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Hillary called India ‘self-appointed frontrunner for UNSC’, ordered snooping

Paan Singh

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Washington: The explosive WikiLeaks hit hard the Indo-US ties as one of the disclosures revealed that the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called India a ‘self appointed’ UNSC frontrunner and ordered spying of the country’s bid to become a permanent member of the body.

In a cable dealing with UNSC expansion, the US State Department reportedly asked its diplomats to collect details about the bids of “self-appointed frontrunners” for the permanent seat of UNSC. The cables have not yet been officially released and pre-date President Barack Obama’s announcement of US support to India’s UNSC bid.

Wikileaks has in its possession more than 3000 cables coming out of the US Embassy in New Delhi. The Radia tapes could pale before these radioactive intelligence leaks.


Hillary Clinton sent a cable to American embassies and missions around the world in 2009, ostensibly directing the diplomats to be part of the intelligence, according to classified documents made public by the whistle-blower website WikiLeaks.

The 8,358-word National Humint Collection Directive (Humint being Human Intelligence) "reflects the results of a recent Washington review of reporting and collection needs focussed on the United Nations," the documents say.

The information Clinton directed the diplomats to ascertain ranged from basic biographical data such as diplomats' names and addresses to their frequent flier and credit card numbers, to even "biometric information on ranking North Korean diplomats." Typical biometric information includes fingerprints, signatures and iris recognition.

The cable, simply signed 'CLINTON', is classified S/NF - or 'Secret/No Foreign' - and was sent to 33 US embassies and the UN mission offices in New York, Vienna and Rome.


It asked officers overseas to gather information about "office and organisational titles; names, position titles and other information on business cards; numbers of telephones, cellphones, pagers and faxes," as well as "internet and intranet 'handles', internet e-mail addresses, web site identification-URLs; credit card account numbers; frequent-flier account numbers; work schedules, and other relevant biographical information," revealed the leaked documents.

Meanwhile, in a Twitter posting, State Department spokesman PJ Crowley denied that American diplomats were doing double duty as intelligence gatherers.

"Contrary to some WikiLeaks' reporting, our diplomats are diplomats. They are not intelligence assets," the tweet attributed to him said.

He further downplayed the cable's significance by writing in a separate tweet: "Diplomats collect information that shapes our policies and actions. Diplomats for all nations do the same thing."

The cable sent by Clinton on July 31, 2009 gave a laundry list of instructions for how State Department employees can fulfil the demands of a "National Humint Collection Directive" in specific countries.

The White House said cables are candid reports by diplomats and can give an incomplete picture of the relationship between the United States and foreign governments.

The cables are not expressions of policy, nor do they always shape final policy decisions, White House Press Secretary, Robert Gibbs, said.

Hillary directed US diplomats to spy: WikiLeaks

:undecided::undecided::undecided:
 
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Ordered snooping

For what ????

To see what kind of diplomatic maneuvering India is doing behind the doors for the UNSC seat. I doubt she found much though, India didn't really bring the issue into the spotlight until they got the ok from the US.
 
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:sniper:

WIKILEAKS ! MY GOD !

ab aaega mazza ! Lets see the reactions of the culprits !

:taz:
 
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HillaryClintonFunnyDemotivational_thumb.jpg


Seriously, why give this woman the time of day...
 
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To see what kind of diplomatic maneuvering India is doing behind the doors for the UNSC seat. I doubt she found much though, India didn't really bring the issue into the spotlight until they got the ok from the US.

Do you really thought that ??
France, Russia, UK already supported our bid for UNSC
 
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Quote:
Hillary called India ‘self-appointed frontrunner for UNSC’, ordered snooping


Coz we are the only declared nuclear power in the race..
 
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@paladin
u actually meant time of 'night'
didnt u?? :-))

well these exposes are giving out the truths
and how silly of crowly calling it ' as reported by wikileaks'
IT is actualy ' AS REPORTED BY US SECRET DOCS'
well when u have no righteousness or shame u can hide ur mothers name too
classic case!!!
 
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@paladin
u actually meant time of 'night'
didnt u?? :-))

well these exposes are giving out the truths
and how silly of crowly calling it ' as reported by wikileaks'
IT is actualy ' AS REPORTED BY US SECRET DOCS'
well when u have no righteousness or shame u can hide ur mothers name too
classic case!!!

??

No... I meant time of day... It's an idiom.
 
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well personally i think India is doing pretty good in wikileaks so far..Not from the US side, but then again US has really hit a new low with these new leaks..No one nation has been singled out, they pretty much think every nation in the world is a threat to them and that just goes to show the paranoia of superpower coming to its inevitable and gradual demise.

Other than that foreign leaders seemed to posses quite positive impressions about India..so cheers
 
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WikiLeaks first cache paints flattering picture of India

Read more: WikiLeaks first cache paints flattering picture of India - The Times of India WikiLeaks first cache paints flattering picture of India - The Times of India

WASHINGTON/NEW DELHI: The first lot of WikiLeaks documents paints a flattering picture of India as a reliable, trusted and respected power in a world that worries itself sick about neighbouring Pakistan.

There are only brief mentions of India in the 243 documents released by WikiLeaks at the time of writing, none of them originating from the US embassy in New Delhi or pertaining directly to India (WikiLeaks says it has more than 3,000 cables from the New Delhi US mission). But two cables from the Middle East show India in favourable light in the region.

In one, King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa inquires from US interlocutors about the extent of India's involvement in Afghanistan and notes that Bahrain sees India as very positive force in the region. "It's a new era," he says. "They can be of great help."

In another document, UAE's crown prince Mohammed Bin Zayed, referred to as MBZ in the cables, supports the US decision to sell F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan arguing that it would not tilt the balance of power, and even if it did, "India's strength as a stable democracy would ensure that it would not ever be in as 'risky' a situation as its neighbor."

Elsewhere, an Italian foreign policy expert clubs India with France and Britain among powers that could be trusted to have nuclear weapons.

Piero Fassino, head of the foreign policy department of the opposition Partito Democratico's (PD) tells his US interlocutors that the greatest risk with nuclear proliferation is that irresponsible governments like the one in Iran could gain access to nuclear arms, and adds that the "PD assessed that there was little to fear with nations such as India, Britain, and France having nuclear weapons."

In another cable, former Austrian Ambassador to Tehran Michael Postl tells his US interlocutors that that the US should not shy away from interviews with Iranian media outlets. In fact, the US diplomat who sent the cable notes, "a program built around broadcasting the differing opinions of the US, India ('because its opinion is well-respected given its influence as a leader in the non-aligned movement'), and Iran might be a useful way to get our messages across while counteracting perceptions of bias."

But the generous references to India may just be the tip of what could be a wicked iceberg. Among the 251,287 cables that are with WikiLeaks, 3,038 are from the US embassy in New Delhi. The very fact that top US officials frantically called New Delhi to warn Indian counterparts about the leaks and brief them about the contents suggests that fireworks are in store.
 
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