Wide-eyed idealism has its place, I agree, but it's place is not to set policy surrounding security, diplomacy, and intelligence-gathering.
Where Aardwolf and UT are speaking in lofty idealism, the rest of us are having a conversation about the state of the world as we know it. If you two would care to join us in that discussion, this thread might go somewhere.
UT, you also seem to be confusing the ideals of open government, which is preferable in a democracy, with open governance in foreign policy, which is a recipe for the demise of a democracy. EDIT: Also, the entire length of my responses on page 1 which you completely failed to even acknowledge.
Firstly, I'd like to point out a discrepancy; "the world
as we know it". That assumption there leaves open a wide range of different worldviews that are possible.
Secondly, only discussing the world as it is currently, instead of what it
could also be is, I feel, shortsighted.
Thirdly, well there's an argument for that for sure. But what exactly do we have to keep secret? Many people would say military secrets. Ok, fair; but how many secrets must a military have? Pre WW2, the US had a standing army of like 100,000 men I think? How many secrets would that army actually have to keep.
Fourthly, I just skipped through the thread, I didn't read your post nor many others. My apologies. Were you talking about this one?
I keep searching the site for an article I swear I posted last time Wikileaks came up but I can't find it. It was written by a Canadian diplomat, and discussed how crucial it is for diplomats to be able to share the unsweetened truth about the countries they are negotiating with with their political superiors, in order to make informed and relevant decisions. He cited an example of how mass graves in the Balkans were uncovered as a result of a human source that passed photographs to him, and he then relayed (along with his assessment that the Serbs were lying through their teeth) with his superiors. Without the type of anonymity normally afforded to diplomatic transmissions, those pictures and that assessment might never have been sent.
On this we actually agree; I've discussed this point with my friends for awhile now, when I talk about secrecy and they ask where I would draw the line in regards to Wikileaks. My policy is that anything that is said between people is something that is private and thus, reasonable to be kept secret. A conversation between you and I in the back room where we just made sure that no one else was around - I'd say it's reasonable to say that both parties had a reasonable belief that the words they were exchanging would not leave that room.
However, if action comes of that; if you say Iran is a dick and I say that we should do something about it; then I feel that any action should be made public. This ranges from covert strikes to a diplomat's schedule.
So in summary; publishing details of covert US actions abroad? I say we should. That's funded with American taxpayer money (which ostensibly we should know where it's going, as was the original idea), and puts American lives at risk (not to mention those on the other side of the barrel). Publishing what one diplomat thinks of another? No, I don't think so.