…m Chapter Eleven Escape Artist Chapter Twelve Whistle Blower Chapter Thirteen Enter Assange Chapter Fourteen Fugitive PART THREE The Counterintelligence Conundrum Chapter Fifteen...
Results for “Assange”
Search across the indexed text of every released document.
Names that match “Assange”
67 documents found
…6 “I was being tailed”: Corbett, “How a Snowdenista Kept the NSA Leaker Hidden in a Moscow Airport.” CHAPTER 11 Enter Assange 98 “Thanks to Russia”: Julian Assange, “How ‘The Guardian’ Milked Edward Snowden’s Story,” Newsweek, April 20, 2015. 98 Julian Assange had made: David...
106 according to Assange, Snowden claimed that one reason he decided to take the secret NSA documents was the brutal treatment of Bradley Manning after he was arrested in 2010 by the US government. “Snowden told me they had abused Manning in a way that contributed to his decisio...
Enter Assange | 101 departure from the position Snowden had taken in his postings on the Ars Technica site in January 2009. He complained in a post there about the detrimental consequences to U.S. intelligence of leakers’ revealing “classified shit” to The New York Times, and he...
…, his twenty-eight-year-old deputy at WikiLeaks. A graduate of the elite Sevenoaks School in Kent, Harri- son served as Assange’s liaison with the outside world. Although she was Officially given the title “investigative editor” of WikiLeaks, she worked so closely with Assange du...
…r task was not only to arrange his escape route but also to create diversions to camouflage his real destination. Under Assange’s tutelage, she had made deceptive ploys an integral parts of her trade craft. “We were working very hard to lay as many false trails as possible,” she...
…as not only to arrange Snowden’s escape route but also to create diversions to camouflage his real des- tination. Under Assange’s tutelage, she had made deceptive ploys an integral part of her tradecraft. “We were working very hard to lay as many false trails as possible,” she la...
CHAPTER 11 Enter Assange Thanks to Russia (and thanks to WikiLeaks), Snowden remains free. —JULIAN ASSANGE, Newsweek, 2015 ULIAN ASSANGE had made a brilliant career of trafficking in state, military, and corporate secrets. Born on July 3, 1971, in Queensland, Australia, Assan...
“Julian Assange.” Also see Julian Assange
…ll Street Journal, June 3, 2015. Also, author’s interview with a Justice Department official who requested anonymity. “Assange said in an ...”-- Michael Hastings, “Julian Assange: The Rolling Stone Interview,” Rolling Stone, January 18, 2012. Also see Julian Assange introduction...
…n Sweden. It was the possible American prosecution that he wished to discuss with me. I first spent several hours with Assange and his legal team over the phone and by email. We worried about the security of our lawyer/client communications, which some might think ironic in ligh...
…ce she had heard from him. It was “I didn’t expect that WikiLeaks was going to send a ninja to get me out.” Meanwhile, Assange continued creating “distractions,” as he put it. On June 24", a booking was made for Snowden on the Aeroflot flight to Cuba, and this information was re...
…it released the classified documents it obtained from Manning in 2010. He was so well regarded among hacktiv- ists that Assange chose him as his keynote speaker replacement at the Hackers on Planet Earth (HOPE) convention in New York City. Assange told Rolling Stone, “Jake [Appel...
…nce position, having first published the WikiLeaks documents that had been illicitly leaked by Manning and published by Assange in 2010. Greenwald was an activist as well as a journalist. He joined the board of directors of the Freedom of the Press Foundation (eventu- ally Runa...
…en Speaks: A Sneak Peek an Exclusive Interview,” Zhe Nation, (website), October 10, 2014 4. “Discussed the danger with Assange ...”-- Assange interview, (London) Sunday Times. Giles Whittell, “Julian Assange unmasked.” Times Magazine, August 29, 2015. 5. “Everyone was screaming...