Website was target of cyber attack, says WikiLeaks
Site comes 'under attack' as they continue dumping online, a cache of more than 250,000 State Department reports.
WASHINGTON:
WikiLeaks said its website had been the target of a cyber attack late on Tuesday as it proceeded with the release of thousands of previously unpublished US diplomatic cables, some still classified.
WikiLeaks later described the problem as "a cyber attack". In a subsequent message on its Twitter feed, it said the website was back up though some users were having problems accessing it. The US cables which the website said it is dumping onto the public record appear to be from a cache of more than 250,000 State Department reports leaked to the group.
WikiLeaks began releasing the cables in smaller batches late last year, but until now had made them public in piecemeal fashion. Several news organizations around the world, including Reuters, have had complete sets of the cables for months. But for the most part, media outlets have only cited or published cables when publishing specific news or investigative stories based on them.
A person in contact with Assange's inner circle told Reuters recently that dismay among WikiLeaks activists over media organizations lost interest in publishing stories based on the material was the rationale for the mass release of documents.
The source described Assange and his associates as "frustrated" at the lack of media interest.
Last year WikiLeaks and Assange were celebrated after their release of State Department cables, tens of thousands of other secret US files, and a classified video of a contested American military operation in Iraq.
Since then public interest in WikiLeaks has waned. It may have suffered from publicity related to Assange's flight to Britain after sexual misconduct allegations were made against him in Sweden and a subsequent protracted extradition fight.
In and earlier report, according to a December 2008 US embassy cable released by WikiLeaks, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi felt that the terrorist attacks in India on November 26, 2008 were a result of Pakistan’s flawed policy, while other major leaks pertaining to Pakistan voice US' concerns over release of terrorists by courts and security at Karachi ports.
WikiLeaks said its website had been the target of a cyber attack late on Tuesday as it proceeded with the release of thousands of previously unpublished US diplomatic cables, some still classified.
WikiLeaks later described the problem as "a cyber attack". In a subsequent message on its Twitter feed, it said the website was back up though some users were having problems accessing it. The US cables which the website said it is dumping onto the public record appear to be from a cache of more than 250,000 State Department reports leaked to the group.
WikiLeaks began releasing the cables in smaller batches late last year, but until now had made them public in piecemeal fashion. Several news organizations around the world, including Reuters, have had complete sets of the cables for months. But for the most part, media outlets have only cited or published cables when publishing specific news or investigative stories based on them.
A person in contact with Assange's inner circle told Reuters recently that dismay among WikiLeaks activists over media organizations lost interest in publishing stories based on the material was the rationale for the mass release of documents.
The source described Assange and his associates as "frustrated" at the lack of media interest.
Last year WikiLeaks and Assange were celebrated after their release of State Department cables, tens of thousands of other secret US files, and a classified video of a contested American military operation in Iraq.
Since then public interest in WikiLeaks has waned. It may have suffered from publicity related to Assange's flight to Britain after sexual misconduct allegations were made against him in Sweden and a subsequent protracted extradition fight.
In and earlier report, according to a December 2008 US embassy cable released by WikiLeaks, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi felt that the terrorist attacks in India on November 26, 2008 were a result of Pakistan’s flawed policy, while other major leaks pertaining to Pakistan voice US' concerns over release of terrorists by courts and security at Karachi ports.