Unity4J
3.0 Online Vigil for Julian Assange - Part 5
The Eerie Silence Surrounding the Assange Case
#Unity4J
originated
from an unplanned but timely response to injustice when Julian
Assange’s internet access and visitation rights were abruptly taken
away and swiftly grew into a series of high-profile monthly online
vigils featuring Chris Hedges, George Galloway, Ray McGovern, Bill
Binney and Daniel Ellsberg among many other noteworthy figures.
International media are reporting that WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief may
imminently be handed by Ecuador to UK authorities. (Ref:
https://disobedientmedia.com/2018/07/...
over-of-julian-assange-to-the-uk-may-be-imminent/)
If such an event occurs, it presents an immediate threat to Assange’s
human rights, asylum rights, liberty and to press freedoms. It would
also be in direct contravention to the rulings of the UN Working
Group on Arbitrary Detention and the Inter-American Court of human
rights, both of which have found in his favour.
“Every time we
witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be
passive in its presence and thereby eventually lose all ability to
defend ourselves and those we love." -Julian Assange Spread the
word: Livestream also accessible at: http://unity4j.com/stream
Event
hashtag: #Unity4J
Official
website: http://unity4j.com/
Official
Twitter: https://twitter.com/@Unity4J
WikiLeaks
Legal Defence Fund: https://justice4assange.com/donate.html
WikiLeaks
support website: https://iamwikileaks.org
Courage
Foundation: https://couragefound.org/
Live-tweets
and/or additional content: @Unity4J @Suzi3D @ElizabethLeaVos
@CassandraRules @KimDotcom @InternetPartyNZ @greekemmy @couragefound
@BellaMagnani @primal_species @CrowdVBank
Other credible accounts for
Julian Assange updates: https://twitter.com/suzi3d/lists/Assa...
MEDIA
INQUIRIES: Media inquiries and interview requests should be made to
Suzie Dawson, via DM on Twitter: @Suzi3D, or Elizabeth Vos on Twitter
via @Elizabethleavos, or by emailing info@unity4j.com For more
background on the recent escalation of grave threats to Julian
Assange’s life and liberty, we recommend reading the following
articles: Courage Foundation: Assange’s protection from US
extradition “in jeopardy”
https://www.iamwikileaks.org/2018/05/...
jeopardy/
Did Rep. Adam Schiff Just Admit the US Has a Secret Indictment of
Julian Assange? https://grayzoneproject.com/2018/05/2...
indictment-of-julian-assange/
Conspiracy emerges to push Julian Assange into British and US hands
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2018...
The
UK’s Hidden Role in Assange’s Detention
https://original.antiwar.com/cook/201...
Treatment
of Assange is unjust, says former Ecuador minister
https://www.theguardian.com/world/201...
ecuador-foreign-minister-guillaume-long
The Eerie Silence Surrounding the Assange Case
Julian
Assange remains cut off from the world in Ecuador’s London embassy,
shut off from friends, relatives and thousands of supporters, leaving
him unable to do his crucial work, as John Pilger discusses with
Dennis J. Bernstein.
Dennis
Bernstein
9
June, 2018
In
a recent communication between Randy Credico, an Assange supporter,
comic and radio producer, and Adam Schiff, the ranking member on the
House Judiciary Committee, Assange’s fear of arrest and extradition
to the US was confirmed by the leader of the Russia-gate frenzy.
Credico
received the following response from Schiff after meeting the the
Congressman’s staff, in which Credico was trying to connect Assange
with Schiff: “Our committee would be willing to interview Assange
when he is in U.S. Custody and not before.”
Dennis
Bernstein spoke with John Pilger, a close friend and supporter of
Assange on May 29. The interview began with the statement Bernstein
delivered for Pilger at the Left Forum last weekend in New York on a
panel devoted to Assange entitled, “Russia-gate and WikiLeaks”.
Pilger’s
Statement
“There
is a silence among many who call themselves left. The silence is
Julian Assange. As every false accusation has fallen away, every
bogus smear shown to be the work of political enemies, Julian stands
vindicated as one who has exposed a system that threatens humanity.
The Collateral Damage video, the war logs of Afghanistan and Iraq,
the Cablegate revelations, the Venezuela revelations, the Podesta
email revelations … these are just a few of the storms of raw truth
that have blown through the capitals of rapacious power. The fakery
of Russia-gate, the collusion of a corrupt media and the shame of a
legal system that pursues truth-tellers have not been able to hold
back the raw truth of WikiLeaks revelations. They have not won, not
yet, and they have not destroyed the man. Only the silence of good
people will allow them to win. Julian Assange has never been more
isolated. He needs your support and your voice. Now more than ever is
the time to demand justice and free speech for Julian. Thank you.”
Dennis
Bernstein: We continue our discussion of the case of Julian
Assange, now in the Ecuadorian embassy in Great Britain. John Pilger,
it is great to talk to you again. But it is a profound tragedy, John,
the way they are treating Julian Assange, this prolific journalist
and publisher who so many other journalists have depended on in the
past. He has been totally left out in the cold to fend for himself.
John
Pilger: I have never known anything like it. There is a kind of
eerie silence around the Julian Assange case. Julian has been
vindicated in every possible way and yet he is isolated as few people
are these days. He is cut off from the very tools of his trade,
visitors aren’t allowed. I was in London recently and I couldn’t
see him, although I spoke to people who had seen him. Rafael Correa,
the former president of Ecuador, said recently that he regarded what
they are doing to Julian now as torture. It was Correa’s
government that gave Julian political refuge, which has been betrayed
now by his successor, the government led by Lenin Moreno, which is
back to sucking up to the United States in the time-honored way, with
Julian as the pawn and victim.
Should
be a ‘Constitutional Hero’
But
really it comes down to the British government. Although he is still
in a foreign embassy and actually has Ecuadorian nationality, his
right of passage out of that embassy should be guaranteed by the
British government. The United Nations Working Party on Unlawful
Detentions has made that clear. Britain took part in an investigation
which determined that Julian was a political refugee and that a great
miscarriage of justice had been imposed on him. It is very good
that you are doing this, Dennis, because even in the media outside
the mainstream, there is this silence about Julian. The streets
outside the embassy are virtually empty, whereas they should be full
of people saying that we are with you. The principles involved in
this case are absolutely clear-cut. Number one is justice. The
injustice done to this man is legion, both in terms of the bogus
Swedish case and now the fact that he must remain in the embassy and
can’t leave without being arrested, extradited to the United States
and ending up in a hell hole. But it is also about freedom of
speech, about our right to know, which is enshrined in the United
States Constitution. If the Constitution were taken literally, Julian
would be a constitutional hero, actually. Instead, I understand the
indictment they are trying to concoct reads like a charge of
espionage! It’s so ridiculous.That is the situation as I see it,
Dennis. It is not a happy one but it is one that people should rally
to quickly.
DB:
His journalistic brethren are sounding like his prosecutors. They
want to get behind Russia-gate freaks like Congressman Adam Schiff
and Mike Pompeo, who would like to see Assange in jail forever or
even executed. How do you respond to journalists acting like
prosecutors, some of whom used his material to do stories? This is a
terrible time for journalism.
JP:You
are absolutely right: It is a terrible time for journalism. I have
never known anything quite like it in my career. That said, it is not
new. There has always been a so-called mainstream which really comes
down to great power in media. It has always existed, particularly in
the United States. The Pulitzer Prize this year was awarded to The
New York TimesandThe Washington Post for
witch-hunting around Russia-gate! They were praised for “how deeply
sourced their investigations were.” Their investigations turned up
not a shred of real evidence to suggest any serious Russian
intervention in the 2016 election.
The
Julian Assange case reminds me of the Gary Webb case. Bob Parry was
one of Gary Webb’s few supporters in the media. Webb’s “Dark
Alliance” series contained evidence that cocaine trafficking was
going on with the connivance of the CIA. Later Webb was hounded by
fellow journalists and, unable to find work, he eventually committed
suicide. The CIA Inspector General subsequently vindicated him. Now,
Julian Assange is a long way from taking his own life. His resilience
is remarkable. But he is still a human being and he has taken such a
battering.
Probably
the hardest thing for him to take is the utter hypocrisy of news
organizations—like The New York Times, which published
the WikiLeaks “War Logs” and “Cablegate,” The
Washington Post and The Guardian, which has
taken a vindictive delight in tormenting Julian. The
Guardian a few years ago got a Pulitzer Prize writing about
Snowden. But their coverage of Snowden left him in Hong Kong. It was
WikiLeaks that got Snowden out of Hong Kong and to safety.
Professionally,
I find this one of the most unsavory and immoral things I have seen
in my career. The persecution of this man by huge media organizations
which have drawn great benefit from WikiLeaks. One of Assange’s
great tormentors,The Guardian‘s Luke Harding, made a great
deal of money with a Hollywood version of a book that he and David
Lee wrote in which they basically attacked their source. I suppose
you have to be a psychiatrist to understand all of this. My
understanding is that so many of these journalists are shamed. They
realize that WikiLeaks has done what they should have done a long
time ago, and that is to tell us how governments lie.
DB:One
thing that disturbs me greatly is the way in which the Western
corporate press speculate about Russian involvement in the U.S. 2016
election, that it was a hack through Julian Assange. Any serious
investigator would want to know who would be motivated. And yet the
possibility that it might be the dozen or so pissed-off people who
went to work for the Clinton machine and learned from the inside that
the DNC was all about getting rid of Bernie Sanders…this is not a
part of the story!
Eight
Hundred Thousand Disclosures on Russia
JP:What
happened to Sanders and the way that he was rolled by the Clinton
organization, everybody knows that this is the story. And now we have
the DNC suing WikiLeaks! There’s a kind of farcical element to
this. I mean, none of this came from the Russians. That WikiLeaks is
somehow in bed with the Russians is ludicrous. WikiLeaks published
about 800,000 major disclosures about Russia, some of them extremely
critical of the Russian government. If you are a government and you
are doing something untoward or you are lying to your people and
WikiLeaks gets the documents to show it, they will publish no matter
who you are, be they the United States or Russia.
DB:Randy
Credico, because of his work and his decision to devote a very
high-profile series to the persecution of Julian Assange, recently
found himself under attack. He went to the White House Press Roast
and, after having a nice discussion with Congressman Schiff, he
yelled out “What about Julian Assange?”
The room was packed
full of reporters but Randy was attacked and dragged out. It was if
everyone there was embarrassed to recognize that one of their
brethren was being brutalized.
JP:Randy
shouted some truth. It is very similar to what happened to Ray
McGovern. Ray is a former member of the CIA but extremely principled.
I might suggest he is a renegade now.
DB:It
was hysterical to watch these four armed guards who kept shouting
“Stop resisting, stop resisting!” and they are beating the hell
out of him!
JP:I
thought the image of Ray being hauled off was particularly telling.
These four overweight, obviously ill-trained young men manhandling
Ray, who is 78 years old. There was something highly emblematic about
that for me. He stood up to challenge the fact that the CIA was about
to hand over leadership to a person who had been in charge of
torture. It is both shocking and surreal, which of course the Julian
Assange case is as well. But real journalism should be able to get
through the shocking and the surreal and get to the truth. There is
so much collusion now, with all these dark and menacing developments.
It is almost as if the word “journalism” is becoming blighted.
DB:There
has certainly been a lot of collusion when it comes to Israel. Then
the word “collusion” is quite appropriate.
JP:That’s
the ultimate collusion. But that’s collusion with silence. Never
has there been a collusion like the one between the U.S. and Israel.
It suggests another word and that is “immunity.” It has a moral
immunity, a cultural immunity, a geopolitical immunity, a legal
immunity, and certainly a media immunity. We see the gunning down of
over 60 people on the day of the inauguration of the new U.S. embassy
in Jerusalem. Israel has some of the most wickedly experimental
munitions in the world and they fired them at people who were
protesting the occupation of their homeland and trying to remind
people of the Nakba and the right of return. In the media these were
described as “clashes.” Although they did become so bad thatThe
New York Times in a later edition changed its front page
headline to say that Israel was actually killing people. A rare
moment, indeed, when the immunity, the collusion was interrupted. All
the talk of Iran and nuclear weapons is without any reference to the
biggest nuclear power in the Middle East.
DB:What
would you say have been the contributions that Julian Assange has
made in this age of censorship and cowardice in journalism? Where
does he come into the picture?
JP:I
think it comes down to information. If you go back to when WikiLeaks
started, when Julian was sitting in his hotel room in Paris beginning
to put the whole thing together, one of the first things he wrote was
that there is a morality in transparency, that we have a right to
know what those who wish to control our lives are doing in secret.
The right to know what governments are doing in our name—on our
behalf or to our detriment—is our moral right. Julian feels very
passionately about this. There were times when he could have
compromised slightly in order to possibly help his situation. There
were times when I said to him, “Why don’t you just suspend that
for a while and go along with it?” Of course,
I knew beforehand
what his answer would be and that was “no.” The enormous amount
of information that has come from WikiLeaks, particularly in recent
years, has amounted to an extraordinary public service. I was reading
just the other day a 2006 WikiLeaks cable from the U.S. embassy in
Caracas which was addressed to other agencies in the region. This was
four years after the U.S. tried to get rid of Chavez in a coup. It
detailed how subversion should work. Of course, they dressed it up as
human rights work and so on. I was reading this official document
thinking how the information contained in it was worth years of the
kind of distorted reporting from Venezuela. It also reminds us that
so-called “meddling” by Russia in the U.S. is just nonsense. The
word “meddling” doesn’t apply to the kind of action implied in
this document. It is intervention in another country’s affairs.
WikiLeaks
has done that all over the world. It has given people the information
they have a right to have. They had a right to find out from the
so-called “War Logs” the criminality of our wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq. They had a right to find out about Cablegate. That’s
when, on Clinton’s watch, we learned that the NSA was gathering
personal information on members of the United Nations Security
Council, including their credit card numbers. You can see why Julian
made enemies. But he should also have made a huge number of friends.
This is critical information because it tells us how power works and
we will never learn about it otherwise. I think WikiLeaks has
opened a world of transparency and put flesh on the expression “right
to know.” This must explain why he is attacked so much, because
that is so threatening. The enemy to great power is not the likes of
the Taliban, it is us.
JP:That
kind of thing is not uncommon. Vietnam was meant to be the open war
but really it wasn’t. There weren’t the cameras around. It is
indeed shocking information but it informs people, and we have
Chelsea Manning’s courage to thank for that.
DB:Yes,
and the thanks he got was seven years in solitary confinement. They
want to prosecute Assange and maybe hang him from the rafters in
Congress, but what about Judith Miller and The New York
Times lying the West into war? There is no end of horrific
examples of what passes for journalism, in contrast to the amazing
contribution that Julian Assange has made.
Click here to
listen to this interview
Dennis
J. Bernstein is a host of “Flashpoints” on the Pacifica radio
network and the author of Special
Ed: Voices from a Hidden Classroom.
You can access the audio archives at www.flashpoints.net.
You can get in touch with the author at dbernstein@igc.org.
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