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WikiLeaks - The Secret Life of a Superpower Part 1. BBC Documentary

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    It was the scoop of the century.
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    WikiLeaks lifts the curtain on the secret communications between Washington
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    and the diplomats that we have stationed all over the globe.
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    I'm not aware of any release of information in human history comparable to the amount that was released via WikiLeaks.
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    These were cables that show the super powers' secret thoughts.
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    It was hard for me to look Secretary Clinton in the eye when she was like, "How did this happen?"
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    A quarter of a million US diplomatic messages apparently stolen by one of their own soldiers,
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    turned into a global sensation by a whistle-blowing website and its controversial founder, Julian Assange.
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    I like crushing bastards.
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    I think every diplomat around the world would have one overriding thought, "Thank God! It wasn't me," and "Thank God! It's not us."
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    In the first in-depth television analysis of the secret cables,
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    we lift the lid on how the world's greatest super power does business and how it gets what it wants.
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    We reveal a super power on a mission to change the world.
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    But a super power that sometimes fails to live up to its own ideals.
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    It's a complete outrage --
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    Diplomats stepping in to attempt to obstruct the course of the criminal investigation.
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    Over a year has passed since the leaking of the cables.
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    [Protests]
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    Now we assess what the impact of the leak has been in the US and beyond.
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    And we ask, can American Diplomacy ever be the same again?
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    They don't trust you anymore.
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    Many of them don't, and it will take a long time, I think, to recover that trust.
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    [WIKILEAKS: The Secret Life of A Superpower]
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    It's late November 2010.
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    Two journalists arrive at the US State Department in Washington DC --
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    The enormous ministry that controls America's relationship with the rest of the world.
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    They're not here for a friendly chat.
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    They're about to blow the lid on America's diplomatic secrets.
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    They were maybe a dozen senior officials and, behind them,
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    you know, at least a dozen more minions taking notes on laptops and so on.
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    They represented not just the State Department
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    but all of the intelligence agencies and the defense department.
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    They did not look happy.
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    The US State Department was facing a crisis unlike any other.
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    A quarter of a million internal messages or cables between Washington and US embassies all over the world
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    had found their way into the hands of the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks
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    and, from there, to five major newspapers.
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    Their message at the opening of the meeting, in uncertain terms, was "You've been given stolen material -- classified material.
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    There would be grave consequences if you publish any of it."
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    At that meeting, one of the people leading the state department's response to the crisis was P.J. Crowley.
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    These stories resulted from a crime.
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    For us, this was still classified material.
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    It was our responsibility to, you know, continue to protect them.
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    The State Department was right to be worried.
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    The cables reveal what American diplomats say when they think the world will never know --
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    Who they trust and who they mock,
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    what they want and how they get it.
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    "Some inside the US government dismiss [Berlusconi] as feckless, vain, and ineffective as a modern European leader."
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    "Merkel is risk averse and rarely creative."
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    "Gaddafi relies heavily on his long-time Ukranian nurse, who has been described as a 'voluptuous blonde."
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    Detailed records from thousands of secret meetings and conversations involving US diplomats
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    were about to become a media sensation.
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    "Bank of England Governor Mervyn King expressed great concern about Conservative leaders' lack of experience."
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    "It was related that King Abdullah remains a heavy smoker, regularly receives hormone injections, and 'uses Viagra excessively."
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    Here were records of American diplomats' secret plans and strategies, their uncertainties and fears.
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    "We should aim at influencing the narrow group of individuals that surround him."
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    Saudi energy facilities remain highly vulnerable to external attack.
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    [The Secretary of Defense] pointedly warned that urgent action is required. Without progress in the next few months, we risk nuclear proliferation in the Middle East.
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    All of this classified information was now in the hands of journalists.
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    In Washington, there was panic.
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    When the newspapers gave us access so that we could begin to get a sense of it,
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    I think there was just a growing sense of horror.
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    Can you remember Secretary Clinton's reaction?
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    She wasn't thrilled. [laughs]
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    I mean, Secretary Clinton knew probably better than anybody exactly just how delicate some of our relations were with different countries.
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    The leak threatened the basics of US diplomacy.
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    When you're confronted with 250,000 cables, in a way, it's overwhelming.
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    You know, it involves everything.
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    But there was little they could do.
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    The five newspapers had already agreed on a publication date.
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    Nothing was going to stop them.
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    All the US government could do now was try to get ready.
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    They knew that within a matter of weeks, the world would know their secrets, and the only question was how bad it would be.
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    We knew that it was going to potentially do an enormous amount of damage to some of our key relationships.
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    What was the atmosphere like in the State Department that these cables would be there for all to see?
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    Battening down the hatches.
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    On the 28th of November of 2010, it began.
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    Huge trove of documents released just hours ago by the whistle-blowing website Wikileaks.
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    The whistle-blowing website released another pile of government documents Sunday, including...
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    Whoever leaked all those State Department documents to the Wikileaks website is a traitor.
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    Within 24 hours, the cables had become a global sensation.
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    It's hard to think of a worse day for US diplomacy.
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    America's private opinions and conversations splashed across every front page in the world.
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    [various news reports]
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    So what's in there? Everything from global fears about Iran's nuclear programme to news that China may have sabotaged Google...
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    Controversial and often embarrassing revelations include an American diplomat describing Prince Andrew as "rude and cocky."
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    It was like that moment when an email gets sent to the wrong person, only went to the whole world.
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    As the leaks poured out, foreign politicians looked on with horror.
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    I think every diplomat around the world will have had one overriding thought: "Thank God it wasn't me," and "Thank God it wasn't us."
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    There is nothing brave about sabotaging the peaceful relations between nations on which our common security depends.
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    In the weeks after the leak, the US Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton, traveled the globe saying sorry.
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    Clinton even joked about getting special "apology tour" jackets made.
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    But in some parts of the world, the fallout from the leak would be unstoppable.
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    We had to pull our ambassador out of Libya, for example, because thugs were making threatening gestures to him.
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    We had an ambassador in Mexico, the Mexican government had just made clear, "we can no longer do business with this American ambassador,"
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    and he's now being replaced.
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    In Washington, tough questions were being asked.
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    President Obama's a pretty calm guy, even in tough times and stressful times.
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    But he was clearly incredibly angry along with the rest of us,
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    and the question, obviously, to me, and to others, was, "How in the world could this happen?"
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    The suspect had been identified.
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    Online chat logs had given him away.
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    The suspected source was not a foreign government or a spy at the heart of the US machine.
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    It was an American soldier sitting in a remote base in the deserts of Iraq.
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    Bradley Manning was a lowly PFC, a Private First Class, but he had access to a world of secrets.
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    We live in a world now when, you know, a 20-something PFC in the American army can cause diplomatic damage of biblical proportions.
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    An enormous flaw in US military security that left American diplomats and the US State Department compromised.
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    The State Department security was actually tighter than military security in this instance,
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    so there was anger, disappointment, a feeling that this simply should not have happened.
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    Is it embarrassing personally that it came out of your department?
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    Well, of course, I mean, it was hard for me to look Secretary Clinton in the eye when she'd say, "How did this happen?"
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    Because it did come out of the Department of Defense, it came out of a military installation.
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    As the cables made headlines around the world, some in America were demanding a tough response.
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    For them, the leak was the ultimate crime, and Bradley Manning a traitor.
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    What do you think of Bradley Manning?
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    I think he committed treason, I think he should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
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    What does that mean?
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    Well, treason is the only crime defined by our Constitution. It says "treason shall consist only of levying war against [the United States],
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    or adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort."
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    He gave our enemies a lot of aid and comfort.
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    So what should happen to him?
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    Well, he should be prosecuted, and if he's found guilty, he should be punished to the fullest extent possible.
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    And what is that?
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    Death.
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    You think he should be killed?
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    Yes.
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    The leak had rocked America and created a global sensation.
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    The superpower had shown it wasn't in control of its secrets.
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    It's now over a year since the first cables were released.
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    So what has been the real impact of the leaking of these documents?
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    And what have the cables really told us about how America does business in the world?
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    The fallout from the secret cables was more than just damaged trust or lurid headlines.
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    We found places where some believe that the cable release itself changed countries.
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    In mid-October 2010, two Tunisian political activists, Sami Ben Gharbia and Malek Khadraoui, got hold of some of the secret US cables.
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    At the time, Tunisia was ruled by a dictator, President Ben Ali.
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    Someone got the cable and they gave me a bunch of Arab leaks, around 300 cables.
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    Sami Ben Gharbia called and he told me that I had the bomb. So I opened the file and I start tweeting.
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    Inside the cables were damning reports written by the American ambassador about the dictator Ben Ali.
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    They showed the extent of his regime's corruption and excess.
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    Corruption in Tunisia is getting worse, whether it's cash, services, land, property, or, yes, even your yacht.
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    President Ben Ali's family is rumored to covet it and reportedly gets what it wants.
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    This is Ben Ali's daughter, Nesrine, and her billionaire husband, Mohamed Sakhr El Materi.
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    And this was one of their houses, a luxury villa on the Tunisian coast.
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    This villa's obviously been smashed up by looters.
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    This place inspired one of the most infamous cables to come out of Tunisia.
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    The American ambassador was invited here for dinner, and what he found - the wealth, opulence astounding.
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    Ancient artifacts everywhere. Roman columns, frescoes, and even a lion's head from which water pours into the pool.
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    The opulence with which El Materi and Nesrine live make clear why they and other members of Ben Ali's family are disliked and even hated by some Tunisians.
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    The excesses of the Ben Ali family are growing.
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    This cage is very, very famous in Tunisia, and
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    it's all because of the cables.
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    This is where Ben Ali's son-in-law kept his pet tiger,
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    and from the cables, we're told that at a time when there were people here in Tunisia who couldn't afford to eat,
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    this animal was fed four chickens a day.
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    At the time of the cable release, Tunisia was already suffering economic unrest.
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    Food prices were rising, youth unemployment was at crisis point.
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    The cables showed the contrast between the lives of ordinary people and their rulers.
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    For activists like Malek and Sami, the cable leak was an extraordinary opportunity.
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    The Wikileaks cable was, for us, like a new tool or a new weapon to make this contest come down from the internet to the street.
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    They published the Tunisian cables on the same day as the Wikileaks splash.
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    It was a very huge reaction. First of all,
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    on the social networks, Twitter, Facebook, and, you know, our community,
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    it was like a bomb.
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    Now, the secret American reports of the Ben Alis' excess were out there for ordinary Tunisians to read.
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    It wasn't that Tunisia didn't know about the corruption.
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    Most people here were well aware of how the elite lived.
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    It was now that they could see that the Americans knew.
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    Ben Ali was a president who made an awful lot of his relationship with the United States.
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    But the cables show that the Americans knew him for what he was.
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    They were critical, and they were disparaging.
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    When the people were in the street,
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    they had in their mind
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    that this regime is really corrupt, that this regime is not really supported by foreign forces,
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    so that maybe people were saying, okay, maybe he's not too strong,
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    maybe he's not too invincible.
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    Then senior ministers in Ben Ali's regime saw the cables were having an impact.
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    When the people of Tunisia saw US criticism of the president,
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    of the surrounding circle, et cetera,
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    of course maybe they were not expecting this from the Americans.
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    So what difference did that make?
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    It did encourage people to speak in a more open and louder way.
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    And this is, in my opinion,
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    there is no doubt.
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    The regime tried to block the websites carrying the cables.
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    They failed.
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    The secret documents helped fuel a mood of change in Tunisia.
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    We published them on November 28th, and the Revolution started on December 17th.
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    It was two weeks. Two weeks.
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    [rioting and protesting]
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    The Revolution began when a young Tunisian, Mohamed Bouazizi,
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    set himself on fire in protest at his mistreatment by the regime.
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    His death provoked outrage and brought crowds to the streets.
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    As they vented their anger, the cables inspired many of their chants.
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    [shouting, gunshots]
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    You see, during the Revolution, some slogans talk about the content of these cables,
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    making reference to the very rich life that those people are living, and
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    the role of the state, a lot of people were referring to these stories.
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    Those protests would bring down a dictatorship that had lasted 23 years.
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    Ben Ali fled the country.
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    The Tunisian Revolution spread and prompted a wave of uprisings that became known as the Arab Spring.
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    The cable leak had played a part in history.
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    But what about America itself?
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    What do the cables reveal about the superpower?
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    We've spent months analyzing these documents.
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    They show how America's diplomats try to get what they want,
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    how they gather gossip and how they use it.
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    How they deal with their enemies, what they say about their friends,
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    when they think no one's listening.
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    So, what does America say about its closest friend of all - us?
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    Two countries who fought alongside each other in Iraq and Afghanistan,
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    but the cables reveal harsh US criticism of the British military.
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    A secret document from December 2008 offered a bleak assessment of British capabilities.
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    The British are not up to the task of securing Helmand.
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    It forced Hillary Clinton to offer yet another apology.
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    I personally want to convey to the government,
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    and to the people of the United Kingdom,
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    both our deep respect and admiration, or
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    the extraordinary efforts, and I regret
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    if anything that was said by anyone suggests to the contrary.
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    But the secret documents show the Americans were hearing concerns about our political leaders.
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    In February 2010, the governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King,
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    and the US ambassador in London discussed the then-Conservative opposition.
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    This is the cable that followed:
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    King expressed great concern about Conservative leaders' lack of experience.
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    Cameron and Osborne have only a few advisors,
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    and seemed resistant to reaching out beyond their small inner circle.
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    It is the duty of a diplomat to report those conversations,
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    so people can take that into account,
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    so they know what's going on.
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    And gossip is not gossip if it's conversations that are had.
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    "Gossip" is speculation. There is no speculation.
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    But some cables are not so easy to explain away.
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    In 2009, Ivan Lewis was a foreign office minister in Tony Blair's government.
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    He got to know the Americans during this time,
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    and they tried to get to know him.
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    No detail or rumor was too [].
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    Lewis reportedly remains a bit of a hound dog where women are concerned.
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    Contacts who know him well report he has manic-depressive tendencies.
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    "He's very up one minute, very down the next.
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    And at least one Foreign and Commonwealth Office colleague has described Lewis as a bully."
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    US diplomats may claim to be simply reporting what they hear,
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    but it seems from the cables that no detail is too trivial.
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    Biographic data is something that is valuable.
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    Building and understanding of the personalities, proclivities,
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    what might be distracting to individuals,
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    what might explain the behavior of third parties toward that individual.
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    Finding out that somebody has a reputation, a bad reputation,
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    with women, once might have been an advantage,
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    but these days, generally isn't.
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    So why, then, did Hillary Clinton send this to London one month after the cable about Lewis was written?
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    "Washington analysts appreciate the excellent background and biographic reporting on Ivan Lewis.
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    [Cable] regarding Lewis's bullying, possible depression, and scandals,
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    as well as comments on the state of his marriage
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    are particularly insightful and timely."
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    We contacted Mr. Lewis, but he didn't want to comment.
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    As for America's diplomats, well, the cable speaks for itself.
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    Dirt and gossip even on America's closest friends goes down very well in Washington.
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    Gossip can reveal information about people
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    that shows their strengths and weaknesses,
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    just like politicians use it, it doesn't mean that you believe everything,
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    but information is information.
Title:
WikiLeaks - The Secret Life of a Superpower Part 1. BBC Documentary
Description:

BBC Documentary about WikiLeaks

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Video Language:
English, British
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
59:29

English subtitles

Incomplete

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