The worsening journalistic disgrace at Wired

by Glenn Greenwald
Dec. 27, 2010

This is a must read article.

For those who don't know, Bradley Manning being the source for all these Wikileaks videos and documents is highly questionable.

It's entirely possible he was not the source but merely a patsy grabbed by the feds to give the impression Wikileaks' sources can be compromised.

His capture came shortly after the Wikileaks leak showing the Pentagon declared war on Wikileaks and was determined to give the impression leaking to them was not safe. - Chris
For more than six months, Wired's Senior Editor Kevin Poulsen has possessed -- but refuses to publish -- the key evidence in one of the year's most significant political stories:  the arrest of U.S. Army PFC Bradley Manning for allegedly acting as WikiLeaks' source.  In late May, Adrian Lamo -- at the same time he was working with the FBI as a government informant against Manning -- gave Poulsen what he purported to be the full chat logs between Manning and Lamo in which the Army Private allegedly confessed to having been the source for the various cables, documents and video which WikiLeaks released throughout this year.  In interviews with me in June, both Poulsen and Lamo confirmed that Lamo placed no substantive restrictions on Poulsen with regard to the chat logs:  Wired was and remains free to publish the logs in their entirety.

Despite that, on June 10, Wired published what it said was only "about 25%" of those logs, excerpts which it hand-picked.   For the last six months, Poulsen has not only steadfastly refused to release any further excerpts, but worse, has refused to answer questions about what those logs do and do not contain.  This is easily one of the worst journalistic disgraces of the year:  it is just inconceivable that someone who claims to be a "journalist" -- or who wants to be regarded as one -- would actively conceal from the public, for months on end, the key evidence in a political story that has generated headlines around the world

In June, I examined the long, strange, and multi-layered relationship between Poulsen and Lamo, and in that piece raised the issue of Wired's severe journalistic malfeasance in withholding these chat logs.  But this matter needs to be re-visited now for three reasons...

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Image source: Wired/AP













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