At least no one I’ve seen. But the U.S. Government should be damn thankful this happened the way that it did. We dodged a major bullet that could have been way, way, more damaging than this debacle has been. How could this have possibly been worse, you ask?
Simple. What if Private Bradley Manning had not been interested in embarrassing us, and was more interested in harming us? Would he have gone to a public website with his trove of secrets our Government had failed properly to secure? Or would he have gone to our actual adversaries, say Iran, or China, or Venezuela, or Russia? What would have been the result? Well, it would not have been made public, the recipients would be all too eager to continue exploiting this hole. This information could have leaked out of the State Department sieve for years, radically altering the results of our diplomacy with no one the wiser.
This way, at least, the U.S. is aware of everything that’s been compromised which minimizes the damage. (Think, what good would cracking the Enigma have been in WWII if the BBC started broadcasting intercepted Nazi communications? Not very.)
What worries me is the fact the hole was so damn large that I find it hard to believe that Private Manning was the first to think of exploiting it.