How
Many Times Must Assange Be Proven Right Before People Start
Listening?
Caitlin
Johnstone
23 May, 2019
And
there it is. WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been charged by the
Trump administration’s Justice Department with 17 counts of
violating the Espionage Act, carrying a maximum sentence of 175 years
in prison. Exactly as Assange and his defenders have been warning
would happen for nearly a decade.
The
indictment, like the one which preceded it last month with Assange’s
arrest, is completely fraudulent, as it charges Assange with “crimes”
that are indistinguishable from conventional journalistic practices.
The charges are based on the same exact evidence which was available
to the Obama administration, which as journalist Glenn Greenwald
noted last year declined to prosecute Assange citing fear of
destroying press freedoms.
Hanna
Bloch-Wehba, an associate professor at Drexel University’s Thomas
R. Kline School of Law, has called the indictment “a worst-case,
nightmare, mayday scenario for First Amendment enthusiasts.”
Bloch-Wehba explains that that the indictment’s “theories for
liability rest heavily on Assange’s relationship with Manning and
his tendency to encourage Manning to continue to bring WikiLeaks
material” in a way that “is not readily distinguishable from many
reporter-source relationships cultivated over a period of time.”
One
of the versions of the New York Times’ report on the new Assange
indictment, which has since been edited out but has been preserved
here in a quote by Slate, said that “officials would not engage
with questions about how the actions they said were felonies by Mr.
Assange differed from ordinary investigative journalism. Notably, The
New York Times, among many other news organizations, obtained
precisely the same archives of documents from WikiLeaks, without
authorization from the government.”
Press
freedom organizations have been condemning these new espionage
charges in stark and unequivocal language.
“Put
simply, these unprecedented charges against Julian Assange and
WikiLeaks are the most significant and terrifying threat to the First
Amendment in the 21st century,” reads a statement by Freedom of the
Press Foundation Executive Director Trevor Timm. “The Trump
administration is moving to explicitly criminalize national security
journalism, and if this prosecution proceeds, dozens of reporters at
the New York Times, Washington Post and elsewhere would also be in
danger. The ability of the press to publish facts the government
would prefer remain secret is both critical to an informed public and
a fundamental right. This decision by the Justice Department is a
massive and unprecedented escalation in Trump’s war on journalism,
and it’s no exaggeration to say the First Amendment itself is at
risk. Anyone who cares about press freedom should immediately and
wholeheartedly condemn these charges.”
“The
indictment of Julian Assange under the Espionage Act for publishing
classified information is an attack on the First Amendment and a
threat to all journalists everywhere who publish information that
governments would like to keep secret,” reads a statement by
Committee to Protect Journalists Executive Director Joel Simon.
“Press freedom in the United States and around the world is
imperiled by this prosecution.”
“For
the first time in the history of our country, the government has
brought criminal charges under the Espionage Act against a publisher
for the publication of truthful information,” reads a statement by
the ACLU. “This is a direct assault on the First Amendment. These
charges are an extraordinary escalation of the Trump administration’s
attacks on journalism, establishing a dangerous precedent that can be
used to target all news organizations that hold the government
accountable by publishing its secrets. The charges against Assange
are equally dangerous for US journalists who uncover the secrets of
other nations. If the US can prosecute a foreign publisher for
violating our secrecy laws, there’s nothing preventing China, or
Russia, from doing the same.”
Also
opposing the new indictment, far too late, have been popular pundits
from mainstream liberal news outlets.
“The
Espionage indictment of Assange for publishing is an extremely
dangerous, frontal attack on the free press. Bad, bad, bad,”
tweeted MSNBC’s Chris Hayes.
“Today
the Trump DOJ becomes the first administration to ever charge a
publisher with *espionage* — an assertive, unprecedented legal
crackdown on the traditional rights and protections for publishers,”
tweeted MSNBC’s Ari Melber. “That is a legal fact, regardless of
one’s views of Julian Assange. The new Trump DOJ indictment treats
activities most top newspapers engage in — gathering and
publishing classified material — as criminal plotting, claiming
Assange ‘conspired’ with and ‘aided and abetted’ his source
in the pursuit of classified material.”
One
need only to look at the outraged “this is a horrible take”
comments underneath these tweets to see that these condemnations are
coming long after the propaganda they’ve helped advance against
WikiLeaks has seeped well into the bloodstream. It’s impossible to
tell the same group of people day after day that Assange is an evil
Nazi Putin puppet rapist who smells bad and mistreats his cat, and
then persuade them to respond to a depraved Trump administration
agenda against that same person with an appropriate level of
resistance.
“I
find no satisfaction in saying ‘I told you so’ to those who for 9
years have scorned us for warning this moment would come,” tweeted
WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Kristinn Hrafnsson. “I care for
journalism. If you share my feeling you take a stand NOW. Either you
are a worthless coward or you defend Assange, WikiLeaks and
Journalism.”
Indeed,
WikiLeaks staff and their supporters have been warning of this for
many years, only to be dismissed as paranoid conspiracy theorists and
rape apologists by smearers who insisted Assange was merely avoiding
rape charges by taking asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London
back in 2012. There are many tweets by the WikiLeaks Twitter account
warning that the US is trying to charge Assange under the Espionage
Act all the way back in 2010, and they’ve been warning about it
over and over again ever since, but nobody’s listened.
“The
only barrier to Julian Assange leaving Ecuador’s embassy is pride,”
blared a Guardian headline last year by the odious James Ball, with
the sub-header “The WikiLeaks founder is unlikely to face
prosecution in the US, charges in Sweden have been dropped — and
for the embassy, he’s lost his value as an icon.”
Assange
has been warning for years that this was coming. He’s been
unequivocal about the fact that he was perfectly willing to
participate in the Swedish investigation from the beginning and was
only taking asylum with Ecuador due to fear of extradition and
political prosecution in the US, which Ecuador explicitly stated were
its reasons for granting him asylum. He was absolutely correct. He’s
been correct the entire time. History has vindicated him. He was
right and his critics were wrong.
We
are also already seeing Assange vindicated in his warnings of what
his prosecution would mean for the free press. He hasn’t even been
extradited yet and we’re already seeing a greatly escalated war on
journalism being implemented, with new developments in just the last
few days like a San Francisco journalist now being charged with
conspiracy for receiving internal documents from the San Francisco
Police Department, and a prominent French journalist being summoned
by police for reporting on corruption in the Macron government.
All
this of course begs the question: what else has he been right about?
Anyone with an ounce of intellectual honesty who has previously had
their doubts about Assange will necessarily begin asking themselves
this question now. It’s worth reviewing the things Assange has been
saying about Russia not being the source of the 2016 Democratic Party
emails that WikiLeaks published, about what really happened in
Sweden, and about his general understanding of what’s going on in
the world with opaque and unaccountable power structures leading us
all down a very dark and dangerous path.
If
you open your mind to the possibility that Assange has been right
about more than you’ve given him credit for previously, the
implications can shatter your world. Give it a try. There’s no
longer any legitimate reason not to.
______________________
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