Wikileaks allegations to be scrutinized in investigation called by British deputy PM

WikiLeaks has published almost 400,000 US military logs, mainly written by soldiers on the ground, detailing daily carnage in Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion: detainees abused by Iraqi forces, insurgent bombings, sectarian executions and civilians shot at checkpoints by US troops.

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Lennart Preiss/AP
Founder of the WikiLeaks website, Julian Assange, speaks during a press conference in London, on Oct. 23. WikiLeaks revealed on Saturday previously secret files on the Iraq war, which in the biggest leak of secret information in US history suggest that far more Iraqis died than previously acknowledged during the years of sectarian bloodletting and criminal violence unleashed by the 2003 invasion.

Allegations of prisoner abuse and civilian killings in Iraq from a cache of leaked U.S. secret military documents are extremely serious and must be investigated, a top British official said Sunday.

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg told BBC television that the accounts of violence in Iraq "are distressing to read about and they are very serious."

Whistleblowing website WikiLeaks has published almost 400,000 U.S. military logs, mainly written by soldiers on the ground, detailing daily carnage in Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion: detainees abused by Iraqi forces, insurgent bombings, sectarian executions and civilians shot at checkpoints by U.S. troops.

Iraq Body Count, a private British-based group that has tracked the number of civilians killed since the war started in March 2003, said it had analyzed the information and found 15,000 previously unreported deaths in the WikiLeaks documents released Friday.

Although the documents appear to be authentic, their origin could not be independently confirmed. The Pentagon has condemned the leak, as has Britain's Ministry of Defense, which said it could put soldiers' lives at risk.

Clegg said it was not for Britain to tell the U.S. how to respond, but that any allegations of abuse by British troops "are extremely serious and need to be looked at."

"People will want to hear what the answer is to what are very, very serious allegations of a nature which I think everybody will find quite shocking," he said.

Clegg's Liberal Democrat party opposed the invasion of Iraq, and he has called the war illegal. His party, in opposition when the war began, is now part of Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative-led ruling coalition.

The Guardian newspaper has examined the files in detail and said it found two cases in which Iraqis reported being abused by British troops.

Britain is currently holding an official inquiry into mistakes made by British officials in the build-up and aftermath of the invasion of Iraq. It is due to issue a report later this year.

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