The Pentagon believes WikiLeaks likely has more secret government documents in its hands, beyond those the website has already released or mentioned publicly, a spokesman said Tuesday.
"We have reason to believe they have other documents as well," Colonel Dave Lapan told reporters, without elaborating.
WikiLeaks, which portrays itself as a whistle-blowing media outlet, released last week an unprecedented 400,000 classified US documents on the Iraq war, and in July posted 77,000 secret US files on the Afghan conflict.
WikiLeaks has said it still has 15,000 documents and video on Afghanistan in its possession.
Media reports have also speculated that the website has tens of thousands State Department cables, but WikiLeaks has denies this.
WikiLeaks and the Pentagon have been engaged in a war of words over the website's dump of secret military files, with US officials accusing the organization of endangering the lives of troops and civilians who worked with US-led forces.
WikiLeaks argues the release of the documents has shed light on the wars, including alleged widespread torture by Iraqi forces and reports that suggested 15,000 additional civilian deaths in the Iraq conflict.
Although US officials condemned WikiLeaks as jeopardizing the security of its troops, Australia said Tuesday that the release of documents in July had not hampered its operations in Afghanistan.
"The investigation found that the leaked documents have not had a direct significant adverse impact on Australia's national interests," the Australian Defence Force said in a statement.
While many reports published by WikiLeaks would not routinely be made public for security reasons, much of the data had already been made public by the military, in many cases in greater detail, the Australian report said.
WikiLeaks has not revealed the source of the secret documents but suspicion has fallen on Bradley Manning, a US Army intelligence analyst arrested in May after the website released footage of a US Apache helicopter strike in Iraq in which civilians died.
Manning is being held at the Marine base in Quantico, Virginia south of Washington.
earlier related report
Iraq court sentences Tareq Aziz to death
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 26, 2010 –
Iraq's supreme criminal court found Iraq's former deputy premier Tareq Aziz guilty of "deliberate murder and crimes against humanity" on Tuesday, sentencing to death the long-time international face of the Saddam Hussein regime.
A stone-faced and haggard-looking Aziz listened as Judge Mahmoud Saleh al-Hasan read the verdict.
"After sufficient evidence against Tareq Aziz that he committed and participated in deliberate murder and crimes against humanity the court decided to issue the death sentence," Hasan said.
The verdict evoked quick reaction from the European Union and rights group Amnesty International, while the Vatican urged clemency for Aziz.
"Our position on the death penalty is well known, so I have nothing to add," Maja Kocijancic, spokeswoman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, said when asked about the sentence.
Ashton will remind Iraqi authorities of the EU position on the death penalty, said a diplomat who requested anonymity.
Amnesty's Malcolm Smart said "Saddam Hussein's rule was synonymous with executions, torture and other gross human rights violations, and it is right that those who committed crimes are brought to justice.
"However, it is vital that the death penalty, which is the ultimate denial of human rights, should never be used, whatever the gravity of the crime," he added in a statement.
"It is also high time the Iraqi government turned the page on this grim cycle and one step towards this would be to end all executions and commute the sentences of all those on death row, believed to number several hundred."
Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said in a statement that "the Catholic Church position on the death penalty is known. We really want the sentence against Tareq Aziz not to be carried out."
Aziz's life should be spared because this would "foster reconciliation and the reconstruction of peace and justice in Iraq after great suffering."
Aziz turned himself in to US forces in April 2003, days after the fall of Baghdad.
In 2009, Aziz was jailed for 15 years for the 1992 execution of 42 Baghdad wholesalers and given a seven-year term for his role in expelling Kurds from Iraq's north.
The court also sentenced Aziz to 15 years on Tuesday for "committing torture" and 10 years for "participating in torture," and ordered that all of his known assets be confiscated.
"The verdict was for the crackdown on religious parties which took place in the 1980s," court spokesman Abdul Saheb told AFP.
Among the charges was the April 1980 killing of Mohammed Baqr al-Sadr, founder of the Dawa party of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, Saheb said.
Saddam reportedly ordered Sadr killed after the cleric and Dawa voiced support in 1979 for Iran's Islamic revolution, sparking demonstrations across Iraq.
Saddam went on to wipe out a large number of Shiite leaders during the 1980-88 war with Iran.
Sheikh Ali Basheer al-Najafi, a Shiite cleric in the holy city of Najaf, said the verdict was the least expected.
"The sentence against those killers is less than what could be expected for the violations they committed against important religious figures" said Najafi, whose father is among the four most important Shiite authorities in Iraq.
Two other men also received the death sentences — former interior minister Saadoun Shaker and Abid Hmoud, an aide to the executed dictator.
All three were sentenced for their role in the crackdown on Shiites.
The death sentences can be appealed and must be confirmed by the presidential council before being carried out.
Giovanni Di Stefano, one of Aziz's lawyers, said the trial had been "a farce."
It was "frankly nothing short of malicious, capricious and non-existent," he said in a statement in Rome.
Before reading the sentence, the judge ordered Aziz to wear a hearing aid so he would understand the verdict. He then waved him away.
Aziz, sitting with his hand on a wooden rail in front, looked tired and ill.
His mouth was slightly crooked, as if an after-effect from a stroke. His family has said he has suffered two strokes while in prison.
Aziz's son Ziad, who has lived in Jordan since 2003, told AFP "the decision was an act of revenge against anybody and anything related to the past."
Of the three people sentenced to death on Tuesday, the urbane and Christian Aziz was by far the most prominent figure.
Named foreign minister in 1983 and then deputy prime minister in 1991, Aziz exploited his mastery of English to put a gloss on Saddam's murderous regime for two decades.
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