<p><br /> According to newspaper websites, the classified US Government documents released by WikiLeaks include claims of:<br /> </p><p><br /> - "Inappropriate behaviour" by a member of the Royal Family.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Requests for "specific intelligence" about British MPs.<br /> </p><p><br /> - "Devastating" criticisms of British operations in Iraq.<br /> </p><p><br /> - "Serious political criticisms" of Prime Minister David Cameron.<br /> </p><p><br /> - US diplomats pressuring countries to resettle former Guantanamo detainees.<br /> </p><p><br /> - "Grave fears" in London and Washington over the security of Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme.<br /> </p><p><br /> - "Harsh" criticism by US embassy staff of their host governments, including Russia and China.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Alleged links between the Russian government and organised crime.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Details of countries involved in financing terrorist groups.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Reports of a near environmental "disaster" involving a rogue shipment of enriched uranium.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Technical details of secret US-Russian nuclear missile negotiations in Geneva.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Secret US efforts to combat al-Qaeda in Yemen.<br /> </p><p><br /> - A description of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, who is said to be accompanied everywhere by a "voluptuous blonde" Ukrainian nurse.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Reports that the King of Bahrein and King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia urged the Americans to take military action to halt Iran's nuclear programme.<br /> </p><p><br /> - US assessments that Iran has obtained advanced missiles from North Korea that could enable it to strike European capitals.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Secret - and so far unsuccessful - US efforts to remove highly enriched uranium from a Pakistani research reactor amid fears it could be diverted for use in an illegal nuclear device.<br /> </p><p><br /> - Conversations between American and South Korean officials over the prospects for a unified Korea, should the North's economic troubles and political transition lead it to "implode".<br /> </p><p><br /> - A global campaign of computer sabotage by Chinese government agents.<br /> </p>