Author: bbc.co.uk
Job            Vacancy - Between the revelations is a report Saudi  Arabia's King Abdullah urged  the US to destroy Iran's nuclear facilities. - Lowongan   Kerja
Job     Indonesia - The founder of Wikileaks, Julian Assange, said  the US  authorities were afraid of being held to account.
But the White House said the release was  "reckless" put the  lives of diplomats and others at risk.
One Republican congressman called for  Wikileaks to be  designated a terrorist organisation. 
Peter King, a member of the House of  Representatives Homeland  Security Committee, said the latest release "manifests Mr Assange's  purposeful intent to  damage not only our national interests in fighting  the war on  terror, but also undermines the very safety of coalition  forces in  Iraq and Afghanistan".
The US Department of Defence says it is  making its computer  systems more secure to prevent future leaks.
   Computer hacking        
Wikileaks has  only posted some 200 of the 251,287 messages it says it has obtained.  However, the entire bundle of cables has been made available to five  publications, including the New York  Times and the UK's Guardian  newspaper. 
  Continue  reading the main story  
Wikileaks
- Website with a reputation for publishing sensitive material
- Run by Julian Assange, an Australian with a background in computer network hacking
- Released 90,000 secret US records of US military incidents about the war in Afghanistan and 400,000 similar documents on Iraq
- Also posted video showing US helicopter killing 12 people - including two journalists - in Baghdad in 2007
- Other controversial postings include screenshots of the e-mail inbox and address book of US vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin
Concerns aired in  the documents  include the security of Pakistani nuclear material that could be used to  make an atomic weapon.
The widespread use of computer hacking  by China's government  is also reported.
The leaked US embassy cables also  reportedly include accounts  of:
- Iran attempting to adapt North Korean rockets for use as long-range missiles
- Corruption within the Afghan government with concerns heightened when a senior official was found to be carrying more than $52m (£33m) in cash on a foreign trip; - President Hamid Karzai is described as ''extremely weak'' and prone to being persuaded by conspiracy theories
- Bargaining to empty the Guantanamo Bay prison camp - including Slovenian diplomats being told to take in a freed prisoner if they wanted to secure a meeting with President Barack Obama
- Germany being warned in 2007 not to enforce arrest warrants for US Central Intelligence Agency officers involved in an operation in which an innocent German citizen with the same name as a suspected militant was abducted and held in Afghanistan
- US officials being instructed to spy on the UN leadership by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
- The very close relationship between Russian PM Vladimir Putin and his Italian counterpart Silvio Berlusconi
- Alleged links between the Russian government and organised crime
- Yemen's president talking to then US Mid-East commander General David Petraeus about attacks on Yemeni al-Qaeda bases and saying: "We'll continue saying the bombs are ours, not yours"
- Faltering US attempts to prevent Syria from supplying arms to Hezbollah in Lebanon
Shedding  light on wars?  
 Wikileaks argues that the site's  previous releases shed light on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
      Wikileaks argues that the site's  previous releases shed light on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.    The leaked embassy cables are both  contemporary and historical,  and include a 1989 note from a US diplomat in Panama City musing about  the options open to Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega and referring to  him as "a master of survival" - the author apparently had no idea that  US forces would invade a week later and arrest Noriega.
In a statement, the White House said:  "Such disclosures put  at risk our diplomats, intelligence professionals, and people around the  world who come to the United States for assistance in promoting  democracy and open government.
"President Obama supports responsible,  accountable, and open  government at home and around the world, but this reckless and dangerous  action runs counter to that goal." 
No-one has been charged with passing the  diplomatic files to  the website but suspicion has fallen on US Army private Bradley Manning,  an intelligence analyst arrested in Iraq in June and charged over an  earlier leak of classified US documents to Mr Assange's organisation. 
The cables release was the third mass  Wikileaks release of  classified documents since it published 77,000 secret US files on the  Afghan conflict in July, and 400,000 documents about the Iraq war in  October.
Wikileaks argues the release of the  documents has shed light  on the wars, including allegations of torture and reports that suggest  15,000 additional civilian deaths in Iraq.
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