World | WikiLeaks US to WikiLeaks: New Leak Risks 'Countless' Lives State Dept. urges Assange to hold diplomatic cables By Matt Cantor Posted Nov 28, 2010 8:50 AM CST Copied Harold Koh, the U.S. State Department legal adviser gestures as he speaks during of private security service providers conference in Geneva, Switzerland, Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2010. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus) The Obama administration is urging WikiLeaks not to follow through on the expected release of secret diplomatic cables, saying the move would threaten “the lives of countless innocent individuals,” damage counterterrorism work, and rattle relations with US allies, the AP reports. A State Department lawyer calls the release illegal in a letter to WikiLeaks’ founder Julian Assange and his lawyer. The release of the letter is “highly unusual” and reveals the White House’s “grave concerns” about the matter, the AP notes. The letter adds that the US won’t work with WikiLeaks to remove material from the 250,000 cables that could hurt intelligence-gathering. The letter was prompted by a British request for information on who the documents put at risk, the State Department said. Read These Next Trump administration begins federal layoffs amid shutdown. Trump's public plea to Bondi was reportedly meant to be private. 'Paper millionaires' are having a moment. Multiple people are dead or missing after an explosion in Tennessee. Report an error