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2010-12-01 10:01:56
On Sunday, five international news outlets published a selection of more than
250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables, provided by the website WikiLeaks. The
disclosure of the cables, most of them from the past three years, offers a rare
unfiltered view of the secretive world of high-level diplomacy. As such, it
could complicate relations with a host of friendly and unfriendly nations.
But what did we actually learn? Here are 10 key revelations from the cables:
1. Many Middle Eastern nations are far more concerned about Iran's nuclear
program than they've publicly admitted. According to one cable, King Abdullah
of Saudi Arabia has repeatedly asked the U.S. to "cut off the head of the
snake" -- meaning, it appears, to bomb Iran's nuclear program. Leaders of
Qatar, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and other Middle Eastern nations
expressed similar views.
2. The U.S. ambassador to Seoul told Washington in February that the right
business deals might get China to acquiesce to a reunified Korea, if the newly
unified power were allied with the United States. American and South Korean
officials have discussed such a reunification in the event that North Korea
collapses under the weight of its economic and political problems.
[Related: WikiLeaks docs reveal U.S. diplomats insulting world leaders]
3. The Obama administration offered sweeteners to try to get other countries to
take Guantanamo detainees, as part of its (as yet unsuccessful) effort to close
the prison. Slovenia, for instance, was offered a meeting with President Obama,
while the island nation of Kiribati was offered incentives worth millions.
4. Afghan Vice President Ahmed Zia Massoud took $52 million in cash when he
visited the United Arab Emirates last year, according to one cable. The Afghan
government has been plagued by allegations of corruption. Massoud has denied
taking the money out of the country.
5. The United States has been working to remove highly enriched uranium from a
Pakistani nuclear reactor, out of concern that it could be used to build an
illicit nuclear device. The effort, which began in 2007, continues.
6. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton ordered diplomats to assemble
information on their foreign counterparts. Documents in the WikiLeaks cache
also indicate that Clinton may have asked diplomats to gather intelligence on
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's plans for Iran, and information on Sudan
(including Darfur), Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Iran and North Korea.
7. The State Department labeled Qatar the worst country in the region for
counterterrorism efforts. The country's security services were "hesitant to act
against known terrorists out of concern for appearing to be aligned with the
U.S. and provoking reprisals," according to one cable.
8. Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Italian Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi are tighter than was previously known. Putin has given the
high-living Berlusconi "lavish gifts" and lucrative energy contracts, and
Berlusconi "appears increasingly to be the mouthpiece of Putin" in Europe,
according to one cable.
[Related: The Guardian gave State Dept. cables to the NY Times]
9. Hezbollah continues to enjoy the weapons patronage of Syria. A week after
Syrian president Bashar Assad promised the United States he wouldn't send "new"
arms to the Lebanese militant group, the United States said it had information
that Syria was continuing to provide the group with increasingly sophisticated
weapons.
10. Some cables reveal decidedly less than diplomatic opinions of foreign
leaders. Putin is said to be an "alpha-dog" and Afghan President Hamid Karzai
to be "driven by paranoia." German Chancellor Angela Merkel "avoids risk and is
rarely creative." Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi travels with a "voluptuous
blonde" Ukrainian nurse.
The cables were obtained, via WikiLeaks, by the New York Times, the Guardian of
Britain, Der Spiegel of Germany, Le Monde of France and El Pais of Spain.