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Secret Power: WikiLeaks and Its Enemies [Minkštas viršelis]

4.55/5 (354 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 368 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 216x140x26 mm, weight: 390 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Nov-2022
  • Leidėjas: Pluto Press
  • ISBN-10: 0745347614
  • ISBN-13: 9780745347615
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 368 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 216x140x26 mm, weight: 390 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Nov-2022
  • Leidėjas: Pluto Press
  • ISBN-10: 0745347614
  • ISBN-13: 9780745347615
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

An uncovering of the terrifying depths of authoritarian power that hide behind the infamous story of WikiLeaks.

*Winner of the European Award for Investigative And Judicial Journalism and Premio Alessandro Leogrande Award 2022*

'I want to live in a society where secret power is accountable to the law and to public opinion for its atrocities, where it is the war criminals who go to jail, not those who have the conscience and courage to expose them.'

It is 2008, and Stefania Maurizi, an investigative journalist with a growing interest in cryptography, starts looking into the little-known organization WikiLeaks. Through hushed meetings, encrypted files, and explosive documents, what she discovers sets her on a life-long journey that takes her deep into the realm of secret power.

Working closely with WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange and his organization for her newspaper, Maurizi has spent over a decade investigating state criminality protected by thick layers of secrecy, while also embarking on a solitary trench warfare to unearth the facts underpinning the cruel persecution of Assange and WikiLeaks.

With complex and disturbing insights, Maurizi's tireless journalism exposes atrocities, the shameful treatment of Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden, on up to the present persecution of WikiLeaks: a terrifying web of impunity and cover-ups.

At the heart of the book is the brutality of secret power and the unbearable price paid by Julian Assange, WikiLeaks, and truthtellers.



An uncovering of the terrifying depths of authoritarian power that hide behind the infamous story of WikiLeaks

Recenzijos

'The vindictive hounding of Julian Assange by the US government deserves as wide an audience as possible. There is no journalist better placed to tell the story than Stefania Maurizi. This Italian journalist has been following the story of Assange and WikiLeaks closely for more than a decade and personally knows most of those involved. But what stands out is her sheer perseverance.  Many journalists would have given up after her multiple requests under the Freedom of Information Act were largely rebuffed by governments in the UK, US, Sweden and Australia. But she proved dogged, engaging in what she describes as trench warfare', taking them to court, the legal costs often paid for by her personally. Through this persistence, she uncovered lots of new information.





As well as being the most detailed account of the persecution of Julian Assange, Maurizi weaves in the stories of whistle-blowers such as Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden, making it one of the most comprehensive accounts yet of the battle between the national security apparatus and advocates of privacy and press freedom. It should be a must-read for all journalists. If Assange can be persecuted on the flimsy grounds exposed by Maurizi, then all journalists anywhere in the world who challenge the US are at risk.' -- Ewen MacAskill, Pulitzer Prize winner for Public Service 2014 'A rigorous, compelling and highly readable reconstruction of the WikiLeaks case. I highly recommend this work. No one conveys better the urgency of averting the extradition and prosecution of Assange' -- Daniel Ellsberg, US whistleblower who leaked the Pentagon Papers 'Maurizi's relentless, rigorous and courageous work has produced compelling evidence for the flagrant and deliberate illegality of Julian Assange's persecution. She has decisively contributed to my official investigation into the case as the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture' -- Professor Nils Melzer, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture (2016-2022) 'Stefania Maurizi's book on the persecution of Julian Assange is the definitive text on this tragedy. To read it is to resist, it is a must read. Free Assange' -- Roger Waters, co-founder of Pink Floyd 'Stefania Maurizi's revelation of the role of the UK Crown Prosecution Service, then run by Keir Starmer, in the persecution of Julian Assange was a journalistic landmark. Her book is a lesson to all who expose the malign secrets of state power' -- John Pilger 'Heroic freedom-fighter or maverick controversialist - Assange is a polarising character. But we can all agree that the classified documents he published revealed much of the heinous barbarity of the post 9/11 US-led wars. This book is a passionate plea in Julian's defence. To extradite would send the message that no journalist or publisher is safe anywhere in the world' -- Kathy Lette, best-selling author and TV presenter 'Everything you think you know about this story is not what you think. Maurizi brilliantly tells the real story of what happened with WikiLeaks and the powers that went out to destroy it' -- John Goetz, Editor of Investigations at German State Broadcaster 'NDR' 'The best possible tribute to Julian Assange's sacrifice on behalf of Western citizens whose governments have been committing, in their name, crimes against humanity. Stefania Maurizi has sacrificed much to write this book, making it a book to read, behold and promote to anyone who cares about the truth' -- Yanis Varoufakis, Professor of Economics at the University of Athens 'An exceptional book by an exceptional journalist. Written like a political thriller, 'Secret Power' is not only one of the best accounts of the WikiLeaks revolution and the man behind it. It's also a deeply disturbing investigation into the military-intelligence complex and secret power determined to dismantle the last strongholds of democracy, namely freedom of the press' -- Srecko Horvat, philosopher and author of 'Poetry from the Future' 'The story of the aftermath of the biggest story in journalism in generations brilliantly laid out by Maurizi. A must read for everyone interested in finding out how democratic and free, the 'free and democratic west' indeed is.' -- Helgi Seljan, investigative journalist at 'Stundin' 'A gripping first-hand account of the Assange affair' -- Gavin Jones, senior Reuters correspondent in Rome Superb -- Thomas A. Drake, whistleblower and former senior executive of the National Security Agency 'MasterfulMaurizi has very likely produced the definitive version of the WikiLeaks story, and its a page-turner to boot' -- Chip Gibbons, Jacobin

Foreword xi
Ken Loach
Introduction: The Man Who Stood Up to Secret Power 1(4)
1 The WikiLeaks Revolution
5(20)
My Source at Risk
5(4)
Saying No to the Pentagon
9(4)
Publishing What No One Dared to Publish
13(3)
A Phone Call in the Night
16(2)
Like a Band of Rebels
18(2)
Destroy WikiLeaks
20(5)
2 The Exceptional Courage of Chelsea Manning
25(15)
Collateral Murder
25(4)
A Lesson
29(3)
She Could Have Looked the Other Way
32(4)
"I Want People to See the Truth"
36(4)
3 Afghanistan: The Faraway War
40(25)
Forever War
40(5)
An Extraordinary Window on the War
45(5)
The Pentagon's Poison
50(3)
The Fog of War
53(1)
Meeting Confirmed
54(2)
Alexanderplatz
56(4)
"Our Boys"
60(5)
4 The Cypherpunk
65(9)
A Highly Intelligent Individual
65(4)
Visionaries and Libertarians
69(5)
5 A Database from Hell: The Iraq War Logs
74(10)
The Word "Democracy" Only Eight Times
74(6)
Like an Acid that Corrodes
80(4)
6 Cablegate: Rattling Power at the Highest Levels
84(29)
Crimes, Scandals and Political Pressure
84(6)
Surrounded
90(3)
A Cottage in the English Countryside
93(4)
A Democracy on a Short Leash
97(9)
Like in Chile under Pinochet
106(7)
7 Guantanamo: The Black Hole of Civilization
113(15)
The Worst of the Worst?
113(7)
Guantanamo's Barbarity Persists and Risks Setting a Precedent
120(8)
8 "The Huffington Post Gang Is Driving Me Nuts"
128(14)
Ellingham Hall
128(2)
Whose Fault Was It?
130(7)
Isolated
137(2)
Divide, Discredit, Sabotage
139(3)
9 From Sweden to Ecuador
142(15)
"He Needs His Head Dunked in a Full Toilet Bowl at Gitmo"
142(2)
An Investigation Opened, Closed and Reopened
144(6)
When Ecuador Said: "Colonial Times Are Over"
150(4)
Confined to 20 Square Meters
154(3)
10 No Place for Protection
157(20)
NSA: The "No Such Agency"
157(2)
The Exceptional Courage of Edward Snowden
159(4)
A Brutal Law from World War I: The Espionage Act
163(1)
The Cruel and Inhumane Treatment of Chelsea Manning
164(2)
Exile
166(5)
In Prison, in Exile or Confined
171(4)
The "Blood on Their Hands" that Never Was
175(2)
11 My Trench Warfare to Unearth the Truth
177(23)
When Google Handed Over WikiLeaks' Data
177(2)
A Suspicious Impasse in Sweden
179(5)
To Look Out the Window
184(1)
Not Just Another Extradition Request
185(4)
How Keir Starmer's Crown Prosecution Service Helped Create the Quagmire
189(7)
When Marianne Ny Finally Changed Her Mind
196(4)
12 Arbitrarily Detained
200(10)
One International Law for Us and One for Them: How Sweden and the UK Ignored the United Nations Working Group
200(5)
Justice for No One
205(5)
13 A Russian Connection?
210(13)
Useful Idiots
210(4)
The Information Trumps All
214(9)
13 The Fury of the CIA
223(12)
A Robbery in Rome
223(2)
The Invisible Arsenal: Vault 7
225(6)
A Spine-chilling Speech
231(4)
15 Under Siege
235(17)
From Protection under Correa to Oppression under Moreno
235(2)
Why Did the UK Crown Prosecution Service Destroy Key Documents?
237(2)
The Lives of Others
239(6)
A Love Born in Hell
245(2)
The American Friends
247(5)
16 The Final Attempts
252(14)
The Diplomatic Route
252(3)
The Legal Route
255(3)
The Poison
258(4)
The Last Meeting
262(4)
17 In the Would-be Guantanamo
266(10)
A Brutal Arrest
266(2)
The State within the State
268(3)
Fifty Weeks
271(2)
The Law as a Sword
273(3)
18 175 Years for the Crime of Journalism
276(19)
The First Time in United States History
276(2)
The Full Force of the State
278(3)
The Espionage Act for Whistleblowers: Prison, Cruelty, Bankruptcy
281(4)
The Espionage Act for Generals and Spymasters: Impunity
285(2)
Something is Rotten in the State of Sweden
287(4)
A Special Rapporteur
291(4)
19 Only Kafka
295(20)
The Trial
295(6)
He Remained in Belmarsh
301(2)
Changing the Game
303(4)
The Witnesses
307(8)
20 A Monstrous Injustice
315(12)
The Cruelty of American and British Justice
315(4)
Killing Julian
319(3)
Piercing the Wall of Darkness
322(5)
21 Secret Power
327(7)
Acknowledgments 334(4)
Index 338
Stefania Maurizi is an Italian investigative journalist working for the daily Il Fatto Quotidiano, having previously reported for La Repubblica and l'Espresso. She began working with Julian Assange and WikiLeaks in 2009 for her newspaper. Among international journalists, she is the only one who has worked on the entirety of the WikiLeaks secret documents and the only one who has conducted a multi-jurisdictional litigation to defend the right of the press to access the full documentation on the WikiLeaks case.

Ken Loach was born in 1936 in Nuneaton. After a brief spell in the theatre, Loach was recruited by the BBC in 1963 as a television director. This launched a long career directing films for television and the cinema, from Cathy Come Home and Kes in the sixties to Land And Freedom, Sweet Sixteen, The Wind That Shakes The Barley (Palme dOr, Cannes Film Festival 2006), Looking for Eric, The Angels Share and I, Daniel Blake (Palme dOr, Cannes Film Festival 2016).