Uncle Sam is mighty upset, and that’s not a good thing for American troops
itching to read the news. The Pentagon has blocked access to The Guardian*
newspaper’s website for all soldiers stationed in the Middle East.
The Guardian confirmed on Monday that its website has been blacklisted by a
filtering system installed by the United States Department of Defense on the
computer system utilized by thousands of service members deployed to the area
covered by the US Central Command, or CENTCOM. That “theater-wide” effort has
reportedly blocked access to the award-winning newspaper’s Web edition for all
soldiers in Afghanistan,
the Middle East, South Asia and
even the command’s headquarters in Florida.
The decision to keep overseas troops from accessing the newspaper comes three
days after The Guardian learned that certain pages of its website were
inaccessible to soldiers stationed within the US.
The Defense Department initially restricted access to Guardian articles
containing classified material — such as the leaked National Security Agency
documents recently disclosed to the paper by former contractor Edward Snowden —
but the Pentagon has since widened that ban, making the entire website off
limits for soldiers not just within America’s border, but those stationed in
locales like Afghanistan and Iraq.
Banning The Guardian in Afghanistan
alone means the 62,000 troops stationed in America’s
longest running-war are unable to access the website.
“US
Central Command is among other DOD organizations that routinely take
preventative measures to safeguard the chance of spillage of classified
information on to unclassified computer networks, even if the source of the
information is itself unclassified,” Army Lt Col Steve Wollman, a spokesman
for CENTCOM, told The Guardian. “One of the purposes for preventing this
spillage is to protect CENTCOM personnel from inadvertently amplifying
disclosed but classified information.”
“Additionally, classified information is not automatically declassified
simply because of unauthorized disclosure,” Wollman added. “Classified
information is prohibited from specific unclassified networks, even if the
information has already been published in unclassified media that are available
to the general public, such as online news organizations.”
Military computers have previously been blocked from accessing the website
for WikiLeaks, an anti-secrecy organization that has published hundreds of
thousands of classified documents.
Blacklisting the entirety of The Guardian
appears unprecedented though, and is a direct response to the NSA documents
that have been sporadically released by the paper since early June.
The Guardian first published on June 6 a top-secret court order revealing
that the NSA routinely collects metadata pertaining to the phone records of
millions of Americans. After the paper revealed evidence of the US
tapping into Internet services several days later, former Booz Allen Hamilton
contractor Edward Snowden identified himself as the source of the leaks.
Snowden, 30, has since been charged with espionage and is reportedly in Moscow
awaiting potential asylum. Snowden has requested assistance from upwards of 20
separate countries, but could face decades in prison if those requests are
ignored and he is extradited to the US
to stand trial.
* Its a crap left wing newspaper - SW Editor
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