WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said Friday he fears the whistleblower who exposed a vast US surveillance program could face the same fate as the US soldier who leaked files to his website. In an interview with CBS This Morning from the Ecuadoran embassy in London where he has been holed up for nearly a year, Assange defended the public's right to know about the Internet data mining program revealed late Thursday.
But he fears the individual who leaked details of the program could face the same fate as WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning, who faces possible life imprisonment for "aiding the enemy" in a military trial begun this week. "Let's ask ourselves whether the whistleblower who has revealed those - and there's more to come - is going, in three years' time, to be in exactly the same position that Bradley Manning is in today," Assange said.
The US government has defended the monitoring program - in which it directly accessed the servers of Internet giants like Microsoft, Apple and Facebook - as essential to preventing terrorist attacks on US soil. It has said the program was approved by Congress and conducted with secret court orders, and that the leaked revelations put American security at risk. But Assange said the public had the right to know about the program.
"Of course, we need government to do all sorts of things. But when it's done properly, there is a law, people are aware of what the law is, there's a process for carrying out the law and there's a process for checking the law. "There's open justice where judges, in their decisions of trying people, themselves are tried before the public," Assange said. "It doesn't mean that every aspect, every detail must be public, but at least enough parameters to understand what is really going on."
The revelations about the Internet spying program, first reported by the Washington Post and Britain's Guardian newspaper, came one day after a Guardian report about the widespread mining of phone records by the same US spy agency. The Post said the leak came from a career US intelligence officer "with firsthand experience of these systems and horror at their capabilities." "They quite literally can watch your ideas form as you type," the officer was quoted as saying.
WikiLeaks rose to fame after Manning, a US Army intelligence analyst based in Iraq, leaked to the anti-secrecy group hundreds of thousands of classified war logs from Iraq and Afghanistan and secret cables from US embassies. Manning has said he leaked the documents to encourage public debate about the wars and US foreign policy, but the US government has portrayed him as a traitor who put lives at risk and endangered national security.
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