Today, Tuesday 11th August, 9:15 BST, WikiLeaks has launched a campaign to
crowd-source a €100,000 reward for Europe’s most wanted secret: the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).
Starting pledges have already been made by a number
of high profile activists and luminaries from Europe and the United States,
including former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, esteemed UK fashion
designer and environmental campaigner Dame Vivenne Westwood, US journalist
Glenn Greenwald, veteran Australian film-maker and investigative journalist
John Pilger, Belarusian philosopher and theorist Evgeny Morozov, Pentagon
Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg and WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Julian
Assange. [Update as of Tuesday 11th August 2.30pm BST: Now joined by filmmaker
Terry Gilliam and Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek.]
Since it began to face opposition from BRICS
countries at the World Trade Organisation, US policy has been to push through a
triad of international “trade agreements” outside of the WTO framework, aimed
at radically restructuring the economies of negotiating countries, and cutting
out the rising economies of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa
(BRICS).
The three treaties, the “Three Big T’s”, aim to
create a new international legal regime that will allow transnational
corporations to bypass domestic courts, evade environmental protections, police
the internet on behalf of the content industry, limit the availability of
affordable generic medicines, and drastically curtail each country’s
legislative sovereignty.
Two of these super-secret trade deals have already
been published in large part by WikiLeaks - the Transpacific Partnership
Agreement (TPP) and the Trade in Services Agreement (TISA) - defeating
unprecedented efforts by negotiating governments to keep them under wraps.
But for Europeans the most significant of these agreements
remains shrouded in almost complete secrecy. The Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership (TTIP), which is currently under negotiation between the
US and the European Union, remains closely guarded by negotiators and big
corporations have been given privileged access. The public cannot read it.
Today WikiLeaks is taking
steps to ensure that Europeans can finally read the monster trade deal, which has been dubbed an “economic NATO” by former US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Using the new WikiLeaks pledge system everyone can
help raise the bounty for Europe’s most wanted leak. The system was deployed in
June to raise
a $100,000 bounty for the TTIP’s sister-treaty for the Pacific Rim, the TPP.
The pledge system has
been hailed by the New York Times as “a great disrupter”, which gives “millions
of citizens... the ability to debate a major piece of public policy,” and which
“may be the best shot we have at transforming the [treaty negotiation] process
from a back-room deal to an open debate.”
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said,
“The secrecy of the TTIP casts a shadow on the future
of European democracy. Under this cover, special interests are running wild,
much as we saw with the recent financial siege against the people of Greece.
The TTIP affects the life of every European and draws Europe into long term
conflict with Asia. The time for its secrecy to end is now.”
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