by Frances Martel | 12:45 pm, August 7th, 2010
For an organization that advertises itself as a defender and disciple of the truth, Wikileaks sure has a hard time keeping the truth about itself straight. Little more than an hour after AP published an interview with alleged Wikileaks spokesman “Daniel Schmitt,”
http://twitter.com/wikileaks">the organization’s Twitter feed, suspected to be run by editor-in-chief Julian Assange, condemned it as “untrue and misleading” and emphasized that it was “not endorsed.”
Schmitt, who posed for a picture despite giving a pseudonym, told the AP that the organization is hopeful Americans will become more politically active against the war in Afghanistan due to the documents they leaked. Despite many accusations that Wikileaks has put countless Afghan informants and American soldiers in danger needlessly, Schmitt told AP, “Knowledge about ongoing issues like the war in Afghanistan is the only way to help create something like safety. That said, he toed the same line as Assange and argued that Wikileaks editors “have tried our best and we are still working on minimizing the harm that has been caused.”
None of that deviates significantly from anything said on Assange’s big media tour these past two weeks. So what exactly is Wikileaks complaining about? Perhaps they are uncomfortable with the fact that Schmitt outed the size of the full-time Wikileaks team– Schmitt, Assange, and three more people. Or perhaps it is the fact that AP’s headline states dramatically “Wikileaks to Publish New Documents” which, though it seems to imply that there are new, threatening documents to American national security related to the Afghanistan leak, comes from the following quote from Schmitt: “I can assure you that we will keep publishing documents — that’s what we do.” In other words, that means the headline is about as shocking as “Glenn Beck to Film More Programs for Fox News” or “Ralph Nader to Run for President.” The new documents could be anything from significant national security leaks to candid photos of the scribbles on Sarah Palin’s hand.
More:
http://www.mediaite.com/online/wikileaks-condemns-interview-with-alleged-wikileaks-spokesman/