Wednesday 20 November 2024
Font Size
   
Friday, 22 October 2010 23:35

WikiLeaks' 400,000 Iraq War Docs Reveal Torture, Civilian Deaths

Rate this item
(0 votes)

The first news reports from WikiLeaks’ database of nearly 400,000 reports from the Iraq war began appearing online Friday afternoon, though the WikiLeaks website was still down.

The Qatar-based Al Jazeera network, the U.K. newspaper Guardian and The New York Times — three of the media outlets

who’ve had embargoed access to the logs for 10 weeks — found previously unreported civilian death counts in the files, rampant brutality by Iraqi police and a report of a separate shooting incident involving the same Apache helicopter unit that was involved in the now-famous 2007 “Collateral Murder” video that WikiLeaks published last April. In the second incident, the unit reportedly shot and killed insurgents who were trying to surrender.

Threat Level reported last month on WikiLeaks’ plans to publish the Iraq database this week, and the role the publication schedule played in creating internal strife at the organization.

Last week, the Pentagon said it had already assembled a 120-person task force to prepare for the Iraq database dump. WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has scheduled a press conference in London on Saturday at 10:00 a.m. local time (5:00 a.m. EDT) to discuss the release.

See Also:

Authors: Kevin Poulsen and Kim Zetter

to know more click here

French (Fr)English (United Kingdom)

Parmi nos clients

mobileporn