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Season 9, Episode 11
Goldhawk Live Breach of security. It’s apparently what WikiLeaks set out to achieve with the release of hundreds of thousands of sensitive diplomatic reports between the U.S. and other foreign governments and embassies. The data dump, said WikiLeaks founder Julien Assange, was all in the name of transparency and democracy. Some would not agree. They include the Obama administration, which this week appointed an anti-terrorism expert to a new post to try to stop future leaks.Join host Dale Goldhawk and his guests around the CPAC table. They ask you: WikiLeaks - public service or public danger? Guests: Jeff Sallot, teaches at the School of Journalism and Communication, Carleton University. Sallot was the Globe and Mail's diplomatic and security correspondent, based in Ottawa, from 1992 until he began teaching. He was Moscow bureau chief for the Globe from 1988 to 1991. Paul Chapin served for over 25 years with Canada's foreign service, and is a specialist in international security. Just this week, Chapin released a paper titled "To Stand On Guard: A National Security Strategy for Canadians", for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute on Public Policy.
Video Length: 0
Date Found: December 08, 2010
Date Produced: December 05, 2010
View Count: 0
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