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Copy-and-Paste Reveals Classified U.S. Documents

cyclop writes "In March, U.S. troops in Iraq shot to death Nicola Calipari, the Italian intelligence agent that rescued the kidnapped journalist Giuliana Sgrena. U.S. commission on the incident produced a report which public version was censored for more than one third. Now Italian press is reporting that all confidential information in the report is available to the public, just by copying "hidden" text from the PDF and pasting it in a word processor (Italian). The uncensored report can now be directly downloaded (evil .DOC format, sorry)"

18 of 1,325 comments (clear)

  1. Mirror, as HTML by lewww · · Score: 5, Informative

    Mirrored here in html format: http://213.160.111.174/unclassified.htm

  2. Re:Oh dear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The copy-paste method has already been employed and shown on /. a few times in the past.

  3. Pdftotext does it by orzetto · · Score: 5, Informative

    Download the pdf and run pdftotext on it, it works.

    Marx was right: Military intelligence is a contradiction in terms.

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  4. Who really made the scoop by dotmaudot · · Score: 5, Informative

    Needless to say, no Italian newspaper ever cares to cite that the news was pointed out by an Italian blogger, Gianluca Neri of Macchianera.

  5. How many times will US fall victim to this? by alangmead · · Score: 4, Informative

    There were at least two publicized incidents Memory Hole Un-Redacts Redacted DOJ Memo and Iranian Coup Plotters Exposed By PDF File were the PDF was discovered to be layered with the graphic blacking out the text over the original.

    You would think by now that the government would either distributed a tool for correctly redacting PDFs or prohibit them.

  6. Re:Further correction by mikael · · Score: 4, Informative

    You don't zoom thru an armed checkpoint in Iraq.

    According to the Italian version of the event, they weren't speeding through the checkpoint, nor were they given any warning that there was a checkpoint up ahead (no lights, signs, or soldiers waving them down).

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  7. "Bullet-riddled" car photos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here and here.

    Look at how "badly" her car was "shot up" and decide for yourself if this "journalist" is a lying sack of shit for saying that the car was shot at 300 or 400 times.

    Now, use the information you have just learned to judge her credibility as a whole.

  8. Re:No smoking gun? by KidHash · · Score: 5, Informative

    Should I expect less if I make jerky motions into my pockets when a police officer pulls me over for a routine traffic accident?

    I guess it depends where you live. In the UK, if I made jerky motions into my pocket when puled over for a routine traffic accident, I certainly wouldn't expect to get shot.

    And if I was, there'd be a public outcry. Don't assume we're all trigger happy...

  9. At the risk of sounding... by sagenumen · · Score: 3, Informative

    At the risk of sounding like a karma-whore to all those people that accuse people as such, I have made a PDF of the .DOC

    It can be found here: http://www.lehigh.edu/~mlt3/Unclassified.pdf

  10. Re:Er.. by cynicalmoose · · Score: 4, Informative

    Effectively not. You will notice that paragraphs in the document are preceded either by (U) or by (S//NF)

    (U) simply means Unclassified.
    (S//NF) means "Secret/No Foreign Nationals".

    Any US citizen has not violated fundamental clearance issues by reading it (however, OpSec provides that this information should only be available on a need to know basis). Non-US Citizens outside the US aren't covered by US law in the same way.
    The position of Non-US nationals in the US is probably different.
    I am neither a Lawyer nor a US Citizen and I possess no US Security Clearance.

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  11. Re:Congratulations, you are a great example by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Satellite photos with time differentials show that the car *must* have been going an average of 60+ mph to cover the distance it had covered between photos. Some of the papers were leaving that bit out of their stories (LA Times for example).

  12. It case anyones wondering... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Since the majority of you /.'ers didn't read the link the reason it's classified is because it points out the following things:

    a) It shows Enemy Tactics, Techniques and Procedures (TTP's)

    b) It shows Coalition TTP's responsive combat dialogue with Enemy TTP's

    c) It gives away the primary routes for incoming/outgoing US embassy personnel with technical, personnel and operational details.

    Being a soldier who just got back from Iraq I'm actually pretty pissed at this because of the fucking dangers behind it. But I'll leave it at that.

  13. Re:We'll find out by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 5, Informative
    Why is the government keeping that information secret

    A vdiff between the censored and unmasked versions suggests that much of what was redacted is operational details, such as:

    • An itemization of IEDs and VBIEDs deployment techniques which have been most effective,
    • An analysis of the tactical strengths and weaknesses of specific checkpoints along "Route Irish",
    • Combat readiness assesment of the units and soldiers involved,
    • A detailed description of how the checkpoint is laid out,
    • Exact grid locations of various assets.
    • Details of how checkpoint searches are set up and executed
    • Details of how checkpoints are expected to deal with approaching vehicles, including threat assesment methods.
    • A statistical analysis of "normal" traffic approaching the checkpoint.

    It names the soldiers involved and details the specific actions taken by those soldiers. It names the soldier who killed Calipari.

    It briefly describes U.S. Embassy procedures for transporting VIPs along Route Irish and in general.

    It details movement of U.S. and Italian Embassy personnel.

    It describes possible future procedures and configurations for checkpoints.

    In other words it has a lot of information of potential use to an insurgent mission planner and a lot that is nobody's business.

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  14. Re:Congratulations, you are a great example by Mac+Degger · · Score: 3, Informative

    You should read more about foreigners in Iraq. They /all/ go speeding around as fast as possible over the iraqi roads. It's SOP: to do anything else would be suicide. Read up on the security contractors, or how the journalists go around (when they do get out of their hotels)...hell, driving around at breakneck speeds is SOP for american soldiers, fer crying out loud!

    The real question is why did a tank-ish thing, which was situated btween two checkpoints and behind a curve without a LOS on the first checkpoint fire at a van which had already passed them (and, coincidentally, the first checkpoint)?

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  15. Re:Oh dear by Kymermosst · · Score: 5, Informative

    I was a 10th Mountain Division soldier from Feb. 1996 to Dec. 1998.

    I dunno about the impact. I expect the iraqi insurgents already have a much better idea of how our security operations work than they can gain through this document. After all they have the opportunity to actually observe this operations and how they react to their attacks.

    Observation is one thing, but one thing your eyes don't necessarily tell you is what the opponent thinks about itself and its own tactics. This report now gives out that information to the enemy, and includes information about combat readiness and the perceived effectiveness of the enemy's tactics.

    It also gives more extensive information on what the various SOPs (standard operating procedures) have to say about certain sitations than you can gain by observation.

    I expect the information was just concealed as a matter of course in case it might contain something of value to the enemy. Still though your overall point is valid. There is no reason the public really needs to know this stuff and it is better safe than sorry with information which might let them kill more soldiers.

    Precisely, and since this directly affects some of the units I'd worked with, I fully support the (time-limited*) "censorship" of this kind of information. The idiot that failed to do it effectivly needs some severe discipline.

    I've got friends and former coworkers in Iraq, and the release of this kind of information doesn't help them one bit.

    (* meaning that after the conflict is over, plus some time, the full report should be (have been) released.)

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  16. Re:Constitutional protection by philbert26 · · Score: 3, Informative
    Please, show me the section of the constitution that says "The preceding stuff doesn't apply when the US government is acting abroad, and the victims of its actions are foreigners."

    The US Supreme Court says just this in UNITED STATES v. VERDUGO-URQUIDEZ. You can always rely on the war on drugs to ensure that government interest prevail.

  17. Re:legality != morallity by Jacked · · Score: 3, Informative
    I don't know all of the details, but, according to a Reuters story:
    CBS news has reported that a U.S. satellite had filmed the shooting and that it had been established the car carrying Calipari was travelling at more than 60 miles (96 km) per hour as it approached the U.S. checkpoint in Baghdad.
    http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L30104709 .htm

    I skimmed through TFA and I think the driver estimated his speed at around 50mph, too. And when he heard the warning shots, he panicked and stomped the accelerator in an attempt to get to the airport faster.

    It'd be nice if they would release the actual satellite imagery for verification, though. Regardless, Sgrena has too much of a credibility problem for me to take her word alone over the word of several U.S. troops and photographic evidence.

  18. Re: Insightful? by danila · · Score: 4, Informative

    You may be underestimating the horror of imprisoning the people there. Watch The Power of Nightmares by BBC. It looks weird, but it really seems that most of the terrorist threat was made up. It's very likely that 90-95% of all people in Guantanamo Bay are innocent. Do you know how flimsy the evidence was in those few cases of suspected terrorists caught on the US soil?

    The whole thing is unjustified. If we ignore the US government propaganda for a second, the whole campaign was simply an act of unprovoked irrational aggression in violation of international laws. As Viggo Mortensen said about America commenting on parallels between war in Iraq and LOTR, "We are the evil guys".

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