
	
	
	by Michel Chossudovsky
	December 13, 2010
	
	from 
	GlobalResearch Website
	
		
			
			"World bankers, by pulling a few simple 
			levers that control the flow of money, can make or break entire 
			economies. 
			
			 
			
			By controlling press releases of economic strategies that 
			shape national trends, the power elite are able to not only tighten 
			their stranglehold on this nation's economic structure, but can 
			extend that control world wide. 
			
			 
			
			Those possessing such power would 
			logically want to remain in the background, invisible to the average 
			citizen." 
			
			(Aldous Huxley)
		
	
	
	WikiLeaks is upheld as a breakthrough in the 
	battle against media disinformation and the lies of the US government.
	
	Unquestionably, the released documents constitute an important and valuable 
	data bank. The documents have been used by critical researchers since the 
	outset of the WikiLeaks project. 
	
	 
	
	WikiLeaks earlier revelations have focussed 
	on US war crimes in Afghanistan (July 2010) as well as issues pertaining to 
	civil liberties and the "militarization of the Homeland" (see Tom Burghardt, 
	
	Militarizing the "Homeland" in Response to the Economic and Political 
	Crisis, Global Research, October 11, 2008)
	
	In October 2010, WikiLeaks was reported to have released some 400,000 
	classified Iraq war documents, covering events from 2004 to 2009 (Tom 
	Burghardt, 
	The WikiLeaks Release: U.S. Complicity and Cover-Up of Iraq 
	Torture Exposed, Global Research, October 24, 2010). These revelations 
	contained in the WikiLeaks Iraq War Logs provide "further evidence of the 
	Pentagon's role in the systematic torture of Iraqi citizens by the 
	U.S.-installed post-Saddam regime." (Ibid)
	
	Progressive organizations have praised the WikiLeaks endeavor. Our own 
	website Global Research has provided extensive coverage of the WikiLeaks 
	project. 
	
	The leaks are heralded as an immeasurable victory against corporate media 
	censorship.
	
	But there is more than meets the eye.
	
	Even prior to the launching of the project, the mainstream media had 
	contacted WikiLeaks.
	
	There are also reports from published email exchanges (unconfirmed) that 
	WikiLeaks had, at the outset of the project in January 2007, contacted and 
	sought the advice of 
	Freedom House. This included an invitation to Freedom 
	House (FH) to participate in the WikiLeaks advisory board: 
	
		
		"We are looking for one or two initial advisory board member from FH who may 
	advise on the following: 
		
			- 
			
			the needs of FH as consumer of leaks exposing business and political 
	corruption 
- 
			
			the needs for sources of leaks as experienced by FH 
- 
			
			FH recommendations for other advisory board members 
- 
			
			general advice on funding, coallition [sic] building and 
			decentralized 
	operations and political framing" (WikiLeaks Leak email exchanges, January 
	2007). 
	
	There is no evidence of FH follow-up support to the 
	WikiLeaks project. 
	
	
	 
	
	Freedom House is a Washington based "watchdog organization that supports the 
	expansion of freedom around the world". It is chaired by William H. Taft IV 
	who was legal adviser to the State Department under 
	G.W. Bush and Deputy 
	Secretary of Defense under the Reagan administration.
	
	WikiLeaks had also entered into negotiations with several corporate 
	foundations with a view to securing funding. (WikiLeaks Leak email exchanges, January 2007):
	
		
		The linchpin of WikiLeaks's financial network is Germany's Wau Holland 
	Foundation... 
		
			
			"We're registered as a library in Australia, we're 
	registered as a foundation in France, we're registered as a newspaper in 
	Sweden," Mr. Assange said. 
		
		
		WikiLeaks has two tax-exempt charitable 
	organizations in the U.S., known as 501C3s, that "act as a front" for the 
	website, he said. He declined to give their names, saying they could "lose 
	some of their grant money because of political sensitivities."
Mr. Assange said WikiLeaks gets about half its money from modest donations 
	processed by its website, and the other half from "personal contacts," 
	including "people with some millions who approach us...." 
		
		
		(WikiLeaks Keeps 
	Funding Secret, WSJ.com, August 23, 2010)
	
	
	Acquiring covert funding from intelligence agencies was, according to the 
	email exchanges, also contemplated. (See 
	
	WikiLeaks Leak email exchanges, 
	January 2007)
	
	At the outset in early 2007, WikiLeaks acknowledged that the project had 
	been,
	
		
		"founded by Chinese dissidents, mathematicians and startup company 
	technologists, from the US, Taiwan, Europe, Australia and South Africa.... 
	[Its advisory board] includes representatives from expat Russian and Tibetan 
	refugee communities, reporters, a former US intelligence analyst and 
	cryptographers." 
		
		(WikiLeaks Leak email exchanges, January 2007).
	
	
	WikiLeaks formulated its mandate on its website as follows: 
	
		
		"[WikiLeaks will 
	be] an uncensorable version of Wikipedia for untraceable mass document 
	leaking and analysis. Our primary interests are oppressive regimes in Asia, 
	the former Soviet bloc, Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East, but we also 
	expect to be of assistance to those in the west who wish to reveal unethical 
	behavior in their own governments and corporations," CBC News Website 
	wants to take whistleblowing online, January 11, 2007.
	
	
	This mandate was confirmed by Julian Assange in a June 2010 interview in The 
	New Yorker:
	
		
		"Our primary targets are those highly oppressive regimes in China, Russia 
	and Central Eurasia, but we also expect to be of assistance to those in the 
	West who wish to reveal illegal or immoral behavior in their own governments 
	and corporations. 
		
		(quoted in 
		
		WikiLeaks and Julian Paul Assange : The New 
	Yorker, June 7, 2010)
Assange also intimated that "exposing secrets" "could potentially bring down 
	many administrations that rely on concealing reality—including the US 
	administration." 
		
		(Ibid) 
	
	
	From the outset, WikiLeaks' geopolitical focus on "oppressive regimes" in 
	Eurasia and the Middle East was "appealing" to America's elites, i.e. it 
	seemingly matched stated US foreign policy objectives. 
	
	 
	
	Moreover, the 
	composition of the WikiLeaks team (which included Chinese dissidents), not 
	to mention the methodology of "exposing secrets" of foreign governments, 
	were in tune with the practices of US covert operations geared towards 
	triggering "regime change" and fostering "color revolutions" in different 
	parts of the World. 
 
	
	 
	
	
	The Role of the 
	Corporate Media - The Central Role of the New York Times
	
	WikiLeaks is not a typical alternative media initiative. 
	
	 
	
	The New York Times, 
	the Guardian and Der Spiegel are directly involved in the editing and 
	selection of leaked documents. The London Economist has also played an 
	important role.
	
	While the project and its editor Julian Assange reveal a commitment and 
	concern for truth in media, the recent WikiLeaks releases of embassy cables 
	have been carefully "redacted" by the mainstream media in liaison with the 
	US government. (See Interview with David E. Sanger, Fresh Air, PBS, December 
	8, 2010)
	
	This collaboration between WikiLeaks and selected mainstream media is not 
	fortuitous; it was part of an agreement between several major US and 
	European newspapers and WikiLeaks' editor Julian Assange. 
	
		
			- 
			
			The important question is who controls and oversees the selection, 
	distribution and editing of released documents to the broader public?
 
 
- 
			
			What US foreign policy objectives are being served through this redacting 
	process? 
 
 
- 
			
			Is WikiLeaks part of an awakening of public opinion, of a battle against the 
	lies and fabrications which appear daily in the print media and on network 
	TV?
 
 
- 
			
			If so, how can this battle against media disinformation be waged with the 
	participation and collaboration of the corporate architects of media 
	disinformation? 
	
	WikiLeaks has enlisted the architects of media disinformation to fight media 
	disinformation: An incongruous and self-defeating procedure. 
	
	America's corporate media and more specifically The New York Times are an 
	integral part of the economic establishment, with links to Wall Street, the 
	Washington think tanks and the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR).
	
	Moreover, the US corporate media has developed a longstanding relationship 
	to the US intelligence apparatus, going back to "Operation Mocking Bird", an 
	initiative of the CIA's Office of Special Projects (OSP), established in the 
	early 1950s.
	
	Even before the WikiLeaks project got off the ground, the mainstream media 
	was implicated. A role was defined and agreed upon for the corporate media 
	not only in the release, but also in the selection and editing of the leaks. 
	In a bitter irony, the "professional media", to use Julian Assange's words 
	in an interview with The Economist, have been partners in the WikiLeaks 
	project from the outset.
	
	Moreover, key journalists with links to the US foreign policy-national 
	security intelligence establishment have worked closely with WikiLeaks, in 
	the distribution and dissemination of the leaked documents.
	
	In a bitter irony, WikiLeaks partner The New York Times, which has 
	consistently promoted media disinformation is now being accused of 
	conspiracy. 
	
	 
	
	For what? For revealing the truth? Or for manipulating the 
	truth? 
	
	 
	
	In the words of Senator Joseph L. Lieberman:
	
		
		“I certainly believe that WikiLleaks has violated the Espionage Act, but 
	then what about the news organizations — including The Times — that accepted 
	it and distributed it?” Mr. Lieberman said, adding: “To me, The New York 
	Times has committed at least an act of bad citizenship, and whether they 
	have committed a crime, I think that bears a very intensive inquiry by the 
	Justice Department.” 
		
		(WikiLeaks Prosecution Studied by Justice Department - NYTimes.com, December 7, 2010)
	
	
	This "redacting" role of The New York Times is candidly acknowledged by 
	David E Sanger, Chief Washington correspondent of the NYT:
	
		
		"[W]e went through [the cables] so carefully to try to redact material that 
	we thought could be damaging to individuals or undercut ongoing operations. 
	And we even took the very unusual step of showing the 100 cables or so that 
	we were writing from to the U.S. government and asking them if they had 
	additional redactions to suggest." 
		
		(See 
		
		PBS Interview; The Redacting and 
	Selection of WikiLeaks documents by the Corporate Media, PBS interview on 
	"Fresh Air" with Terry Gross: December 8, 2010). 
	
	
	Yet Sanger also says later in the interview:
	
		
		"It is the responsibility of American journalism, back to the founding of 
	this country, to get out and try to grapple with the hardest issues of the 
	day and to do it independently of the government." 
		
		(ibid) 
		
"Do it independently of the government" while at the same time "asking them 
	[the US government] if they had additional redactions to suggest"?
	
	
	David E. Sanger cannot be described as a model independent journalist. 
	
	 
	
	He is 
	member of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and the 
	
	
	Aspen Institute's 
	Strategy Group which regroups the likes of,
	
		
			- 
			
			Madeleine K. Albright 
- 
			
			Condoleeza 
	Rice 
- 
			
			former Defense Secretary William Perry 
- 
			
			former CIA head John Deutch 
- 
			
			the president of the World Bank, Robert. B. Zoellick
			 
- 
			
			Philip Zelikow, 
	former executive director of the 9/11 Commission,  
	
	...among other prominent 
	establishment figures. (See also F. William Engdahl, 
	
	WikiLeaks: A Big 
	Dangerous US Government Con Job, Global Research, December 10, 2010). 
	
	It is worth noting that several American journalists, members of the Council 
	on Foreign Relations have interviewed WikiLeaks, including Time Magazine's 
	
	
	Richard Stengel (November 30, 2010) and The New Yorker's Raffi Khatchadurian. 
	(WikiLeaks and Julian Paul Assange 
	- The New 
	Yorker, June 11, 2007)
	
	Historically, The New York Times has served the interests of 
	
	the Rockefeller 
	family in the context of a longstanding relationship. 
	
	 
	
	The current New York 
	Times chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr. is a member of the Council on Foreign 
	Relations, son of Arthur Ochs Sulzberger and grandson of Arthur Hays 
	Sulzberger who served as a Trustee for the Rockefeller Foundation. 
	
	 
	
	Ethan Bronner, deputy foreign editor of The New York Times as well as 
	Thomas 
	Friedman among others are also members of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). 
	(Membership Roster - Council on Foreign Relations)
	
	In turn, 
	the Rockefellers have an important stake as shareholders of several 
	US corporate media.
 
	
	 
	
	
	The Embassy and State 
	Department Cables
	
	It should come as no surprise that David E. Sanger and his colleagues at the 
	NYT centered their attention on a highly "selective" dissemination of the 
	WikiLeaks cables, focusing on areas which would support US foreign policy 
	interests:
	
		
	
	
	These releases 
	were then used as source material in NYT articles and commentary. 
	
	The Embassy and State Department cables released by WikiLeaks were redacted 
	and filtered. They were used for propaganda purposes. They do not constitute 
	a complete and continuous set of memoranda.
	
	From a selected list of cables, the leaks are being used to justify a 
	foreign policy agenda. 
	
	 
	
	A case in point is Iran's alleged nuclear weapons 
	program, which is the object of numerous State Department memos, as well as 
	Saudi Arabia's support of Islamic terrorism. 
 
	
	 
	
	
	Iran's Nuclear Program
	
	The leaked cables are used to feed the disinformation campaign concerning 
	Iran's Weapons of Mass Destruction. 
	
	 
	
	While the leaked cables are heralded as 
	"evidence" that Iran constitutes a threat, the lies and fabrications of the 
	corporate media concerning Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program are not 
	mentioned, nor is there any mention of them in the leaked cables. 
	
	The leaks, once they are funneled into the corporate news chain, edited and 
	redacted by the New York Times, indelibly serve the broader interests of US 
	foreign policy, including US-NATO-Israel war preparations directed against 
	Iran.
	
	With regard to "leaked intelligence" and the coverage of Iran's alleged 
	nuclear weapons program, David E. Sanger has played a crucial role. 
	
	 
	
	In 
	November 2005, The New York Times published a report co-authored by David E. 
	Sanger and William J. Broad entitled "Relying on Computer, U.S. Seeks to 
	Prove Iran's Nuclear Aims".
	
	The article refers to mysterious documents on a stolen Iranian laptop 
	computer which included "a series of drawings of a missile re-entry vehicle" 
	which allegedly could accommodate an Iranian produced nuclear weapon:
	
		
		"In mid-July, senior American intelligence officials called the leaders of 
	the international atomic inspection agency to the top of a skyscraper 
	overlooking the Danube in Vienna and unveiled the contents of what they said 
	was a stolen Iranian laptop computer.
The Americans flashed on a screen and spread over a conference table 
	selections from more than a thousand pages of Iranian computer simulations 
	and accounts of experiments, saying they showed a long effort to design a 
	nuclear warhead, according to a half-dozen European and American 
	participants in the meeting.
The documents, the Americans acknowledged from the start, do not prove that 
	Iran has an atomic bomb. 
		 
		
		They presented them as the strongest evidence yet 
	that, despite Iran's insistence that its nuclear program is peaceful, the 
	country is trying to develop a compact warhead to fit atop its Shahab 
	missile, which can reach Israel and other countries in the Middle 
	East."
		
		(William J. Broad and David E. Sanger 
		Relying on Computer, U.S. Seeks to Prove Iran's Nuclear Aims - New York 
		Times, November 13, 2005)
	
	
	These "secret documents" were subsequently submitted by the US State 
	Department to the International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA, with a view to 
	demonstrating that Iran was developing a nuclear weapons program. 
	
	 
	
	They were 
	also used as a pretext to enforce the economic sanctions regime directed 
	against Iran, adopted by the UN Security Council.
	
	While their authenticity has been questioned, a recent article by 
	investigative reporter Gareth Porter confirms unequivocally that the 
	mysterious laptop documents are fake. (See Gareth Porter, Exclusive Report: 
	Evidence of Iran Nuclear Weapons Program May Be Fraudulent, 
	November 18, 2010).
	
	The drawings contained in the documents leaked by William J. Broad and David 
	E. Sanger do not pertain to the Shahab missile but to an obsolete North 
	Korean missile system which was decommissioned by Iran in the mid-1990s. 
	
	 
	
	The 
	drawings presented by US State Department officials pertained to the "Wrong 
	Missile Warhead":
	
		
		In July 2005 ... Robert Joseph, US undersecretary of state for arms control 
	and international security, made a formal presentation on the purported 
	Iranian nuclear weapons program documents to the agency's leading officials 
	in Vienna. 
		 
		
		Joseph flashed excerpts from the documents on the screen, giving 
	special attention to the series of technical drawings or "schematics" 
	showing 18 different ways of fitting an unidentified payload into the 
	re-entry vehicle or "warhead" of Iran's medium-range ballistic missile, the 
	Shahab-3. 
		 
		
		When IAEA analysts were allowed to study the documents, however, 
	they discovered that those schematics were based on a re-entry vehicle that 
	the analysts knew had already been abandoned by the Iranian military in 
	favor of a new, improved design. 
		 
		
		The warhead shown in the schematics had the 
	familiar "dunce cap" shape of the original North Korean No Dong missile, 
	which Iran had acquired in the mid-1990s... The laptop documents had 
	depicted the wrong re-entry vehicle being redesigned... 
		
		(Gareth Porter, op 
	cit) 
 
		
		
David E, Sanger, who worked diligently with 
		WikiLeaks under the banner of 
	truth and transparency was also instrumental in the New York Times "leak" of 
	what Gareth Porter describes as fake intelligence. 
		
		(Ibid)
	
	
	While this issue of fake intelligence received virtually no media coverage, 
	it invalidates outright Washington's assertions regarding Iran's alleged 
	nuclear weapons. 
	
	 
	
	It also questions the legitimacy of the UN Security Council 
	Sanctions regime directed against Iran.
	
	Moreover, in a bitter irony, the selective redacting of the WikiLeaks 
	embassy cables by the NYT has usefully served not only to dismiss the 
	central issue of fake intelligence but also to reinforce, through media 
	disinformation, Washington's claim that Iran is developing nuclear weapons. 
	
	
	 
	
	A case in point is a November 2010 article co-authored by David E. Sanger, 
	which quotes the WikiLeaks cables as a source:
	
		
		"Iran obtained 19 of the missiles from North Korea, according to a [WikiLeaks] 
	cable dated Feb. 24 of this year..."
		
		(WikiLeaks Archive 
		- Iran Armed by 
	North Korea - NYTimes.com, November 28, 2010)
		 
		
		These missiles are said to have the "capacity to strike at capitals in 
	Western Europe or easily reach Moscow, and American officials warned that 
	their advanced propulsion could speed Iran’s development of intercontinental 
	ballistic missiles." 
		
		(Ibid)
	
	
	 
 
	
	WikiLeaks, Iran and 
	the Arab World
	
	The released wikileaks cables have also being used to create divisions 
	between Iran on the one hand and Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States on the 
	other:
	
		
		"After WikiLeaks claimed that certain Arab states are concerned about Iran’s 
	nuclear program and have urged the U.S. to take [military] action to contain 
	Iran, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton took advantage of the issue 
	and said that the released cables showed U.S. concerns regarding Iran’s 
	nuclear program are shared by the international community." 
		
		Tehran Times :
		
		WikiLeaks promoting Iranophobia, December 5, 2010
	
	
	The Western media has jumped on this opportunity and has quoted the State 
	Department memoranda released by Wikleaks with a view to upholding Iran as a 
	threat to global security as well as fostering divisions between Iran and 
	the Arab world.
 
	
	 
	
	
	"The Global War on 
	Terrorism"
	
	The leaks quoted by the Western media reveal the support of the Gulf States 
	and Saudi Arabia to several Islamic terrorist organizations, a fact which is 
	known and amply documented.
	
	What the reports fail to mention, however, which is crucial in an 
	understanding of the "Global War on Terrorism", is that US intelligence 
	historically has channeled its support to terrorist organizations via 
	Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. (See Michel Chossudovsky, 
	
	America's "War on 
	Terrorism", 2005). 
	
	 
	
	These are US sponsored covert 
	intelligence operations using Saudi and Pakistani intelligence as 
	intermediaries.
	
	In this regard, the use of the WikiLeaks documents by the media tends to 
	sustain the illusion that the CIA has nothing to do with the terror network 
	and that Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states are "providing the lion's share of 
	funding" to Al Qaeda, the Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba, among others, when in 
	fact this financing is undertaken in liaison and consultation with their US 
	intelligence counterparts: 
	
		
		"The information came to light in the latest round of documents released 
	Sunday by WikiLeaks. In their communiqués to the State Department, U.S. 
	embassies in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states describe a situation in which 
	wealthy private donors, often openly, lavishly support the same groups 
	against whom Saudi Arabia claims to be fighting." 
		
		(WikiLeaks: Saudis, Gulf 
	States Big Funders of Terror Groups - Defense/Middle East - Israel News - 
	Israel National News)
	
	
	Similarly, with regard to Pakistan:
	
		
		The cables, obtained by WikiLeaks and made available to a number of news 
	organizations, make it clear that underneath public reassurances lie deep 
	clashes [between the U.S. and Pakistan] over strategic goals on issues like 
	Pakistan's support for the Afghan Taliban and tolerance of Al Qaeda..."
		
		
		(Wary Dance With Pakistan in Nuclear World, The New York Times December 1, 
	2010) 
	
	
	Reports of this nature serve to provide legitimacy to US drone attacks 
	against alleged terrorist targets inside Pakistan.
	
	The corporate media's use and interpretation of the WikiLeaks cables serves 
	to uphold two related myths:
	
		
			- 
			
			Iran has nuclear weapons program and constitutes a threat to global 
	security.
 
 
- 
			
			Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are state sponsors of Al Qaeda. They are 
	financing Islamic terrorist organizations which are intent upon attacking 
	the US and its NATO allies.  
	
	 
 
	
	The CIA and the 
	Corporate Media
	
	The CIA's relationship to the US media is amply documented. 
	
	 
	
	The New York 
	Times continues to entertain a close relationship not only with US 
	intelligence, but also with the Pentagon and more recently with the 
	Department of Homeland Security. 
	
	"Operation Mocking Bird" was an initiative of the CIA's
	Office of Special 
	Projects (OSP), established in the early 1950s. Its objective was to exert 
	influence on both the US as well as the foreign media. From the 1950s, 
	members of the US media were routinely enlisted by the CIA. 
	
	The inner workings of the CIA's relationship to the US media are described 
	in Carl Bernstein's 1977 article in Rolling Stone entitled
	
	The CIA and the 
	Media:
	
		
		"[M]ore than 400 American journalists who [had] secretly carried out 
	assignments for the Central Intelligence Agency, according to documents on 
	file at CIA headquarters. [1950-1977] Some of these journalists’ 
	relationships with the Agency were tacit; some were explicit... Reporters 
	shared their notebooks with the CIA. 
		 
		
		Editors shared their staffs. Some of 
	the journalists were Pulitzer Prize winners... Most were less exalted: 
		foreign correspondents who found that their association with the Agency 
		helped their work....
Among the executives who lent their cooperation to the Agency were Williarn 
	Paley of the Columbia Broadcasting System, Henry Luce of Tirne Inc., Arthur 
	Hays Sulzberger of the New York Times, Barry Bingham Sr. of the LouisviIle 
	Courier‑Journal, and James Copley of the Copley News Service. 
		
		 
		
		Other 
	organizations which cooperated with the CIA include the American 
	Broadcasting Company, the National Broadcasting Company, the Associated 
	Press, United Press International, Reuters, Hearst Newspapers, 
	Scripps‑Howard, Newsweek magazine, the Mutual Broadcasting System, the Miami 
	Herald and the old Saturday Evening Post and New York Herald‑Tribune.
		
		
		(The 
	CIA and the Media by Carl Bernstein) 
	
	
	Bernstein suggests, in this regard, that,
	
		
		"the CIA’s use of the American news 
	media has been much more extensive than Agency officials have acknowledged 
	publicly or in closed sessions with members of Congress" 
		
		(Ibid)
	
	
	In recent years, the CIA's relationship to the media has become increasingly 
	complex and sophisticated. We are dealing with a mammoth propaganda network 
	involving a number of agencies of government.
	
	Media disinformation has become institutionalized. The lies and fabrications 
	have become increasingly blatant when compared to the 1970s. The US media 
	has become the mouthpiece of US foreign policy. 
	
	 
	
	Disinformation is routinely 
	"planted" by CIA operatives in the newsroom of major dailies, magazines and 
	TV channels: 
	
		
		"A relatively few well-connected correspondents provide the 
	scoops, that get the coverage in the relatively few mainstream news sources, 
	where the parameters of debate are set and the "official reality" is 
	consecrated for the bottom feeders in the news chain."
		
		(Chaim Kupferberg, 
		
		The 
	Propaganda Preparation of 9/11, Global Research, September 19, 2002).
	
	
	Since 2001, the US media has assumed a new role in sustaining the "Global 
	War on Terrorism" (GWOT) and camouflaging US sponsored war crimes.
	
	 
	
	In the 
	wake of 9/11, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld created the Office of 
	Strategic Influence (OSI), or "Office of Disinformation" as it was labeled 
	by its critics: 
	
		
		"The Department of Defense said they needed to do this, and 
	they were going to actually plant stories that were false in foreign 
	countries -- as an effort to influence public opinion across the world.'" 
		
		
		(Interview with Steve Adubato, Fox News, 26 December 2002, see also Michel 
	Chossudovsky, 
		
		War Propaganda, Global Research, January 3, 2003)
	
	
	Today's corporate media is an instrument of war propaganda, which begs the 
	question: 
	
		
		why would the NYT all of a sudden promote transparency and truth 
	in media, by assisting WikiLeaks in "spreading the word"; and that people 
	around the World would not pause for one moment and question the basis of 
	this incongruous relationship. 
	
	
	On the surface, nothing proves that WikiLeaks is a CIA covert operation. 
	
	
	 
	
	However, given the corporate media's cohesive and structured relationship to 
	US intelligence, not to mention the links of individual journalists to the 
	military-national security establishment, the issue of a CIA sponsored PsyOp 
	must necessarily be addressed.
 
	
	 
	
	
	WikiLeaks Social and 
	Corporate Entourage
	
	WikiLeaks and The Economist have also entered into what seems to be a 
	contradictory relationship. WikiLeaks founder and editor Julian Assange was 
	granted in 2008 The Economist's New Media Award.
	
	
	The Economist has a close relationship to Britain's financial elites. It is 
	an establishment news outlet, which has, on balance, supported Britain's 
	involvement in the Iraq war. The Economist's Editor-in-Chief, John Micklethwait was a participant in the June 2010 
	
	Bilderberg conference. 
	
	The Economist also bears the stamp of 
	
	the Rothschild family. 
	
	 
	
	Sir Evelyn 
	Robert Adrian de Rothschild was chairman of The Economist from 1972 to 1989. 
	His wife Lynn Forester de Rothschild currently sits on The Economist's 
	board. 
	
	 
	
	The Rothschild family also has a sizeable shareholder interest in The 
	Economist. Former Editor of The Economist (1974-86), Andrew Stephen Bower 
	Knight is currently Chairman of the J. Rothschild Capital Management Fund. 
	He is also reported to have been member of the Steering Group (1986) of the Bilderberg.
	
	The broader question is,
	
		
		why would Julian Assange receive the support from 
	Britain's foremost establishment news outfit which has consistently been 
	involved in media disinformation?
	
	
	Are we not dealing with a case of "manufactured dissent", whereby the 
	process of supporting and rewarding WikiLeaks for its endeavors, becomes a 
	means of controlling and manipulating the WikiLeaks project, while at the 
	same time embedding it into the mainstream media.
	
	It is also worth mentioning another important link. 
	
	 
	
	Julian Assange's lawyer 
	Mark Stephens of Finers Stephens Innocent (FSI), a major London elite law 
	firm, happens to be the legal adviser to the Rothschild Waddesdon Trust. 
	
	
	 
	
	While this in itself does prove anything, it should nonetheless be examined 
	in the broader context of WikiLeaks' social and corporate entourage: 
	
		
	
	
	 
	
	
	Manufacturing Dissent
	
	WikiLeaks has the essential features of a process of "manufactured dissent". 
	It seeks to expose government lies. It has released important information on 
	US war crimes. 
	
	 
	
	But once the project becomes embedded in the mould of 
	mainstream journalism, it is used as an instrument of media disinformation: 
	
		
		"It is in the interest of the corporate elites to accept dissent and protest 
	as a feature of the system inasmuch as they do not threaten the established 
	social order. The purpose is not to repress dissent, but, on the contrary, 
	to shape and mould the protest movement, to set the outer limits of dissent. 
		
		 
		
		To maintain their legitimacy, the economic elites favor limited and 
	controlled forms of opposition... To be effective, however, the process of 
	"manufacturing dissent" must be carefully regulated and monitored by those 
	who are the object of the protest movement " 
		
		(See Michel Chossudovsky, 
	"Manufacturing Dissent": the Anti-globalization Movement is Funded by the 
	Corporate Elites, September 2010)
	
	
	What this examination of the WikiLeaks project also suggests is that the 
	mechanics of 
	New World Order propaganda, particularly with regard to its 
	military agenda, has become increasingly sophisticated.
	
	It no longer relies on the outright suppression of the facts regarding 
	US-NATO war crimes. Nor does it require that the reputation of government 
	officials at the highest levels, including the Secretary of State, be 
	protected. 
	
	 
	
	New World Order politicians are in a sense "disposable". They can 
	be replaced. What must be protected and sustained are the interests of the 
	economic elites, which control the political apparatus from behind the 
	scenes. 
	
	In the case of WikiLeaks, the facts are contained in a data bank; many of 
	those facts, particularly those pertaining to foreign governments serve US 
	foreign policy interests. 
	
	 
	
	Other facts tend, on the other hand to discredit 
	the US administration. With regard to financial information, the release of 
	data pertaining to a particular bank instigated via WikiLeaks by a rival 
	financial institution, could potentially be used to trigger the collapse or 
	bankruptcy of the targeted financial institution. 
	
	All the Wiki-facts are selectively redacted, they are then "analyzed" and 
	interpreted by a media which serves the economic elites. 
	
	While the numerous pieces of information contained in the WikiLeaks data 
	bank are accessible, the broader public will not normally take the trouble 
	to consult and scan through the WikiLeaks data bank. The public will read 
	the redacted selections and interpretations presented in major news outlets.
	
	A partial and biased picture is presented. The redacted version is accepted 
	by public opinion because it is based on what is heralded as a "reliable 
	source", when in fact what is presented in the pages of major newspapers and 
	on network TV is a carefully crafted and convoluted distortion of the truth.
	
	Limited forms of critical debate and "transparency" are tolerated while also 
	enforcing broad public acceptance of the basic premises of US foreign 
	policy, including its "Global War on Terrorism". 
	
	 
	
	With regard to a large 
	segment of the US antiwar movement, this strategy seems to have succeeded: 
	
		
		"We are against war but we support the 'war on terrorism'".
	
	
	What this means is that truth in media can only be reached by dismantling 
	the propaganda apparatus, - i.e. breaking the legitimacy of 
	
	the corporate 
	media which sustains the broad interests of the economic elites as well 
	America's global military design.
	
	In turn, we must ensure that the campaign against WikiLeaks in the U.S., 
	using the 
	
	1917 Espionage Act, will not be utilized as a means to 
	wage a 
	campaign to 
	control the Internet. 
	
	 
	
	In this regard, we should also stand firm in 
	preventing the prosecution of Julian Assange in the US.
 
	
	
	Note: Minor changes were 
	added to this article on December 14 and 26, 2010