United States worried at new WikiLeaks release

The United States is concerned about a big dumping of classified documents by WikiLeaks which is expected to include diplomatic cables, State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said.

"We are gearing up for the worst-case scenario, that leaked cables will touch on a wide range of issues and countries,"
Crowley told media.
The spokesman added that "we've known all along that WikiLeaks has in its possession State Department cables."
"We are prepared if this upcoming tranche of documents includes State Department cables. We are in touch with our posts around the world. They have begun the process of informing governments that a release of documents is possible in the near future," Crowley said.
He said that diplomatic cables, messages between US posts around the world, "involve discussions that we had with government officials, with private citizens."
"Inherent in this day-to-day action is trust that we can convey our perspectives to other governments in confidence," he said. Breaking that confidence "has an impact."
"These revelations... are going to create tensions on our relationships between our diplomats and our friends around the world," he said.
Pentagon spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan said that US officials were expecting a possible release of documents "late this week or early next week."
"I'm not going to talk specifics but I would say that even though they are believed to be State Department documents, classified cables, there are some that contain DoD (Department of Defense) related issues.
WikiLeaks has not said what will be contained in its coming release, indicating only that it will be "seven times" the Iraq War logs in which it posted 400,000 secret documents.
A new posting would mark WikiLeaks' third mass release of classified documents after it published 77,000 secret US files on the Afghan conflict in July.
WikiLeaks argues the release of the documents, US-soldier authored incident reports from 2004 to 2009, has shed light on the wars, including allegations of torture by Iraqi forces and reports that suggested 15,000 additional civilian deaths in Iraq.
WikiLeaks' announcement Monday came just days after Sweden issued an international arrest warrant for the website's head, Australian national Julian Assange, wanted for questioning related to rape and sexual molestation accusations