, Leigh and Harding reveal the startling inside story of the man and the leak.

  Inside Julian Assange’s

  War on Secrecy

  David Leigh and Luke Harding

  with Ed Pilkington, Robert Booth and Charles Arthur

  This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

  Version 1.0

  Epub ISBN 9780852652404

  www.randomhouse.co.uk

  Published by Guardian Books 2011

  2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

  Copyright © The Guardian

  David Leigh and Luke Harding have asserted their right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the authors of this work

  This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  First published in Great Britain in 2011 by

  Guardian Books

  Kings Place

  90 York Way

  London

  N1 9GU

  www.guardianbooks.co.uk

  A CIP catalogue for this book is available from the British Library

  ISBN: 978-0-85265-239-8

  CONTENTS

  Cast of characters

  Introduction

  Chapter 1: The Hunt

  Chapter 2: Bradley Manning

  Chapter 3: Julian Assange

  Chapter 4: The rise of WikiLeaks

  Chapter 5: The Apache video

  Chapter 6: The Lamo dialogues

  Chapter 7: The deal

  Chapter 8: In the bunker

  Chapter 9: The Afghanistan war logs

  Chapter 10: The Iraq war logs

  Chapter 11: The cables

  Chapter 12: The world’s most famous man

  Chapter 13: Uneasy partners

  Chapter 14: Before the deluge

  Chapter 15: Publication day

  Chapter 16: The biggest leak in history

  Chapter 17: The ballad of Wandsworth jail

  Chapter 18: The future of WikiLeaks

  Appendix: US Embassy Cables

  Acknowledgements

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  WikiLeaks

  MELBOURNE, NAIROBI, REYKJAVIK, BERLIN, LONDON, NORFOLK, STOCKHOLM

  Julian Assange – WikiLeaks founder/editor

  Sarah Harrison – aide to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

  Kristinn Hrafnsson – Icelandic journalist and WikiLeaks supporter

  James Ball – WikiLeaks data expert

  Vaughan Smith – former Grenadier Guards captain, founder of the Frontline Club and Assange’s host at Ellingham Hall

  Jacob Appelbaum – WikiLeaks’ representative in the US

  Daniel Ellsberg – Vietnam war whistleblower, WikiLeaks supporter

  Daniel Domscheit-Berg – German programmer and WikiLeaks technical architect (aka Daniel Schmitt)

  Mikael Viborg – owner of WikiLeaks’ Swedish internet service provider PRQ

  Ben Laurie – British encryption expert, adviser to Assange on encryption

  Mwalimu Mati – head of anti-corruption group Mars Group Kenya, source of first major WikiLeaks report

  Rudolf Elmer – former head of the Cayman Islands branch of the Julius Baer bank, source of second major WikiLeaks report

  Smári McCarthy – Iceland-based WikiLeaks enthusiast, programmer, Modern Media Initiative (MMI) campaigner

  Birgitta Jónsdóttir – Icelandic MP and WikiLeaks supporter

  Rop Gonggrijp – Dutch hacker-businessman, friend of Assange and MMI campaigner

  Herbert Snorrason – Icelandic MMI campaigner

  Israel Shamir – WikiLeaks associate

  Donald Böstrom – Swedish journalist and WikiLeaks’ Stockholm connection

  The Guardian

  LONDON

  Alan Rusbridger – editor-in-chief

  Nick Davies – investigative reporter

  David Leigh – investigations editor

  Ian Katz – deputy editor (news)

  Ian Traynor – Europe correspondent

  Harold Frayman – systems editor

  Declan Walsh – Pakistan/Afghanistan correspondent

  Alastair Dant – data visualiser

  Simon Rogers – data editor

  Jonathan Steele – former Iraq correspondent

  James Meek – former Iraq correspondent

  Rob Evans – investigative journalist

  Luke Harding – Moscow correspondent

  Robert Booth – reporter

  Stuart Millar – news editor, guardian.co.uk

  Janine Gibson – editor, guardian.co.uk

  Jonathan Casson – head of production

  Gill Phillips – in-house head of legal

  Jan Thompson – managing editor

  New York Times

  NEW YORK, LONDON

  Max Frankel – former executive editor

  Bill Keller – editor

  Eric Schmitt – war correspondent

  John F Burns – London correspondent

  Ian Fisher – deputy foreign editor

  Der Spiegel

  HAMBURG, LONDON

  Georg Mascolo – editor-in-chief

  Holger Stark – head of German desk

  Marcel Rosenbach – journalist

  John Goetz – journalist

  El País

  MADRID, LONDON

  Javier Moreno – editor-in-chief

  Vicente Jiménez – deputy editor

  Other Media

  Raffi Khatchadourian – New Yorker staffer and author of a major profile of Assange

  Saeed Chmagh and Namir Noor-Eldeen – Reuters news agency employees accidentally killed by US army pilots in 2007

  David Schlesinger – Reuters’ editor-in-chief

  Kevin Poulsen – former hacker, senior editor at Wired

  Gavin MacFadyen – City University professor and journalist, London host to Assange

  Stephen Grey – freelance reporter

  Iain Overton – former TV journalist, head of Bureau of Investigative Journalism

  Heather Brooke – London-based American journalist and freedom of information activist

  Bradley Manning

  Bradley Manning – 23-year-old US army private and alleged WikiLeaks source

  Rick McCombs – former principal at Crescent high
school, Crescent, Oklahoma

  Brian, Susan, Casey Manning – parents and sister

  Tom Dyer – school friend

  Kord Campbell – former manager at Zoto software company

  Jeff Paterson – steering committee member of the Bradley Manning support network

  Adrian Lamo – hacker and online confidant

  Timothy Webster – former US army counter-intelligence special agent

  Tyler Watkins – former boyfriend

  David House – former hacker and supporter

  David Coombs – lawyer

  Julian Assange

  Christine Hawkins – mother

  John Shipton – father

  Brett Assange – stepfather

  Keith Hamilton – former partner of Christine

  Daniel Assange – Julian’s son

  Paul Galbally – Assange’s lawyer during his 1996 hacking trial

  Stockholm allegations / extradition

  “Sonja Braun” – plaintiff; member of Brotherhood movement

  “Katrin Weiss” – plaintiff; museum worker

  Claes Borgström – lawyer for both women, former Swedish equal opportunities ombudsman and prominent Social Democrat politician

  Marianne Ny – Swedish chief prosecutor and sex crimes specialist

  Mark Stephens – Assange lawyer

  Geoffrey Robertson, QC – Assange lawyer

  Jennifer Robinson – lawyer in Mark Stephens’ office

  Gemma Lindfield – lawyer acting for the Swedish authorities

  Howard Riddle – district judge, Westminster magistrates court

  Mr Justice Ouseley – high court judge, London

  Government

  Hillary Clinton – US Secretary of State

  Louis B Susman – US ambassador in London

  PJ Crowley – US assistant secretary of state for public affairs

  Harold Koh – US state department’s legal adviser

  Robert Gates – US defence secretary

  Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles – former UK government special representative to Afghanistan and former ambassador to Kabul

  INTRODUCTION

  Alan Rusbridger

  Back in the days when almost no one had heard about WikiLeaks, regular emails started arriving in my inbox from someone called Julian Assange. It was a memorable kind of name. All editors receive a daily mix of unsolicited tip-offs, letters, complaints and crank theories, but there was something about the periodic WikiLeaks emails which caught the attention.

  Sometimes there would be a decent story attached to the emails. Or there might be a document which, on closer inspection, appeared rather underwhelming. One day there might arrive a diatribe against a particular journalist – or against the venal cowardice of mainstream media in general. Another day this Assange person would be pleased with something we’d done, or would perambulate about the life he was living in Nairobi.

  In Britain the Guardian was, for many months, the only paper to write about WikiLeaks or to use any of the documents they were unearthing. In August 2007, for instance, we splashed on a remarkable secret Kroll report which claimed to show that former President Daniel Arap Moi had been siphoning off hundreds of millions of pounds and hiding them away in foreign bank accounts in more than 30 different countries. It was, by any standards, a stonking story. This Assange, whoever he was, was one to watch.

  Unnoticed by most of the world, Julian Assange was developing into a most interesting and unusual pioneer in using digital technologies to challenge corrupt and authoritarian states. It’s doubtful whether his name would have meant anything to Hillary Clinton at the time – or even in January 2010 when, as secretary of state, she made a rather good speech about the potential of what she termed “a new nervous system for our planet”.

  She described a vision of semi-underground digital publishing – “the samizdat of our day” – that was beginning to champion transparency and challenge the autocratic, corrupt old order of the world. But she also warned that repressive governments would “target the independent thinkers who use the tools”. She had regimes like Iran in mind.

  Her words about the brave samizdat publishing future could well have applied to the rather strange, unworldly Australian hacker quietly working out methods of publishing the world’s secrets in ways which were beyond any technological or legal attack.

  Little can Clinton have imagined, as she made this much praised speech, that within a year she would be back making another statement about digital whistleblowers – this time roundly attacking people who used electronic media to champion transparency. It was, she told a hastily arranged state department press conference in November 2010, “not just an attack on America’s foreign policy interests. It is an attack on the international community.” In the intervening 11 months Assange had gone viral. He had just helped to orchestrate the biggest leak in the history of the world – only this time the embarrassment was not to a poor east African nation, but to the most powerful country on earth.

  It is that story, the transformation from anonymous hacker to one of the most discussed people in the world – at once reviled, celebrated and lionised; sought-after, imprisoned and shunned – that this book sets out to tell.

  Within a few short years of starting out Assange had been catapulted from the obscurity of his life in Nairobi, dribbling out leaks that nobody much noticed, to publishing a flood of classified documents that went to the heart of America’s military and foreign policy operations. From being a marginal figure invited to join panels at geek conferences he was suddenly America’s public enemy number one. A new media messiah to some, he was a cyber-terrorist to others. As if this wasn’t dramatic enough, in the middle of it all two women in Sweden accused him of rape. To coin a phrase, you couldn’t make it up.

  Since leaving Nairobi, Assange had grown his ambitions for the scale and potential of WikiLeaks. In the company of other hackers he had been developing a philosophy of transparency. He and his fellow technologists had already succeeded in one aim: he had made WikiLeaks virtually indestructible and thus beyond legal or cyber attack from any one jurisdiction or source. Lawyers who were paid exorbitant sums to protect the reputations of wealthy clients and corporations admitted – in tones tinged with both frustration and admiration – that WikiLeaks was the one publisher in the world they couldn’t gag. It was very bad for business.

  At the Guardian we had our own reasons to watch the rise of WikiLeaks with great interest and some respect. In two cases – involving Barclays Bank and Trafigura – the site had ended up hosting documents which the British courts had ordered to be concealed. There was a bad period in 2008/9 when the high court in London got into the habit of not only banning the publication of documents of high public interest, but simultaneously preventing the reporting of the existence of the court proceedings themselves and the parties involved in them. One London firm of solicitors over-reached itself when it even tried to extend the ban to the reporting of parliamentary discussion of material sitting on the WikiLeaks site.

  Judges were as nonplussed as global corporations by this new publishing phenomenon. In one hearing in March 2009 the high court in London decided that no one was allowed to print documents revealing Barclays’ tax avoidance strategies – even though they were there for the whole world to read on the WikiLeaks website. The law looked a little silly.

  But this new form of indestructible publishing brought sharp questions into focus. For every Trafigura there might be other cases where WikiLeaks could be used to smear or destroy someone. That made Assange a very powerful figure. The fact that there were grumbles among his colleagues about his autocratic and secretive style did not allay the fears about this new media baron. The questions kept coming: who was this shadowy figure “playing God”? How could he and his team be sure of a particular document’s authenticity? Who was determining the ethical framework that decided some information should be published, and some not? All this meant that Assange was in many respects – more,
perhaps, than he welcomed – in a role not dissimilar to that of a conventional editor.

  As this book describes, the spectacular bursting of WikiLeaks into the wider global public eye and imagination began with a meeting in June 2010 between the Guardian’s Nick Davies and Assange. Davies had sought out Assange after reading the early accounts that were filtering out about the leak of a massive trove of military and diplomatic documents. He wanted to convince Assange that this story would have more impact and meaning if he was willing to ally with one or two newspapers – however traditional and cowardly or compromised we might be in the eyes of some hackers. An agreement was struck.

  And so a unique collaboration was born between (initially) three newspapers, the mysterious Australian nomad – and whatever his elusive organisation, WikiLeaks, actually was. That much never became very clear. Assange was, at the best of times, difficult to contact, switching mobile phones, email addresses and encrypted chat rooms as often as he changed his location. Occasionally he would appear with another colleague – it could be a journalist, a hacker, a lawyer or an unspecified helper – but, just as often, he travelled solo. It was never entirely clear which time zone he was on. The difference between day and night, an important consideration in most lives, seemed of little interest to him.

  What now began was a rather traditional journalistic operation, albeit using skills of data analysis and visualisation which were unknown in newsrooms until fairly recently. David Leigh, the Guardian’s investigations editor, spent the summer voraciously reading his way into the material. The Guardian’s deputy editor in charge of news, Ian Katz, now started marshalling wider forces. Ad hoc teams were put together in assorted corners of the Guardian’s offices in King’s Cross, London, to make sense of the vast store of information. Similar teams were assembled in New York and Hamburg – and, later, in Madrid and Paris.