Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials -- November 30, 2010


Has WikiLeaks Finally Gone Too Far? -- Blake Hounshell, Foreign Policy

Roy Greenslade, a journalism professor and commentator for the Guardian, castigates British editors for their critical coverage of WikiLeaks, the self-proclaimed whistleblower site that is about to release some 250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables into the wild:

Aren't we in the job of ferreting out secrets so that our readers - the voters - can know what their elected governments are doing in their name? Isn't it therefore better that we can, at last, get at them?

Read more ....

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials

Where in the World Is Julian Assange? -- Deborah Hastings, Aol News
WikiLeaks: Do they have a right to privacy? -- Malcolm Rifkind, The Telegraph
Attack by WikiLeaks: Assange is an enemy of the U.S., but the U.S. keeps too many secrets. -- Wall Street Journal editorial
WikiLeaks and the Diplomats -- New York Times editoral
Digital security problem is bigger than Assange and PFC Manning -- Robert Haddick, Small Wars Journal

Beijing's Pyongyang fatigue -- Charles Homans, Foreign Policy
Analyst View N.Korea's diplomatic gesture and "rational policy" -- Reuters
S. Korea's Fine Line: Talk Tough, Keep Finger Off Trigger -- Time Magazine
Consequences on the Korean Peninsula -- Rep. Ed Royce, The Washington Times
Hitting the North -- Sung-Yoon Lee, L.A. Times

Taliban Imposter: The U.S. Doesn't Know Its Enemy -- Robert Baer, Time Magazine

Is the Mossad Targeting Iran's Nuclear Scientists? -- Time Magazine

Spooking the Terrorists—and Ourselves -- Christopher Dickey, Newsweek

A Little Perspective on Stuxnet -- J. E. Dyer, Commentary Magazine

Tough Times for a Superpower -- Eugene Robinson, Real Clear Politics

No comments:

Post a Comment