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2003年2月、ブレア政権はイラクのセキュリティと情報機関に関するドキュメント(パウエルが同月の国連安保理の演説で使用したもの)を発表した。
また、そのドキュメントをワード文書の形式でウェブサイトに掲載した。
そのワード文書の改定ログを解析したところ、ブレア先見関係者と思しき名前が見つかった。
また、ログにはドキュメントがJ・プラットのハードディスクからフロッピーに痕跡も見れれる。
このドキュメントのワード版は最近ウェブサイトから削除された。
2003年6月に発表された別のイラク関連レポートはPDFファイルになっている(PDFファイルは個人情報を含まない)。
Microsoft Word bytes Tony Blair in the butt
Richard M. Smith (rms@computerbytesman.com) June 30, 2003
Microsoft Word documents are notorious for containing private information in file headers which people would sometimes rather not share.
The British government of Tony Blair just learned this lesson the hard way.
Back in February 2003, 10 Downing Street published a dossier on Iraq's security and intelligence organizations.
This dossier was cited by Colin Powell in his address to the United Nations the same month.
Dr. Glen Rangwala, a lecturer in politics at Cambridge University, quickly discovered that much of the material in the dossier was actually plagiarized from a U.S. researcher on Iraq.
You can read Dr. Rangwala's original analysis of the dossier from Feb. 5, 2003 at this URL:
http://www.casi.org.uk/discuss/2003/msg00457.html
Blair's government made one additional mistake:
they published the dossier as a Microsoft Word file on their Web site.
When I first heard from Dr. Rangwala about the dossier, I decided to try to learn who had worked on the document.
I downloaded the Word file containing the dossier from the 10 Downing Street Web site (http://www.number-10.gov.uk/) and found the following revision log in the file:
Rev.#1: "cic22" edited file "C:\DOCUME~1\phamill\LOCALS~1\Temp\AutoRecovery save of Iraq - security.asd"
Rev.#2: "cic22" edited file "C:\DOCUME~1\phamill\LOCALS~1\Temp\AutoRecovery save of Iraq - security.asd"
Rev.#3: "cic22" edited file "C:\DOCUME~1\phamill\LOCALS~1\Temp\AutoRecovery save of Iraq - security.asd"
Rev.#4: "JPratt" edited file "C:\TEMP\Iraq - security.doc"
Rev.#5: "JPratt" edited file "A:\Iraq - security.doc"
Rev.#6: "ablackshaw" edited file "C:\ABlackshaw\Iraq - security.doc"
Rev.#7: "ablackshaw" edited file "C:\ABlackshaw\A;Iraq - security.doc"
Rev.#8: "ablackshaw" edited file "A:\Iraq - security.doc"
Rev.#9: "MKhan" edited file "C:\TEMP\Iraq - security.doc"
Rev. #10: "MKhan" edited file "C:\WINNT\Profiles\mkhan\Desktop\Iraq.doc"
Most Word document files contain a revision log which is a listing of the last 10 edits of a document, showing the names of the people who worked with the document and the names of the files that the document went under.
Revision logs are hidden and cannot be viewed in Microsoft Word.
However I wrote a small utility for extracting and displaying revision logs and other hidden information in Word .DOC files.
It is easy to spot the following four names in the revision log of the Blair dossier:
P. Hamill
J. Pratt
A. Blackshaw
M. Khan
In addition, the "cic22" in the first three entries of the revision log stands for "Communications Information Centre," a unit of the British Government.
Back in February, I passed along these 4 names to Dr. Rangwala who then provided them to a number of reports in the UK. One reporter quickly identified the four individuals as:
Paul Hamill - Foreign Office official
John Pratt - Downing Street official
Alison Blackshaw - The personal assistant of the Prime Minister's press secretary
Murtaza Khan - Junior press officer for the Prime Minister
During the week of June 23, 2003, the British Parliament held hearings of the Blair Dossier and other PR efforts by the UK Government leading up to the Iraq war.
Alastair Campbell of the UK Communications Information Centre was put in the hot seat and had to explain the dossier plagiarism and details of the revision log.
One of the interesting tidbits that came out of the hearings is that John Pratt provided the dossier on a floppy disk to Alison Blackshaw to give to Colin Powell for his presentation before the United Nations.
The revision log shows the document being copied from Pratt's hard drive to a floppy disk in revisions #4 and #5.
The Word version of the dossier was recently removed from the 10 Downing Street Web site, but I archived a copy of the Feb. 6 version here:
IRAQ- ITS INFRASTRUCTURE OF CONCEALMENT, DECEPTION AND INTIMIDATION
http://www.computerbytesman.com/privacy/blair.doc
The Blair government learned its lesson well with regard to publishing Microsoft Word documents.
Another report on Iraq that was published in June 2003 was only available as a PDF file.
PDF files do not contain revision logs or hidden author information.
Links
Dr. Glen Rangwala's analysis of the Iraq dossier, Feb. 2003
http://www.casi.org.uk/discuss/2003/msg00457.html
Dr. Glen Rangwala's paper submitted to Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of Commons, June 16, 2003
http://middleeastreference.org.uk/fac030616.html
Iraq's Security and Intelligence Network:A Guide and Analysis, Sept. 2002
http://meria.idc.ac.il/journal/2002/issue3/jv6n3a1.html
Downing St dossier plagiarised, Feb. 6, 2003
http://www.channel4.com/news/2003/02/week_1/06_dossier.html
Britain Admits That Much of Its Report on Iraq Came From Magazines, Feb. 8, 2003
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20B1EFD395F0C7B8CDDAB0894DB404482
Straw's letter to WMD inquiry
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/iraq/story/0,12956,983396,00.html
Campbell: In the line of fire
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/story.jsp?story=418480
The key backroom players
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/articles/5475182
WD97: How to Minimize Metadata in Microsoft Word Documents
http://support.microsoft.com:80/support/kb/articles/Q223/7/90.ASP
Dr. Glen Rangwala's Web site
http://middleeastreference.org.uk
10 Downing Street Web site
http://www.number-10.gov.uk
http://www.computerbytesman.com/
http://www.computerbytesman.com/privacy/blair.htm