AhabsOtherLeg wrote:AlicetheKurious wrote:vanlose kid wrote:you've read that, yes, but have you checked?
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I wasn't sure how, but now I tried, using Google, and to my surprise I was able to do it quite easily. I found the cable about the Saudi King Abdullah.
You can use this site to search through all the currently released cables by keyword: http://ht.ly/3kggO
I don't know if it's a CIA front-end or whatever, it doesn't seem to be directly affiliated with Wikileaks, but I've been using it all week and it's very efficient.
Alice, you MUST read them. It's kind of monotonous going, but you can't take it for granted that the representations of even the best-intentioned commentators reflect the same things you'll see. Plus, it really is a lesson in the power of spin, as if we needed one. There isn't really a hardline bias in the informational content itself, beyond what you'd reasonably expect from a bunch of conventionally American-exception-minded diplomats writing to the people who pay the embassy's heating bills. Or....Wait a minute, I'm one of those people.
I guess I mean the people who authorize the payments. Or sign the checks. Or....You know what I mean. Their bosses.
WRT Iran specifically, there's one from Malaysia that wasn't published here that's a little bit of an eye-opener in its own way. The part that caught my attention (preceded by a handy key to the abbreviations) was:
- FEEB = First East Export Bank, the subsidiary of Iran's Bank Mellat that is (or in 2009 was) licensed in Malaysia
BN= Barisian Nasional, the governing political coalitiion in Malaysia.
GOM = Government of Malaysia
USG = Bullies, weaklings, and liars, per a clear-eyed reading.
IRAN = victim of obsessive and unjust persecution by bullies, weaklings and liars, per a clear-eyed reading.
- 4. (S) Lee shared BN concerns that if BN were to revoke the
FEEB license it would trigger law suits against the GOM by
FEEB shareholders. He continued that after repeated BN
requests, the USG has yet to provide any concrete or specific
evidence of FEEB or Bank Mellat wrongdoing that could be used
in court by the GOM to defend a suit against BN for wrongful
action against FEEB. xxxxxxxxxxxx added that U.S. &suspicions
were not always accurate. Lee also queried on U.S.
designation actions on other Bank Mellat foreign subsidiaries
in Seoul, London, Ankara and other locations and asked why
Malaysia was being singled out for immediate action.
Abdullah noted that BN recently inspected FEEB and found the
bank had consummated only one Euro 400,000 letter of credit
for the import of oil and gas-related equipment from Iran in
its first six months of operation. BN officials argued that
they could supervise a low-activity Bank Mellat subsidiary as
well as those other countries where the US is not preparing
to implement sanctions.
Imagine that. U.S. diplomats are aware that Iran has business transactions that have nothing whatsoever to do with the alleged pursuit of nuclear weapons, for which they can't provide Malaysia with evidence that would stand up in court, despite repeated requests.
That was last year, though. And per a brief search-term review, t looks like we have managed to make Seoul say "Uncle" since then. So maybe we're also still scary enough to cow Malaysia. But I doubt it. They're out of our price range these days. And in all events, London and Ankara are still saying la-la-la-la-I-can't-hear-you.
In any event. In all sincerity, I defy anyone to tell me whose national interests or what set of unseemly concealed objectives are served by letting the world know any of that. It doesn't even particularly help Iran. Or Malaysia. Or Turkey. Or South Korea. It just lets U.S. diplomats make themselves look like the arrogant, unreasonable, vengeful and demanding assholes that they were in fact being.
And it's quite informative that way. But only if you read it. Same (but different) goes for the rest of them, if you know what I mean.
Full text here, for those who want to cast their own eyes over it, which I urge them to do