Wombaticus Rex wrote:Been reading this thread since the inception but never saw fit to post up until now.
I find myself increasingly settling towards the position that Assange himself, and WikiLeaks as an organization, do not have to be active agents or even compromised in order for things to have played out like they did. Considering how fundamentally unknowable this main contention is, of Assange's true inner motivations, I find it of limited value. I honor the gut feelings of Alice and Lupercal and I value all their contributions, but I would like to address constructively why I disagree with you guys here.
You are 100% correct that the interpretation and media/gov spin on the cablegate revelations has been repeatedly and distinctively in support of existing foreign policy objectives. However, the machine that makes that possible functions on it's own. It is huge, it is over a century old, and it will digest anything -- any dissent, any legal actions, any artistic statement -- into sanitized psyops. (Observe how it treats Iran, or Chavez, or Castro.) It has never needed the complicity and cooperation of anyone to accomplish those ends. Now, I recognize that history is clear on this: the media Machine absolutely has had the complicity and cooperation of people who played the role of agent provocateur, often on a grand, decades-long scale, too!
We can't prove that about Assange, though. Yet. Honestly, it's not even a very strong case for implication, from where I'm sitting.
The history of these agents and "Assets" is also clear about something more troubling: that these people almost always have their own conflicting agendas, and an often hostile relationship with their "handlers" @ Master Control. Timothy Leary: undoubtedly a man who was involved with the CIA, but also living proof that working for the Company doesn't necessarily make you a Company Man.
I think there is a valid line to be drawn between the contents of the cables and the stories that have dominated the media discussion -- those are two very different things. This indicates the size, scope and power of the media machine we've been talking about, but it's also an indication that Assange is playing a more complex game than just, say....being in a Harley-Davidson shirt at the right place at the right time with the right lines about why the buildings collapsed. There is a great deal of genuinely damning material being released and given almost no media coverage. That might just be to muddy the waters, but it also complicates your case.
More fundamentally, though, the content of the cables that have been released have profound and undeniable real world EFFECTS. That is the most important element here, not Assange. I think this remains an amazingly huge and important ongoing story worth paying close attention to. In the context of the Grand Chessboard, I think the question of Assange's possible agent status are actually secondary to the ongoing, real world effects. Like, very secondary.
Just my $0.02 and I have no illusions about changing minds. Carry on.
Okay that deserves a point-by-point so here we go:
1. Considering how fundamentally unknowable this main contention is, of Assange's true inner motivations, I find it of limited value.
No problem there. I happen to think Assange is mainly interested in making a buck, but there's nothing inherently wrong with that, even selling his services to spooks, if he doesn't have a problem with their objectives. That would contradict his recent statements but I think those are about as sincere as Obama campaign promises, if not less. But basically I agree, the inner Assange is not the issue.
2. the interpretation and media/gov spin on the cablegate revelations has been repeatedly and distinctively in support of existing foreign policy objectives.
Yes, and I agree with the rest too, but wikileaks/Assange haven't done much that I can see to interfere with this containment-of-subversion process, which suggests to me they don't particularly care what use is made of the goods they provide, if they even do. I have my doubts about the Manning story for example but that's another conversation.
3. More fundamentally, though, the content of the cables that have been released have profound and undeniable real world EFFECTS.
Yes, I agree with that too, but that's the problem. The effects I've seen so far haven't been good news for anyone but Boeing, Raytheon, Northrup Grumman, etc. I'm guessing you have in mind Kenya and Iceland, and I'll admit that the little I've heard about those two has been promising, but I don't know enough to say with any certainty whether those regime changes have been any less beneficial to US "interests" than any other CIA intervention. Maybe they were, but based on effects I know more about, like the failure of the Copenhagen weather talks, it looks to me like wikileaks is basically a spook puppet show, whether it started out as one or not.