This is a list of notable content from the United States diplomatic cables leak that shows the United States' opinion of related affairs. Beginning on 28 November 2010, WikiLeaks had been publishing classified documents of detailed correspondence—diplomatic cables—between the United States Department of State and its diplomatic missions around the world. On 1 September 2011, it released all of the Cablegate documents in its possession without redaction.
Contents
- By subject
- United Nations
- European Union
- Council of Europe
- NATO
- Catholic Church
- By region
- Copenhagen Accord on climate change
- List of infrastructure critical to US national security
- BAE Systems
- Boeing
- Bouygues
- Chevron Corporation
- DynCorp
- Itera
- Lockheed Martin
- McDonalds
- MasterCard and Visa
- Monsanto
- Pfizer
- Petro Canada
- Royal Dutch Shell
- Diplomatic analysis of individual leaders
- References
By subject
The United States Department of State requires the reason for classification to be specified on all classified cables according to these classification categories:
1.4 a) military plans, weapons systems, or operations
1.4 b) foreign government information
1.4 c) intelligence activities, sources, or methods, or cryptology
1.4 d) foreign relations or foreign activities of the United States, including confidential sources
1.4 e) scientific, technological or economic matters relating to national security; which includes defense against transnational terrorism
1.4 f) United States government programs for safeguarding nuclear materials or facilities
1.4 g) vulnerabilities or capabilities of systems, installations, infrastructures, projects or plans, or protection services relating to the national security, which includes defense against transnational terrorism
1.4 h) weapons of mass destruction
Of the 3,420 cables published as of 3 February 2011, 2,647 are classified confidential or secret. Of these, the vast majority are labeled 1.4 (b) or 1.4 (d), or both, indicating that they contain information about foreign relations or governments.
107 of the cables are labeled 1.4 (c).
Thirty cables are labeled 1.4 (a), for information about military operations, plans, or weapons systems. These 26 cables are: 06LISBON1921, 08CURACAO82, 04BRASILIA592*, 10THEHAGUE7, 09REYKJAVIK225, 04RANGOON1100*, 09LIMA1669, 04BRASILIA1938*, 01VATICAN1261*, 09STATE81957, 09NAIROBI2497, 10ABUJA215, 08STATE65820, 09RIYADH1667, 09RIYADH1687, 09BAKU744, 08RABAT727, 08LONDON1115, 09PESHAWAR2, 09ISLAMABAD2449, 04ANKARA7211*, 05ABUDHABI2178*, 08RPODUBAI49, 09STATE96550, 10ANKARA126, 10MUSCAT71, 10ABUDHABI69, 06REYKJAVIK107, 10STATE2634, and 09STATE97244. (The cables marked with an asterisk are not available in full.)
Thirty cables are classified 1.4 (e) for national security matters: 06KINSHASA1410, 08PARIS750, 08PARIS735, 08TRIPOLI230, 07TRIPOLI967, 08TRIPOLI374, 06DARESSALAAM1593, 07KINSHASA282, 07PARIS4723, 08MADRID707, 09UNVIEVIENNA192, 07ACCRA1437, 08FREETOWN406, 08MADRID418, 09SHANGHAI160, 10KUWAIT45, 09STATE15113, 09STOCKHOLM194, 10BEIJING231, 10BEIJING263, 05LONDON4981*, 09ASHGABAT248, 09BRUSSELS536, 09UNVIEVIENNA553, 08TRIPOLI540, 08TRIPOLI635, 10WINDHOEK7, 09BRUSSELS537, 10STATE2634, and 09SHANGHAI170.
Five cables have the designation 1.4 (f) for protection of nuclear materials or facilities: 07KINSHASA797, 08LISBON1808, 08KINSHASA189, 09MOSCOW2749, and 09ASHGABAT248.
Seven are designated 1.4 (g) for national security systems. These are 07BUJUMBURA479, 10WINDHOEK7, 07BUJUMBURA515, 09STATE15113, 09STOCKHOLM194, 10SANAA5, and 10CARACAS107.
The nine cables with the label 1.4 (h) for weapons of mass destruction are 07BUJUMBURA479, 08PARIS750, 08PARIS735, 07BUJUMBURA515, 08BERLIN210, 04MADRID4887*, 05MADRID1924*, 08UNVIEVIENNA215, and 09STATE20624.
United Nations
In July 2009, a confidential cable originating from the United States Department of State, and under United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's name, ordered US diplomats to spy on Ban Ki-moon, Secretary-General of the United Nations, and other top UN officials. The intelligence information the diplomats were ordered to gather included biometric information (which apparently included DNA, fingerprints, and iris scans), passwords, and personal encryption keys used in private and commercial networks for official communications. It also included Internet and intranet usernames, e-mail addresses, web site URLs useful for identification, credit card numbers, frequent flyer account numbers, and work schedules. The targeted human intelligence was requested in a process known as the National Humint Collection Directive, and was aimed at foreign diplomats of US allies as well.
Further leaked material revealed that the guidance in the cables was actually written by the National Clandestine Service of the Central Intelligence Agency before being sent out under Clinton's name, as the CIA cannot directly instruct State Department personnel.
The disclosed cables on the more aggressive intelligence gathering went back to 2008, when they went out under Condoleezza Rice's name during her tenure as Secretary of State.
European Union
Herman Van Rompuy, President of the European Council, was quoted as saying to Howard Gutman, U.S. Ambassador to Belgium, that the "EU no longer believes in the success of the military mission in Afghanistan". He also added "Europe is doing it [War in Afghanistan] and will go along out of deference to the United States, but not out of deference to Afghanistan".
In 2007, with reference to negotiations with the EU over the adoption of genetically modified crops, the U.S. Ambassador to France recommended that "we calibrate a target retaliation list that causes some pain across the EU".
Council of Europe
According to a cable from the US embassy in Strasbourg, European human rights standards are "an irritant", and their champion, the Council of Europe, "is an organisation with an inferiority complex and, simultaneously, an overambitious agenda".
NATO
NATO created plans to defend the Baltic states and Poland known as Operation Eagle Guardian. Nine British, German, U.S. and Polish divisions have been designated for combat operations in the event of a Russian attack. In 2011 NATO wants to conduct exercises for this new plan. The U.S. also offered to Poland to station special naval forces in Gdańsk and Gdynia as well as stationing F-16 fighter aircraft and C-130 Hercules transport aircraft in Poland.
Catholic Church
After the election of Pope Benedict XVI, US diplomats recommended that the US Department of State seek to 'help shape his approach as he begins to grapple with the world beyond the Vatican's walls'.
By region
Other information in the tranche of cables released by WikiLeaks on 28 November 2010 and subsequent days included the following:
Copenhagen Accord on climate change
Diplomatic cables show how the U.S. "used spying, threats and promises of aid" to gain support for the Copenhagen Accord, under which commitments are made to reduce emissions. The emergent U.S. emissions pledge was the lowest by any leading nation.
List of infrastructure critical to U.S. national security
Perhaps the most sensitive of all releases as of 6 December was a cable from the U.S. State Department sent in February 2009 referencing the Critical Foreign Dependencies Initiative and listing installations and infrastructure worldwide that it considered critical to protect U.S. interests from terrorists. Before releasing this list WikiLeaks had deliberately removed details of names and locations, but much was still revealed. Ostensibly the list does not include any military facilities. Instead it includes key facilities that if attacked could disrupt the global supply chain and global communications, as well as goods and services important to the U.S. and its economy.
In the cable the U.S. State Department requests American diplomats to identify installations overseas "whose loss could critically impact the public health, economic security, and/or national and homeland security of the United States." The order was under the direction of the U.S. Department for Homeland Security in co-ordination with the U.S. Department of State.
These are noted excerpts from the list:
The publishing of this particular cable which had been classified secret and not for review by non-U.S. personnel, was followed by strong criticism. U.S. State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley said the disclosure "gives a group like al-Qaeda a targeting list." Also British prime minister David Cameron stated that the list was damaging to the national security of both his country and the United States, "and elsewhere". WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson said with reference to the cable: "This further undermines claims made by the US Government that its embassy officials do not play an intelligence-gathering role." Part of the cable read: "Posts are not/not being asked to consult with host governments with respect to this request."
BAE Systems
In 2002, BAE Systems sold Tanzania an overpriced radar. Objections by the then British development secretary Clare Short were overruled by Tony Blair.
Boeing
A series of cables show how US diplomats and senior politicians intervene on behalf of Boeing to help boost the company's sales.
Bouygues
Chevron Corporation
DynCorp
Itera
Lockheed Martin
McDonald's
MasterCard and Visa
Monsanto
Pfizer
Petro-Canada
Royal Dutch Shell
Diplomatic analysis of individual leaders
The leaked diplomatic cables provided criticism of varying degree by U.S. embassy staff of their host governments: These details were quite embarrassing to both leaders as well as the U.S. officials who worked on these cables.