Ian wrote:JOZeldenrust wrote:There are some valid reasons to keep shit secret: preliminary positions in negotiations, because renegotiation becomes impossible once concessions become public, and informants in enemy territory, because they'd be at risk, but transparancy should be the default, and it's the responsibility of the party keeping secrets to keep them under wraps.
Quite true - the Army's security procedures were complete crap. A junior enlisted kid used a recordable CD to copy whatever the hell he wanted. But safeguarding is easier said than done. Try as I might to safeguard my house, a clever burglar could probably find a way in. All my fault if that happens?
Absolute security is an illusion, but reasonable security isn't. This wasn't even close to reasonable security.
JOZeldenrust wrote:If you're using informants, only their contacts need to know their identity. Any other party can just use the anonymous reports by the contacts. Giving access to their info to hundreds of thousands of people is just fucking stupid. It's bound to leak, and when it does it's better if it becomes common knowledge then if it gets into the hands of just the wrong people
Not really - what if an informant's contact drops dead or gets transferred somewhere else? Information needs to be put into writing, and circulated to as few people as reasonable (but no fewer), and archived in databases. Otherwise there's no continuity.
I wasn't thinking of contacts as physical people, but rather as units of people. I should've made that more clear. Ever seen "The Departed"? If even Hollywood can create a semblance of a reasonable undercover operation, I'm sure the US government should be able to figure it out.
JOZeldenrust wrote:The leaking of diplomatic cables isn't the problem of Wikileaks. Neither was the leaked video of the crew of a combat helicopter shooting up a news crew. If the US can't control their flow of information, that's their fucking problem. And if they don't want their lies found out, they shouldn't fucking lie
A bit of an over-simplification there - those choppers didn't know two of their targets worked for reuters. I watche the video: they thought they were engaging insurgents. Apache helicopters don't wander around cities looking for crowds of civilians to shoot up; they had been under fire earlier. And even Wikileaks admitted it did not have much information on the victims, except that two of them turned out to be employed by Reuters.
I have no reason to believe the incident was anything other then a tragic mistake, but it was a stupid mistake (even with the poor quality of the video, it's quite possible to see that the thing being carried is a video camera and not an RPG launcher), and the military consciously covered up the event, claiming US troops had nothing to do with the shooting, when they knew what had happened. That was a shameful lie.
JOZeldenrust wrote:American diplomacy - at least since WWII, and probably before that - relied on the assumption that "the enemy of my enemy is my friend". It has consistently yielded terrible results: installing fascist or criminal regimes in South America, "because the socialists were such a threat". Supporting theocratic or feudal regimes in the Middle East "because the socialists were such a threat".
I'll make one apology for Cold War-era US policies, and it is this: in a great many cases, the US had the option of dealing with a local authoritarian brute or a leftist authoritarian brute who preferred to be in the Soviet sphere. It's not like the Third World was brimming with would-be clones of Thomas Jefferson, ready to lead their people to peace and prosperity if only the US didn't install a dictator in their place.
Allende in Chile was quite reasonable. The socialist student movement in Iran wasn't commited to the USSR. Even in the cases where the alternative was allowing a country to fall into the sphere of the USSR, would that really have been such a bad thing? Communism destroyed itself, like any oppressive regime will if the people have the means to emancipate themselves. The best way to make sure the people have those means is by maintaining trade relationships with those countries, preferably without dealing with the government itself.
I know it's all hindsight, but with some countries America is in the same position they were in in the Cold War. The recent socialist regimes in South America come to mind. Even Iran. A few years ago, when Khatami was president, some positive involvement from the side of America might have been enough to skew the balance of Iranian public opinion in favour of a pro-Western course. As it is, the American hostility towards Iran (yes, I know the hostility is mutual) just serves to solidify the support of Ahmedinejad, and by now most of the Iranian economy is in the hands of the state.
If America wants to protect its interest in the long term, it'll have to stop thinking in terms of short term alliances, and instead focus on long term benefits for the entire world population, including presently hostile communities. Economy isn't a zero sum game.