1. All of these people calling for Julian Assange to be "executed" or "put on trial for treason" should really focus on what exactly they're saying. Aside from the blatantly violent threats, you can't put the guy on trial for treason because he isn't American. If they want to kill him anyway, that's the worst unilateral neocon lack of Geneva respect ever. gg.
There are plenty of non-Americans in American jails on long sentences. But you could always try him at the Hague. Win for international jurisprudence.
2. If WikiLeaks is evil for doing this, then by default the New York Times, The Guardian, and Der Spiegel should all be charged with leaking information. We cannot nitpick at the specifics and say that one organization self-censored this much info, and the others didn't.
I agree. Anyone who helped spread classified data without legal authority from the classifier to do so is liable. A strong defensive move on WikiLeaks' part is that hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world are now implicated. No legitimate judicial infrastructure can support that many arrests or trials. So the only viable legal recourse is to try and punish a figurehead. Mr Assange seems happy to pose for the cameras and be that figurehead. What a martyr.
3. This is the Internet. I am a center-left believer of social democracy and for net neutrality, but the freedom of information must be left untouched.
I am as well and I agree.
If things have to be hidden, then something wrong has happened. Preventing negative historic events from happening again, requires that we know what happened.
It would not have done us much good if the Manhattan Project were conducted through a write-in campaign in the NYT or the plans for D-Day were discussed in every Parisian cafe prior to June 6th, 1944. Even when far less imperious things than war are discussed in a public forum they have the potential to spiral out of control. Diplomats, spies, and soldiers do their work under a veil of secrecy because
information is dangerous.
There is a certain category of information--classified information--that is not free to consume for that very reason. As I've already stated it is kept in trust by a small segment of the population for the benefit of the larger whole and is, over time, sanitized and declassified so that a full perspective of history can be gained. This usually takes place by the time the individuals involved are all retired or dead and the events in question are no longer of immediate interest.
Look, at some point you have to trust that your government is doing the right thing, but at no time should you ever assume that it is perfect or is always doing what it should be doing. Governments are made of people and people make mistakes. So if you don't like the particular secrets you think (or know, in this case) your government is keeping, and you live in place where you are free to do something about it--vote or better yet get yourself into a position where you can change the system from the inside and affect that change.
And in my opinion, I don't see anyone being killed as a direct result of these leaked cables.
When classified is leaked contemporaneously to the events it documents, it almost always has the potential to not only damage a nation's "interests", which may have dubious value even to its own citizens, but to place people in very real physical danger. WikiLeaks has not scrubbed source identities from its publications, for example, and those are real people who may already be dead because their 'treachery' to one cause or another is suddenly brought to light. If you think that this does not happen, I have a few stories I could tell you someday...
Once a government halts all movement of information on the Internet, they become China (albeit on a milder scale), hands down. Governments around the world have had documents leaked onto the Internet, with unsuccessful action taken.
We aren't talking about the PRC and the US has by no stretch of the imagination become the PRC just because they don't want sensitive classified information to get out to everyone with a BitTorrent client.
It's too late; they will remain free for everyone to see.
That's true, they will. You can't undo this, and I certainly wouldn't propose to try. What you can do is punish the people who have broken the law. You can also do some civic duty and not perpetuate the breach and speak out against the mindset that seeks to portray doing so in a positive or "liberating" light.
the correct way to do this is to eliminate the person who actually leaked the information.
He's in jail and I look forward to reading the proceedings of his court martial.
However the full footage doesn't make that crew look much better.
Hey, guess what? War is fucking hell. Don't elect people who steer you toward one.