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Franklin D. Roosevelt: Let me assert my firm belief...
that the only thing we have to fear...
is fear itself.
Neil Armstrong: That's one small step for man...
This is Walter Cronkite in our newsroom.
President Kennedy died at 1 P.M.,
some 38 minutes ago.
...who are trying to make
a boogey out of us...
Richard O. Covey: Go at throttle up.
Tom Mintier: This vehicle has exploded.
They are here in the thousands.
They are here in the tens of thousands.
Nik Gowing: Diana, Princess of Wales, has died.
Female Reporter: This just in.
Television viewers across the country
watch in astonishment...
Man 1:Oh, my goodness. Man 2: Oh, God.
Female Reporter 2: There was a huge explosion sound.
Nick: Der Spiegel is begging for more time.
The Times wants to go.
Let me talk to Rosenbach.
Alan: Christ, it's like herding cats.
Holger: No, I don't want to have to scroll down
for the Task Force 373 story.
Holger, I've got Nick.
Ah, great. Five minutes?
- We have to go. - Five more minutes.
Yes, Bill, I know. But Nick just spoke to Rosenbach.
They need at least another few minutes.
No more delays, Alan. You said twelve o' clock.
Alan: I know, but the point is to publish together.
You know the Germans.
They need to dot all the "I's" and cross all the "T's."
Go. Now.
It's live. The Times is live.
Well, there you go. Patience, humility,
all American virtues.
Yes, Bill, thanks very much for not giving a ***.
Go.
Of course, our top story this morning...
the White House blasting the release
of over 90,000 U.S. military records.
It came from an organization
that didn't exist five years ago, WikiLeaks.
The New York Times, Britain's Guardian,
and Germany's Der Spiegel...
coordinated in publishing...
what some are comparing to the Pentagon Papers,
back in the Nixon years.
Male Reporter 1: They include civilian casualties
and special forces killing squads.
The most serious allegation is that some soldiers
committed war crimes.
Barack Obama: I know much has been written...
as a result of the substantial leak
of documents from Afghanistan.
What is this website, "WikiLeaks"?
And who is Julian Assange?
Assange has made WikiLeaks a global force.
And for better or worse...
exposed what he considers
some of the world's darkest secrets.
Male Reporter 2: The eyes of the world
are on the Frontline Club in London.
Female Reporter: Julian Assange is a man
without a home who lives the life of the hunted...
changing his appearance, using false names...
and encrypted cell phones to avoid detection.
The U.S. government argues
there's nothing Noble about Assange.
A U.S. official describes him as very Anti-American.