this post was submitted on 15 May 2024
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I'd advise that you do some research before making claims like this
No you:
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/nov/27/war-crimes-whistleblower-david-mcbride-reveals-why-he-went-to-the-media
Riddle me this then: Why would he hand evidence of war crimes being committed to a journalist if HE wanted people to know that soldiers weren't committing war crimes?
That Four Corners episode came out fairly recently. Tell me, what motives would Dan Oakes, an investigative journalist with a reputation, have to disparage a whistleblower who is about to be prosecuted? I dunno, maybe he doesn't want to be the target of prosecution himself and distancing from him is protection?
Why do you keep referring to the BBC article? It's quite poorly worded and oversimplified for an international audience. You won't find many articles about David McBride's motives from before the case because he was secret then, the ABC gave him up.
So it's either A:
Or B:
I choose B, but hey, you know better because of some random BBC article and an ABC hit piece
He couldn't have taken them to Spain: that wouldn't be responsible and he'd probably get busted. He could destroy the documents, but he wouldn't be able to take credit and try to drive up more awareness. Don't mistake intelligence for stupidity
Telling a mod of the community you're in to "blow me"? Brave move.
I find it amusing how confidently incorrect they are quoting some BBC article (because the BBC would have the best idea as to what is going on in Australia).
that wording is misleading at best. 2 things were true
Source.
Same article: